Generational Changes?

Put this in the category of “I don’t know for certain, but I don’t think so.”

I have been to a number of presentations now in which “visionaries” describe today’s students as “different” than we are/were. I agree. Students are supposedly bored by today’s classrooms and today’s learning experiences. Again, I agree or at least I guess I agree. However, just for the sake of argument, how do we really know that this is really true. Perhaps kids in the 60s were really bored too, but were either afraid to say so then or by now have forgotten. Actually, if we could describe college-age students as students in this one-sided discussion, I could probably argue that today’s students are probably more “grade oriented” than the college students of my generation. Not necessarily the same thing as involved or interested, but clearly not rejecting “the establishment.” Anyway, I digress and should be doing a better job of focusing on my point.

During the type of visionary offering I have in mind, the presenter gets to a point at which he/she claims that students are used to “processing” multiple, simultaneous sources of information. There may be a reference to Sesame Street although other program references might now be more appropriate. Just to convince the audience that things have changed, the presenter displays a screen image from CNN or some similar source. The image shows an anchor person speaking, a graphic or video source, and a completely unrelated text stream scrolling at the bottom of the screen. This is not all. The presenter describes an imaginary student as watching this while talking on a cell phone, instant messaging, and listening to the stereo. True, this scenario is different than today’s teachers experienced as students.

This is where the logic of this presentation always gets a little fuzzy for me. If the message is classroom experiences are boring in comparison, I guess this position is probably valid. However, I always kind of get the impression the presenter is making an additional claim. The concern I have is that the claim is either that a new generation of humans has recently evolved to be capable of processing multiple unrelated streams of input or that the multi-input living room scene is a model for the ideal classroom. This is the point at which the research of developmental and cognitive psychologists might inform any assumptions being made. The developmental literature is a little far afield for me, but I know of no work demonstrating a generational progression in the capacity for handling multiple unrelated inputs. The cognitive literature I do follow . Older work (e.g., the impact of irrelevant images in children’s literature) and recent work with multimedia (e.g., Mayer – check spelling) argue that unnecessary information reduces processing efficiency and redundant information in the same modality can reduce learning. The issues here are different than the issue of “it is nice to have another input channel to attend to when the first channel becomes boring.”

Are younger people better at handling multiple inputs? My reactions is that this may be the wrong question to worry about. Consider this. I happen to like to channel surf and continually find myself rotating through 20 or so channels without realizing that I have lapsed into this “mode.” My wife hates this behavior. Somehow, I think I am actually following what is happening on CNN headline news, the baseball game, G4TechTV, the weather channel, etc. Would you be willing to conclude that my preference for this style of television viewing suggests much about what type of television programming should be developed for adult males?

OK, I feel better now. Learning experiences do need to be more engaging. The race has not evolved to require unrelated sensory experiences.

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“Meta” Blogging

If you think about your own thinking, you are engaged in “metacognition.” What would you be doing if you blog about blogging?

NECC has become the focus of multiple bloggers and has taken the trouble to integrate some of this work through a centralized blog – EdWebBlogs. And, yes, entries from this blog were included.

So – I am blogging about a blog that blogs about some of my blogging. Will this generate an infinite loop?

Blog on!

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Teacher Selected Resources

NECC provides many views of technology use in schools. You can experience the perspective of vendors, research/policy scholars, and savvy teachers. In a way, this can be an exercise in “digital literacy.” Which sessions would you select if you were seeking classroom examples?

One of Cindy’s current projects is supported by Teaching American History grant. So — I end up selecting more sessions and examples from this category than might normally be the case

My 8:30 choice was a session with the title Travel Back in Time with Technology

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Wandering the outside aisles …

When I attend large trade shows, I try to take some time to explore what some of the smaller or startup companies have to offer. “Making it” in the educational software field is tough even if you have a great concept because it can be difficult to gain attention for your products.

