Monday, October 20, 2014

Musings Prompted by Tom Ward's Talk


I have mixed feelings about Tom Ward's message. Tom himself is nice fellow and it was great he came and shared his ideas and experiences with us.

Ward cites the SAMR (Substitution Augmentation Modification Redefinition) model for enhancing technology integration as the theory behind his approach to using technology. This model was developed by Dr. Ruben Puentedura. Puentedura runs a consulting firm focused on IT in education. Here is the site. I plan to consider SAMR in a separate post. For now I will say that while the materials look comprehensive and persuasive, it also appears to be a case of backwards design, i.e., that the goal of using as much “technology” as possible in the classroom is stated at the beginning with all subsequent work being geared towards justifying this outcome.

It's not a bad direction in terms of popularity, job security, attention, “buzz”... Who wouldn't like it? Philanthropists will, investors (especially those who sell educational technology and software products), principals, parents, even teachers will jump on the bandwagon so as not to seem out of touch. Students of course will love it. Students are all about gadgets. We are all about gadgets. We love our gadgets. So anything that makes us feel our gadgets are wonderful, that there is nothing wrong with all the time we spend staring at screens, makes us feel wonderful about ourselves. This is what bothers me.

I do not blithely dismiss educational technology altogether. The notion of Technological Pedagogical Content Knowledge (TPACK), for instance, is a serious framework for understanding how to do learning + technology. But I keep going back to my first class in Teaching with Technology, where we learned about the history of technology in education—the way radio, film, you name it, was supposed to “transform” education but never quite lived up to what its proponents declared for it.

I attended to Ward's presentation trying to keep an open mind. But my skepticism could not be overcome. I found myself wondering about Vine and Viddy and other formats and the growing tendency to reduce everything to 8 seconds or 30 seconds or 140 characters, this notion that everything worthwhile can be expressed in 30 seconds or 140 characters. I agree with Ward that the ability to be concise, to strip away everything but what is essential, is a useful skill. “Imagine the depth of understanding at which students would need to know something to convey it is six seconds,” he remarked. There are some things, however, that are not containable in six seconds. There are some things that if you put them into 8 seconds, thirty seconds, or 140 characters will be destroyed or at least transformed (usually mutilated) completely. There are ideas and conversations, creations and collaborations that will never happen if the time and space for them to develop is cut short or limited.

I think as teachers, as adults, we should be trying to foster increased attention not decreased attention. We should encourage thoughtfulness, rumination, patience, and serenity. These and other thinking dispositions promote intellectual character. 

The grounds of Aleksander Pushkin's hereditary estate in Boldino, where the quite, contemplative atmosphere helped him create some of the most enduring works in Russian Literature.

I do not think that our students need any help going faster... here I pause, check my email and see the subject line “Life's Inhuman Pace,‏” today's update from The Chronicle Review: “Speed Kills: Fast is never fast enough,” by Mark C. Taylor, which begins:

 "Sleeker. Faster. More Intuitive" (The New York Times); "Welcome to a world where speed is everything" (Verizon FiOS); "Speed is God, and time is the devil" (chief of Hitachi’s portable-computer division). In "real" time, life speeds up until time itself seems to disappear—fast is never fast enough, everything has to be done now, instantly. To pause, delay, stop, slow down is to miss an opportunity and to give an edge to a competitor. Speed has become the measure of success—faster chips, faster computers, faster networks, faster connectivity, faster news, faster communications, faster transactions, faster deals, faster delivery, faster product cycles, faster brains, faster kids. Why are we so obsessed with speed, and why can’t we break its spell?...

Think carefully about who benefits from a speedy world: Big business. Multinationals. Forces wanting to sell us things, wanting us to never slow down to enjoy what we have. We give them our money and then throw away our time. Instead of enjoyment and satisfaction, all we can do is feed our addiction to speed and novelty.

And what about the forces who watch us? They like nothing better than see us all leave our digital footprints everywhere and at all times. Makes us that much easier to track, to control...

What are we becoming?

Ward turned things around at the very end, I though. His final reflections were perceptive when he critiqued his students' notion of, “the video is proof, why do we need the talking?” As an ELA teacher, I will make sure my students understand why they “need the talking,” and the writing, and the reading.



"I greet you, deserted corner of the earth. You are a calm refuge for labors and inspiration, a place Where the invisible rush of my days Streams through your lap of happiness and oblivion. […] I am yours. I love this dark garden, Its cool shade, its flowers, This meadow piled with fragrant haystacks. Where radiant brooks murmur in the shrubs..."

Pushkin, A. (1982) "The Countryside," (D. M. Thomas, Trans.),  
The bronze horseman: selected poems of Alexander Pushkin, 
Secker & Warburg. (original: 1819).

