Education is Not Rocket Science
Auteur : David B. Zandvliet
Date de publication : 2006-01-01
Ăditeur : BRILL
Nombre de pages : 99
Résumé du livre
The dominance of computer labs in our schools is the result of a long struggle among teachers and technicians for control of precious computer resources. As technicians gain power and influence, this is expressed in the ârow on row of machinesâ installed in literally thousands of computer labs in schools around the world. While labs are in some ways, ideal for learning about technology or computer programming, they somehow seem ill equipped to assist teachers with a lesson on language arts, geography or for helping students conduct a scientific experiment. As a result, the huge investment in computers seems like so much wasted potential: labs are not influencing teaching in the ways we had hoped for, and in fact, their use may even be harmful to students. These observations are based on five years of experience as the director of a centre for educational technology at a leading Canadian university and, on the results of three international studies I conducted in Australia, Canada and Malaysia. A reversal of the current âtechno- trendâ would mean teachers would reclaim computers for âtheir ownâ classrooms, and relegate the idea of the computer lab to the scrap heap of history. As educators, we need to discard the âonce size fits allâstrategy which computer labs imply about teachersâ instructional needs. This is reinforced by the apparent failure of computers to transform teachersâ practice despite significant investments in computer technologies. Some critics describe this as a âmanagement problemâ as computer labs reinforce âtop downâ ways of thinking about knowledge. Unfortunately, once such models are adopted, undesirable uses of technologyâsuch as the computer labâbecome entrenched in a bureaucratic mindset, limiting the effectiveness of these expensive tools to support teaching and learning.