Muzzy Lane Software offers a high end “simulation” (I would also classify this product as a simulation/strategy game) that allows history students to take on historical roles, make key decisions, and experience how such decisions might have influenced the course of history. The present game emphasizes WWII era European history. Running beneath the “video game” is a complex structure of rules and a proprietary engine (potentially allowing the adaptation of the technology to other scenarios or content domains.

history game image

The company web site offers a nice page with links to online information on quality education games.

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Context

Now for an old guy moment.

It is sometimes helpful to place present experiences in some type of context and understand the issues and values that shape current policy. You may be aware of the effort to generate a National Technology Plan. As a contribution to this planning effort, scholars from the Education Development Center Center for Children and Technology were asked to shape a A retrospective on 20 years of technology policy. An overview of some of their observations was reported at NECC. The report traces the evolution of present policy through various initiatives back to “A Nation At Risk.” Whatever their professional or political views, it appeared that the authors were quite careful to avoid being judgemental. However, the presenter was quite clear that reactions to the issues outlined in the document should be examined with an awareness of the value systems driving change. (My translation – we had to write as we did because we were paid to do so. We encourage you to take this document as a starting point and be as judgmental as you feel is necessary to accomplish something you feel is meaningful.)

By the way, the list of “influential position papers/reports” provided in this retrospective may be helpful to some (note to edtech graduate students outlining the intro for thesis or dissertation).

Seems to me, we are going in circles and my personal historical context places us back at the point at which we thought meeting individual needs through ILS applications that personalized drill activities was cool.

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You may not be interested in this work, but feel grateful someone is!

The question of whether or not anyone can show “technology works” comes up again and again. While many educators may assume someone must have already answered the question or not feel attending to the question is necessary, the question will not go away. Those committed to technology in schools owe their thanks to those researchers who are willing to take on this deceptively simplistic question.

I know enough about the associated issues to realize that I probably will never be able to do relevant work myself. It takes access to many schools, teachers, and students to even begin asking interesting questions. It takes having significant funding and probably working in certain parts of the country to have the necessary access.

I suggest you review the NECC paper provided by Bebell, O???Dwyer, Russell, & Seeley on this topic (NECC . In addition to providing new data, this paper does a nice job of explaining what is already known and why the question is so difficult for researchers to answer.

See also – inTASC Research on Technology Use and Student Achievement for additional related work.

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When (preservice) teachers blog

I try to attend Bernie Dodge’s sessions when I can because I admire how he has been able to generate significant ideas out of courses he teaches (e.g., webquests). I mean this comment in a positive way. My research and teaching concern the same general field of study, but I can’t say any class project I have ever generated has been the basis for any serious scholarship.

The presentation “when teachers blog” concerned work by Dodge and Molebash evaluating the blogs of preservice English and language teachers. The general rationale for exploring blogs with this group was based on the assumption that such students would be “pro” writing and may be positively influenced by the opportunity to eventually engage their own future students with this tool.

The activity of encouraging preservice teachers to blog has extended across two semesters to this point and has involved the collection of some data (activity level and questionnaire responses) and some basic “manipulations” (whether blogging and reading the blogs of others was voluntary or worth 10% of the course grade (see paper paper to be available). Response to the experience of blogging was positive, students felt quite capable of blogging, and there was increased activity with incentives.

Some of the ideas shared at the session were very interesting. The authors wanted to provide teachers an opportunity for reflection and noted changes in what teachers had to say as they became more experienced in their student teaching. The idea of “saving” a record of this part of one’s life is interesting. Following the presentation, the group became caught up in a discussion of concerns associated with blogs – what younger students might reveal that may endanger them, what preservice or practicing teachers may say about their private and professional experiences that may endanger their professional futures. For example, student teachers reflecting on frustrations with students, colleagues, supervisors may encounter repercussions. In my opinion, it is difficult and perhaps inappropriate for people who are passionate about what they do to separate their professional and personal lives. Perhaps, this is especially true for those just discovering and shaping a professional identify.


Current example.

It seems a sad trend that self-expression can also be self threatening (must be something in the constitution about this). I guess this means I should not post my pictures from last night’s excursion to “The Quarter.”

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