Filed under: ICT in Teaching and Learning
Ewan McIntosh summarises an address by the University of Bristol’s Angela MacFarlane. I’ll quote his summary in full becaue it’s short and because it resonates with so much of my current thinking and where I want to go with the idea of technology-enabled learning.
Teachers will never have the time that the experts in the classroom – the kids – will have to get to the bottom of the possible uses of technology. These handheld learning opportunities will change drastically the way that we teach. But they change things in the same ways as social media does, too:
- The curriculum needs to accommodate the attitude that the approach to learning is the learner’s responsibility.
- Projects allow students not only to access content but also to create their own media and share it – lessons are planned around reception and publishing of information.
- There is an initial “speculate to accumulate” with technology. Once the uses of the devices or social media have been explored there is more time (than before?) for wider and deeper learning.
- Mobile devices integrate with other technologies – IWBs, software… Social media interacts with these ‘traditional’ new technologies, too.
Doug Brown finishes off the session by outlining what I was chatting with Derek about at the break: all this goes against the grain of the curriculum and the people who created it, who themselves did not have experiences with this kind of learning. They are afraid and, if they fail to grasp what is going on, they have every reason to be afraid.”
My emphasis is always on the learner experience, so I was particularly struck by Ewan’s observation that “all this goes against the grain of the curriculum and the people who created it”.
During the two years I spent in an FE college, my two deepest frustrations were:
- the curriculum
- the requirement to teach to the test
As a trainer with some 10 years’ experience by then, I felt up to the task of identifying learner needs and providing learning that would meet them. I also objected to the notion of teaching a person to pass a test rather than equipping them to exercise a new skill independently of me. It didn’t take me long to move back into the business sector, where these strictures were removed (and replaced, I guess, by ROI).
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