Tech Battles

Technology has the potential to be my saving grace or my greatest down fall when it comes to student learning in the classroom.  It just depends on the day…literally.you-v-tech

Challenge 1: What technology?

Coming from a poor, rural school district there simply isn’t the funds to provide adequate technology access for every child.  I am in a school of almost 800 students.  We currently have 2 mobile labs.  There are 25 computers in each mobile lab.  Class sizes are typically 28-32 sometimes up to 40…yes, 40.  The numbers don’t add up.  I would love to use more technology with my students but there just isn’t enough to go around in our high school. Luckily, my department has saved enough money to purchase our own mobile lab. That has helped tremendously.  I do have a Promethean Board and laptop.   However, I have never received any training on how to best utilize the board. Needless to say, I use it mainly as a projection screen.  I’m embarrassed.  Sad…but true.

Our school building is divided by subject areas.  Science and math share a long hallway with 12 classrooms on it.  That hallway has only 60 wireless spots available.  If all the mobile labs and the iPads that other departments have are in use on the hallway, we all can’t access the internet.  This becomes a problem during testing, which is the time that you don’t want any technology problems.

In science, computers aren’t the only technology.  Lab equipment is critical in learning science fundamentals.  If we can’t get laptops, we definitely can’t afford proper lab equipment.  I would love to have an autoclave, a gel electrophoresis, centrifuge, and high tech sensors to measure environmental differences but this just isn’t going to happen.  There is only so much I can substitute and “make do” with to give my students real lab experience. They leave high school at a severe disadvantage when heading to upper level science courses.

I am saddened that there is not enough technology to go around in my school to give our students the opportunity to explore the advantages of learning through technology.

Challenge 2: I am the student. They are the teacher.

My students have taught me more about technology than any workshop I have ever been to.  When I give project assignments and let my students create a finished product using their best skills, I am completely amazed.  I have students in my class that cut and edit music at home and others that create video games.  They teach me how to use the technology.

…Maybe one of the can show me how to use the Promethean board.

Challenge 3: NO CELL PHONES

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Our school district has very strict rules about cell phone use.  Students are allowed to have cell phones but they must not be on or visible. That request is laughable I know.  When dealing in a world of twitter, texting, and snapchat, how can you really enforce this?  Yes, it makes my blood boil when a student thinks they are being slick and tries to text during my class. But I understand that this is a different generation of kids.  They have grown up being connected to the world.  If they have a mini computer in their pocket, why can’t I let them use it?

Challenge 4: When do I use it?

This challenge I think is the trickiest.  Knowing when and how to use technology to make the learning process more meaningful is a struggle.  I don’t want to use technology to just say I’m using it.  What’s the point?!  I want to use it to empower my students learning.  Not just as an add-on to the lesson, but letting it be real instruction.  I am still in the beginning stages of figuring this out.

Challenge 5: He’s a French model.

edu59Everything on the internet is not true.  It’s hard for kids to understand this.  Heck, it’s hard for me to decipher quality information sometimes. I tell my students to check their sources and research the topic on multiple sites. I use the  the State Farm Internet Commercial as an example with my kids where the woman says “They can’t put anything on the internet that’s not true”. Not so. Her date is definitely not a French model.

 

1 thought on “Tech Battles

  1. asolano

    All great insights but challenge 5 is close to my heart because as a former newspaper reporter you have to check your sources and Wikipedia is not the best one. But there are too many people out there who believe it to be true.

    Also that commercial cracks me up.

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