The role of
education should be to prepare students to enter the global community and
economy. Over the past twenty years or
so, the advances in technology have led to great changes across the world. As Scott McLeod explains, the job market in the United States has
shifted from manual labor and cognitive labor jobs to upper end service and
creative end jobs. This means that
workers need to be able to analyze and problem solve, not simply reiterate
facts that can otherwise be looked up on the internet. The advances in technology also allow for
greater collaboration amongst people throughout the world via e-mail, video
conferencing, Skype, and social media such as Facebook and LinkedIn. For these reasons, the structure of education
needs to change to fit the evolving world.
In addition to
the wiki, I have been trying to incorporate other new technologies into the
classroom. As part of my technology
implementation plan, I created a pre-assessment survey on exponential functions
through Survey Monkey and exit tickets through Socrative. I created discovery activities on exponential
functions through the use of graphing calculators and the graphing calculator
app on the iPad. Students will be
creating their own videos through Educreations explaining a problem to their
classmates. In addition, I will be
having my classes create a virtual poster or Keynote/PowerPoint presentation
displaying what they learned about a real world application of exponential
functions of their choosing. They will
be working collaboratively with a group to create this project, much like the
experiences they will likely be having after they leave high school.
Admittedly, I
was skeptical of integrating technology as much as I have, mostly because I
didn’t know how to use technology effectively.
By no means would I call myself an expert, but I am beginning to feel
more comfortable and my students are becoming more
acclimated to the use of technology in the classroom. Will Richardson writes, “Instead of simply
handing in countless assignments to teachers to be read, graded, handed back,
and most likely thrown away, we can now offer our students a totally new way of
looking at the work they do. It’s not
meant for the teacher or the class or even the school. It’s meant for the world – literally”
(Richardson, 153-4). With blogs and social media being so prevalent and easy to
use, anyone can be a content creator. I think this is something important we
can all teach our students, especially to help prepare them to be the best that
they can be when they enter college and the job market.
Resources:
McLeod,
S. (2010). Tedxasb - Scott Mcleod - 2/25/10 [Web]. Retrieved from
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-yA6oTU1emM&feature=youtu.be
Richardson, W. (2010). Blogs, wikis, podcasts, and other
powerful web tools for classrooms. (3rd ed.). Corwin Press.
Schrum,
L., & Levin, B. B. (2010). Leading 21st-century schools, harnessing
technology for engagement and achievement. Corwin Press.

