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Thursday, September 22, 2011
Comment on Why can't kids find Baghdad on the map
Reflection or response to Teaching Video (Sept 14)
Tuesday, September 20, 2011
Response to Johnson's article
Response to "Why can't kids find Baghdad on the map"
The issue of accessibility to technology and information has been a recurrent theme in a lot of our classes in the past couple of years. It has often become a debate on whether teaching and education should stay relatively the same, change completely and use all the resources that are at our fingertips, or to combine the two and make the best of both worlds. In my opinion, I think that for the time being, it is still important for us to approach education as a combination of the two teaching strategies. For some subjects, the textbook is still a useful resource - history is history, and math problems are math problems. However, with this in mind, we are now exposed to so many different ways to educate and engage our students in the subjects that we are teaching. I was glad that the article touched on the shift that has occurred for who/what the students depend on for knowledge. I believe that over the next decade or so, our role will change from being a "teacher" to a being a "facilitator". Yes, students have developed the skills of "searching, accessing, organizing/representing, and communicating" information (just as we did), but what are they truly looking at? Students now just have a far greater pool of information to sift through and find the relevant information that they are looking for - if they don't know what to search, or how to pick through the information, they will be lost in "cyber space". Although our role may change, students still need guidance and education on what information is accurate, relevant, etc - a lot of the students that i taught on my practicum believed that Wikipedia was the Holy Grail for information acquisition. With this being said, our role may be changing, but we are still guiding our students on how to "search, access, organize/represent, and communicate" information, just in a different way than we did when we were in high school. Unfortunately, the upcoming generation (and even my generation) has an attention span of a gnat. I believe that this is directly tied to our accessibility to information, as we can find any answer we want to almost any question that is posed in seconds...and then off to the next task. I think that the part that will stay the same in the classroom is the necessity to teach students that life outside of the classroom and typical teenage home-life is not just surfing the web, videogames and TV. Once they have left the school, there is (usually) a job out there waiting for them and it does not allow for this gnat-like attention span. Although I think it is important to use the technology available to us, it is just a tool to use the classroom...it doesn't change the other half of teaching that goes beyond the information/curriculum and helps prepare our students for the "real world".
Monday, September 19, 2011
Baghdad on a map
With regards to the article, I partially agree with what Geoff Johnson has to say. His comments regarding knowledge bring to light the fact that 50's, 60's and 70's education model was based heavily on the knowledge category of the cognitive domain. Specifically, when he says "my access to knowledge depended very much on my own teachers' access to and interpretation of knowledge." Knowledge has never been more accessible, not only because of the Internet, but also because of social networking that allows for knowledge to be spread globally almost instantaneously. Furthermore, current and future generations are not interested in knowing one thing but like to know how things are connected. This can be seen with Wikipedia, which connects pieces of information with other pieces of information, allowing one to broad knowledge about a subject. As Johnson notes, when he asked his son where Baghdad was, his son used Google Earth to not only find it on the globe, but also see what it looks like from an aerial and street view. Furthermore, links appeared that provided further information about Baghdad that a globe or atlas could not provide like “the latest news and reports from Baghdad, daily life in Iraq, elections, analysis of the Iraqi war, society and business.” This access allows us a greater understanding of the world as a whole. What Johnson begins to elude to is the fact that we as teachers need to address other categories within the cognitive domain: comprehension, application, analysis, synthesis and evaluation.
However, where I slightly disagree with Johnson is that information does still need to be taught and evaluated within the classroom. It is important for students to have a general base of knowledge they can rely on to comprehend, apply, analyse, synthesize and evaluate information. Google’s search engine lists websites in popularity, not in validity. That is to say, whichever site has been visited the most comes up first when you search that item on Google. Google does not, however, check the validity of the information being presented on that site in relation to what you have searched. This means that without a previous base of knowledge on the subject, an individual would be unable to discern if the information being presented is credible. A somewhat interesting example of this was from a few years ago when a British couple booked a flight online from London to Sydney, Nova Scotia rather than Sydney, Australia. Sydney, Australia is in the state of New South Wales, which when shortened is NSW, similar to the shortened form of Nova Scotia, NS (link: http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/uk_news/2172858.stm). Had they examined the information more closely and had knowledge of flights from London to Sydney, they would have realized that they had made a booking error by flying first to Canada and by checking that their connecting flight was on Air Canada. However, due to their reliance on the information the computer was presenting them, they booked the wrong flight. Though a somewhat obscure choice, it does show how reliance on “the computer or the internet knowing everything” can lead to mistakes being made. To allow for our students to achieve “higher-level thinking skills”, a basis of general knowledge is required.