 

ДЕРЕВНЯ

Приветствую тебя, пустынный уголок,
Приют спокойствия, трудов и вдохновенья,
Где льется дней моих невидимый поток
На лоне счастья и забвенья.
[...]
Я твой: люблю сей темный сад
С его прохладой и цветами,
Сей луг, уставленный душистыми скирдами,
Где светлые ручьи в кустарниках шумят...


6 comments:

  1. John,

    I appreciate your considerate thoughts and skepticism on all of this. Although you pose a valid argument, I think I'd have to disagree with your approach to the information that is given to us.
    Focusing on what we are learning EDUC 504, and all the guest speakers, I do not think that they are trying to impose on our future teaching styles, only try to open some doors if we may come across a "teachers block" (equivocal to "writers block").
    When you say in the very beginning of your blog about the “goal of using as much ‘technology’ as possible”…I interpreted your feelings on this course as a forceful push towards technology in education. Unless I interpreted that wrong, I do not think Jeff or Rory are trying to say that "technology is the way."
    I believe, as in all of the classes of the Secondary MAC program, that these professors are trying to provide us with a tool-kit, and we can use them in any way we see fit. I know when I have to screw a nail into the wall, I get lazy and sometimes go for the hammer. Hey, it did its job, huh? BUT- the best way to put that nail in the wall, sometimes, if you stand there and physically screws it in with a Phillips.
    I'm hoping that analogy makes sense towards our program. I'm sure some of us are feeling the struggle (I know I am). Some of us think our professors are vapid and have no depth, which is disheartening. But the way I look at a class is through a big focus question...."Can I use this material in my future teaching and if so how?" I hope this thought helps you feel less brainwashed in this class.
    On a macroscopic scale, yes, technology and going faster is way is popular. But you have to look at it as this world, or this nation, has come a LONG way. If it weren't for basic technology, we'd still be hitting rocks together to start a fire so we can eat our deer meat. Do you think we'd have time for that with a HUGE Reflective Writing Task due at the end of the week? Ehhh...my answer is no. I really think you cannot pick and choose which technology is "OK" to be on board with. Every piece of technology, no matter how fast or how slow, all helps us in some way. Your bike that you use is a helpful piece of technology...thank god for that.
    And to end on a comment about Vine or using technology for students. I definitely agree that being concise is not always important and that these "ideas and conversations, creations and collaboration... will never happen if the time and space for them to develop is cut short or limited." However, the use of vine and twitter and other applications is not going to be the ONLY curriculum. I think the purpose of using those are two-fold: 1) Relating to the technology that students have mastered/use faily 2)teaching a specific skill of as outlined in the (possibly) the following Common Core State Standards:
    CCSS.ELA-LITERACY.W.11-12.3: Write narratives to develop real or imagined experiences or events using effective technique, well-chosen details, and well-structured event sequences.
    CCSS.ELA-LITERACY.W.11-12.3.D: Use precise words and phrases, telling details, and sensory language to convey a vivid picture of the experiences, events, setting, and/or characters.
    I'm sure someone who plans to be an E/LA teacher might find the use of such technology and brevity if you're going to be grading 100's of assignments. Maybe ONE of them can be an 8-second video clip that summarizes Romeo & Juliet. This may be an important way to show how your students can take a large, complicated text and break it down in their own ways. That skill will be incredibly important in the future, especially if they plan to attend college. Hopefully the skills will be transferred!
    I hope you found my comment as thoughtful as your blog. Let me know what you think, or if you have any concerns.
    Your fellow teacher-in-the-making,
    Anthony

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    1. Dear fellow teacher-in-the-making Anthony!
      Thank you for your thoughtful, sincere response! Your points are excellent. You made me look back carefully at what I had written... (“did I really say... THAT?!”) On some points, I'm not sure I did. For example, I'm curious where you got the idea I was suggesting that, “they are trying to impose on our future teaching styles.” I don't. People have good intentions in our MAC world. Everyone involved wants us to be the best teachers we can be. Besides you can't have a teacher training program without an Ed Tech component. And I think ours is excellent. And I'm a little sorry I picked Tom Ward's talk to unload. But the SAMR thing pushed me over the edge. That's just me. Some people gush about technology. I ain't gonna gush. I think it's changing us. And changing us too fast. Already we read differently. Speak differently. Communicate differently. So I'm throwing up barricades until I'm sure the way we think as humans won't irrevocably become like a the trailer for the latest action blockbuster. And I personally don't think of technology as a “cure for teacher's block.” As a teacher, I look to technology to be there to allow me to better realize what I have ALREADY decided to do. Technology should facilitate the process, make it faster, easier... some adjective in the comparative degree. But maybe you also mean, “allow us to do what we envision (better),” rather than waiting for technology to deliver us from any “teacher blocks” (in the form of WHAT do I do?, as opposed to HOW might I do it?) we may have. If so, we are in agreement!

