The document discusses how the learning styles of today's students have been shaped by growing up in a technology-rich environment. It argues that educators need to recognize this and incorporate technology into their teaching methods to better engage students. Specifically, it provides examples of how tools like podcasts, online exchanges, and video resources can help bring foreign languages and cultures to life in the classroom. It also suggests that technology can act as an "equalizer" and that students themselves are a valuable resource for teaching teachers about new educational technologies.
2. Connecting to the 21st-Century Student
Students Teach Technology to Teachers
Word Up: Bring the World's Languages to Your
Classroom
Conclusion
References
3. “There's something about changing over to an electronic
medium, something about that screen. It's psychological. It's a
generational thing. Teachers in every strata of education are
increasingly dealing with a student population that is not only
more wired than they are but also grew up in a techno-
drenched atmosphere that has trained them to absorb and
process information in fundamentally different
ways(McHugh).”
•Educational methods of the past are no longer all functional
and effective with today’s youth. They have learned to absorb
information in a completely new way, and we as educators
must recognize and reciprocate that.
4. Focus is on the methods of
information absorption in this new
21st century generation
Today’s brains shaped by
information streams – ‘memes’
The MEdia Generation
Teachers must compete with
distractions of multimedia
A need for a change in study
methods withing the classroom
Not just standardized test prep with
Q&A, but technology would allow
for interaction
Collaborative learning
5. Idea that this generation is a
“mix-and-match” one
Like their options
Using technology like wikis,
podcasts, and blogs does hand
some control to the students
Generation of micromanagers
Important that the use of these
technologies is monitored
Safety
Educational effectiveness
involving
6. “The goal of GenYES is not simply to help schools integrate technology
in a collaborative way. Harper believes his organization can facilitate
greater equality and access for students of diverse circumstances. "On
the Internet, the poorest student in the world has the same resources as
Bill Gates's kids," Harper says. "Ready access to technology, he adds, is
"an equalizer, a leveler (Cruickshank, 2008).”
“Harper makes it a point to always ask teachers whether they prefer
learning from students or adults. Ninety-eight percent of the teachers
ranked their student partner's support as being of high quality. They
went into teaching, the teachers tell Harper, "because we like to work
with kids(Cruicksharnk, 2008)."
7. Idea that schools consist of 92% students and 8% teachers
Chances are, the students have more knowledge of technology
Teachers enjoy learning from the students more than
from workshops with adults
Participation is key
8. Technology is an equalizer
A poor child has the same resources via the web as
would a wealthy child
Responsibility is what kids need
Technology is a tool to teach responsibility
Education is essential
Trust in the youth
Next generation is always the hope of the future
9. I love the idea that technology can be an equalizer. Not only
an equalizer amongst children, but an equalizer amongst
teachers and students. To give students the opportunity to
be involved and have responsibility gives them something
that is experiential rather than just regurgitation. In my
opinion, students of this MEdia generation are more
knowledgeable in technology because they’re more apt to
experiment. They click around until they find what they
need. Some who are not as familiar with technology are too
timid to take charge and discover what technology has to
offer. Allow the students to reveal the resources to the
teachers and do the “clicking-around” in a sense, and then
let the teachers utilize the resources within the classroom.
Both feel equally involved in the progress and the students
become more likely to participate.
10. •“One of the biggest challenges for foreign language teachers
is to expose their students to authentic speech by native
speakers. Another is to immerse them in the culture of the
language they're studying when that culture may be half a
world away. But in our expanding digital age, it's increasingly
easy to connect live with overseas students, find related
videos and audio clips, and discover examples of living
language online -- all free(Weir, 2008).”
•“The Internet has made accessing authentic materials and
interacting with native speakers an everyday occurrence in
many schools across the country,“ It has really brought the
world into our classrooms(Weir, 2008)."
11. Technology: bringing
people together from
different sides of the
globe
Wikis, chat, live feed,
blogs, podcast,
Access to foreign news,
weather, reports
Ability to hear native
speakers and dialogues
Form overseas
friendships
12. Speaking and reading a language is different from
hearing a language spoken at its native speed
Podcasts allow students to repeatedly hear a language
ePals-program that generates electronic pen pals,
faster, more reliable results
Technology is revolutionizing the way we learn
language
13. Learning a language usually begins with basic vocabulary and
cultural knowledge. A set of skills for students made
standard by the state is that the students can regurgitate
basic grammar laws and define or translate the language to
their own. However, another skill, possibly even a more
useful one, is conversational skills. Being able to
understand a native speaker of a language can be essential
in language education. With all of the tools technology is
providing, the importance of translating and
communication will expand. Hopefully, language
education can transfer from just a regurgitation of sorts to
a more conversational, real world skill with the help of
things like podcasts, Skype, e-Pals, and audio aides.
14. To conclude, I see the responsibility of integrating
technology into the class as both the teachers’ and the
students’. It is the students’ responsibility to be
responsible with the technology available to them. It is
the teachers’ responsibility to make themselves aware
of what resources can truly impact the classroom and
education experience. Technology is meant to aide and
enhance. This new generation is keenly aware of the
resources available to them, and teachers should
recognize that by incorporating the learning tools of
this MEdia Generation, students range of learning and
understanding is broadened.
15. Cruickshank, D. (2008, April). Dennis Harper:
Harnessing student-led tech support. Edutopia .
McHugh, J. (n.d.). Connecting to the 21st-Century
Student. Edutopia .
Weir, L. (2008, March 11). Word Up: Bring the World's
Languages to Your Classroom. Edutopia .