Friday, January 23, 2009

Technology 101 Redux

I will try to avoid too much overlap between this post and my initial post. I have been excited and frustrated with my experiences so far in class. I am excited with the opportunities provided to learn about tools to make my teaching more efficient and effective. At the same time, my fledgling knowledge of technology has limited my enjoyment of what should be an enjoyable journey. I have found myself making a significant investment in time without yielding a satisfying return on that investment. As Ben Hogan displayed in his approach to golf by stating that the answers are "found in the dirt", I feel that becoming more proficient with technology can be found through constant work in our classroom, hopefully building a solid base of information that can be continually expanded. Hogan had to develop the fundamentals first, then build upon those fundamentals through further exploration. To this point, I have struggled with understanding the fundamentals, and that has significantly slowed the overall learning process.

But the opportunities provided to us in class give me hope for my future in education. I know that I have to evolve my teaching style, but I have often been reluctant because I didn't have confidence with technology. Our experiences with Ning, Blogger, Delicious, WizIQ, Google Docs and Dim Dim have certainly given me some tools that should help me be successful with technology. Now the question becomes how to use these tools, not for the sake of using them, but to utilize the functionality that each provides.

For finding and sharing information in the language arts, Delicious has been a nice tool to this point. I am constantly receiving bookmarks concerning my subject area, essentially developing a far broader research base than I could possibly create on my own. Resources can be shared within departments, allowing members to build on common ground, not only within the department, but within the language arts community across the globe.

Ning and Blogger provide great communication tools for students and parents. Our school system currently uses Webgrader, so parents are a click away from checking student progress. What I like about Ning and Blogger is that I should be able to do a much better job communicating class information overall, so that parents can be more informed about what their son/daughter will be doing in the class. Ning might be a better tool for students to obtain information about the class, much the same way as we use it, whereas parents might be better served through the use of a blog. Either way, both tools provide excellent opportunities to continue building the communication bridge between the classroom and home.

Dim Dim and WizIQ might be great opportunities for online collaborative work either between my classes, or classes elsewhere in the world. I like the fact that classroom walls don't really exist anymore, and that opportunities to learn can extend as far as one chooses to reach. I do believe it will be a challenge to get MY students excited about these tools, because they would actually have to take ownership of their education. That is not meant to be a kick in the teeth to my students. I wouldn't trade any of them for the world, but I do know it would be a challenge getting them excited about using these resources. Many would probably come around, but then maturity issues might be a concern. These are good problems to try and solve, and not prohibiting factors for using the technology. Just as we had to troubleshoot some issues from our early meetings, the process would become more successful with experience.

Google Docs is probably the tool hottest on my radar at this point. I have been playing with the idea of creating a paperless classroom, and I think that Docs could help me achieve this process. Students should have less problems with printers, flash drives, or compatibility between word processors. I like that it is an easy tool for collaboration, and that it allows students and me to track revisions along the way. For me, I need to use Docs more before I fully unleash it on my classes. I currently still produce all my documents in Pages, then cut and past into Docs. I know my current practice is unnecessary, but it is difficult to break old habits. As I continue to learn more about Google Docs, my proficiency should logically increase, and I will be able to ween myself off of the old ways.

So my frustration with essentially "not being good at any of this" has taken a backseat to the possibilities that these tools provide to enhance classroom instruction. I am sure that in the years to come, the landscape of my classes will be significantly different, and in turn, be closer to fulfilling the age old purpose for teaching; meeting the needs of my students.

1 comment:

  1. You have great goals - and I think the next class will open up the way for you in terms of applying the tools - good job!

    ReplyDelete