This document discusses strategies for integrating technology into teaching. It recommends five strategies: 1) Classroom blogging, which allows students to become publishers and fosters introspection; 2) Using technology for research and problem-solving to develop information literacy skills; 3) Using digital media like photos to enhance visual learning; 4) Having students collect and organize their knowledge into databases, wikis or blogs to provide their own scaffolding; and 5) Using targeted drill and practice software to be effective when it provides feedback and connections to the real world are made. The document emphasizes that technology should enhance and improve instruction, accommodate access issues, and foster discovery and constructivist learning through higher-order thinking.
10. Too many times,
what’s done on a computer is
inauthentic.
Quality learning must connect
to the real world to make a lasting impression
on the lives of learning children.
15. This is easy to do—for students, and for
teachers.
Students become publishers.
With RSS, blogs are easy to handle
administratively.
Blogging is at once social but also fosters
introspection and self-evaluation.
18. The future is content that is imperfect that
requires scrutiny... so—
Teach students skills in information
literacy by conducting research online +
Use the power of collective intelligence
that the Internet provides.
19. Have students construct their own new
knowledge by finding it.
Use technology (hardware + software) as
one or more tools to solve problems,
answer questions, or enlighten
perspectives.
21. Digital photography, and
stock photo sources make
finding visual media easier
than ever before in the history
of humankind.
It takes longer than writing words,
but we are visual animals,
and many of our students learn
well visually.
25. Where do we put
Information?
Do you forget things? (I do)
What would happen if we cataloged,
or collected our knowledge, so we
could browse it later?
26. What’s the Idea?
Use technology to help students
provide their own scaffolding by
collecting and organizing the
products of their knowledge.
Databases, wikis, blogs, digital
portfolios
29. Is drill and practice software effective?
What do others say?
30. Drill & Practice
Is most effective when:
it’s targeted for students who require
practice, but who are also self-motivated
the software provides feedback
connections are made by the teacher for
the student from the software to the real
world
32. Integration
National, State, and Local Mandates
Access
Change!—Professional Development
Effectiveness of Technology
33. Which
Strategies?
Something easy
Something that accommodates access
issues
Something that is based in sound
educational/pedagogical theory
Something that targets discovery,
constructivist learning, and higher-
order Blooms
34. 5 Strategies
Classroom Blogging
Research and Problem-Solving
Let Me See It
Let Us Collect
Practice Makes... Perfect