As such, subject teachers are still required but must begin to expand their classroom and their teaching to include more categories within the cognitive domain. Sitting and listening to a teacher tell you facts that you can find in a book or online will fail to engage students. Rather a teacher that asks students to take information and apply it or evaluate it will help their students achieve those “higher-level thinking skills.” Instead of asking “where is Baghdad?,” a better question would be “why is Baghdad’s location within the Middle East so important and how does it’s alliance with the United States play into current U.S. foreign policy.” The issue with that question on a test is that it is so demanding that it either requires students to memorize a lot of information or use resources, like the internet or a peer reviewed article or text book, to answer it. The latter, though, has been deemed not to be allowable during a test or exam. If the current model were to change, the second question would show greater insight into a student’s true capabilities than knowing where Baghdad is on a map.
As well, I saw this YouTube video a few years ago at the Online Teaching and Learning Showcase that UVic put on. Thought it was relevant to this article.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-P2PGGeTOA4
Saturday, September 17, 2011
The Future of Textbooks?

Many US schools adding iPads, trimming textbooks
Many US public schools providing iPads to students, moving away from traditional textbooks
In this Aug. 23, 2011 photo, sophomore Lenny Thelusma, 16, checks out his new iPad as his mother, Tara Killion, looks on at Burlington High School in Burlington, Mass. Burlington is giving iPads this year to every one of its 1,000-plus high school students. Some classes will still have textbooks, but the majority of work and lessons will be on the iPads. (AP Photo/Elise Amendola)
HARTFORD, Conn. (AP) -- For incoming freshmen at western Connecticut's suburban Brookfield High School, hefting a backpack weighed down with textbooks is about to give way to tapping out notes and flipping electronic pages on a glossy iPad tablet computer.
A few hours away, every student at Burlington High School near Boston will also start the year with new school-issued iPads, each loaded with electronic textbooks and other online resources in place of traditional bulky texts.
While iPads have rocketed to popularity on many college campuses since Apple Inc. introduced the device in spring 2010, many public secondary schools this fall will move away from textbooks in favor of the lightweight tablet computers.
Apple officials say they know of more than 600 districts that have launched what are called "one-to-one" programs, in which at least one classroom of students is getting iPads for each student to use throughout the school day.
Nearly two-thirds of them have begun since July, according to Apple.
New programs are being announced on a regular basis, too. As recently as Wednesday, Kentucky's education commissioner and the superintendent of schools in Woodford County, Ky., said that Woodford County High will become the state's first public high school to give each of its 1,250 students an iPad.
At Burlington High in suburban Boston, principal Patrick Larkin calls the $500 iPads a better long-term investment than textbooks, though he said the school will still use traditional texts in some courses if suitable electronic programs aren't yet available.
"I don't want to generalize because I don't want to insult people who are working hard to make those resources," Larkin said of textbooks, "but they're pretty much outdated the minute they're printed and certainly by the time they're delivered. The bottom line is that the iPads will give our kids a chance to use much more relevant materials."
The trend has not been limited to wealthy suburban districts. New York City, Chicago and many other urban districts also are buying large numbers of iPads.
The iPads generally cost districts between $500 and $600, depending on what accessories and service plans are purchased.
By comparison, Brookfield High in Connecticut estimates it spends at least that much yearly on every student's textbooks, not including graphing calculators, dictionaries and other accessories they can get on the iPads.
Educators say the sleek, flat tablet computers offer a variety of benefits.
They include interactive programs to demonstrate problem-solving in math, scratchpad features for note-taking and bookmarking, the ability to immediately send quizzes and homework to teachers, and the chance to view videos or tutorials on everything from important historical events to learning foreign languages.
They're especially popular in special education services, for children with autism spectrum disorders and learning disabilities, and for those who learn best when something is explained with visual images, not just through talking.
Some advocates also say the interactive nature of learning on an iPad comes naturally to many of today's students, who've grown up with electronic devices as part of their everyday world.
But for all of the excitement surrounding the growth of iPads in public secondary schools, some experts watching the trend warn that the districts need to ensure they can support the wireless infrastructure, repairs and other costs that accompany a switch to such a tech-heavy approach.
And even with the most modern device in hand, students still need the basics of a solid curriculum and skilled teachers
Wednesday, September 14, 2011
Reflection or response to Teaching Video (Sept 14)
Reflection on Finding Bagdad on a Map article.
Response to 'Why can't kids find Baghdad on the map?'
What type of teacher do you want to be?
Do you agree or disagree with the article?
Additional comments?