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  2. Mr. Hill,

    You are not alone in your skepticism of technology's integration into the classroom, it's potential impacts on learning, and its burgeoning prevalence in today's society.

    Like you, I walked away from Mr. Ward's presentation with mixed feelings. I recognize the positive opportunities that technological applications—Viddy and Vine, to use your examples—present teachers today, but my hesitation stems from the potential costs.

    Life is full of trade-offs, and teaching is no exception. As teachers, we are governors of trade-offs; we try to maximize the good and minimize the bad in our instruction. But if, as you say, the world is speeding up and technology is helping, to which I completely agree, how are we able to identify which is good and which is bad? Or are we simply suppose to abandon applications and methods of old for the newest and greatest gadget and technologies that come out? I would argue no.

    I greatly appreciated your words:
    "There are ideas and conversations, creations and collaborations that will never happen if the time and space for them to develop is cut short or limited.

    I think as teachers, as adults, we should be trying to foster increased attention not decreased attention. We should encourage thoughtfulness, rumination, patience, and serenity. These and other thinking dispositions promote intellectual character."

    It is difficult to believe that the valued characteristics and qualities you described above can be effectively developed in this speed-craved and attention reducing world in which we and our students live, especially when we are investing in our dependencies on our impersonal gadgets.

    I want to thank you for introducing me to some Russian literature within this blog post. The short excerpt from Pushkin's "The Countryside" is beautiful. This text, to me, was like the anitdote of speed. Texts like this need to be read slowly, with attention and openness if you hope to share in its meaning. Your future students will be blessed to have a teacher like you who will slow their lives down, even for a moment, through texts such as this from Pushkin. I would also encourage you to think about taking your students outdoors. There are no plug ins there.

    If you are looking for another angle on this idea of speed, technology, and its potential impact on the upcoming generations, take a look at these two books by Richard Louv:
    - "The Last Child in the Woods: Saving our Children from Nature-Deficit Disorder"
    - "The Nature Principle: Reconnecting with Life in a Virtual Age"

    I think their titles speak for themselves so I will not elaborate.

    Again, thank you for your thoughtful post. Although technologies can positively impact the learning environment, I am hesitant to simply give my full allegiance. Time, I think we'd both agree, is a necessary ingredient in the development of our students, their thoughts, and character. We can give them that.

    Best,
    Jesse

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    1. Mr. Antuma,

      What a kind, appreciative response! And thanks for the book titles. Last Child had been on my radar for a while, but The Nature Principle is new for me. What a wonderful thing it would be to read them both right now! (or perhaps one at a time). Sadly they would have to get in line and occupy spaces number 37 and 38 of “books I would love to be reading if I weren't doing MAC assignments all the time. Right behind Burton's Anatomy of Melancholy. All 500 pages...

      Glad you like the Pushkin. I went to that place in the pictures, Boldino, in October (fall was Pushkin's favorite season) 1997. It was... ideally contemplative.

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    2. PS. That poem by Pushkin is quite interesting. I wanted to convey my idea of thoughtfulness, which is what I felt when I went to Boldino, so I found some pictures of it that looked like what I saw there, and a few lines of verse. Actually, Pushkin wrote “The Countryside” at his OTHER hereditary estate, Mikhailovskoe, but that's not all that important. What is uncanny is this poem I picked just for the opening lines—when I read through the whole thing, it's about 60 lines—supported my point in the post in a different way. The first two stanzas are about the peacefulness of the countryside. The poet appreciates the calm contemplativeness he finds remarking, “here I am freed from the shackles of the rat race.” (My translation here, and not an ideal one of, “Я здесь, от суетных оков освобожденный,” does not quite capture the conceit—typical for romantic-era poets and very common in Pushkin—that “the murmur of the unenlightened masses,” really gets him down). OK, so this is a little elitist, I'll grant you, but Pushkin then heads off in a truly progressive direction. Those shackles foreshadowed the real theme of the poem: the enslavement of the serfs. The rest of the poem presents a graphic picture of this exploitation ending with the poet wondering if he'd see an end to oppression. (He didn't. Pushkin died of his wounds from a duel in 1837, and the serfs were emancipated by by Tsar Alexander II in 1861—two years before Lincoln's Emancipation Proclamation).

      Anyway, as I wrote in the post, for me the problem with our technology addiction is more than just wasting a lot of time on some pretty mindless stuff. I suspect something more sinister: the enslavement of our minds as we give up our ability to engage in critical reflection, thinking in depth, being satisfied with our own cogitations and ruminations and not having other's thoughts—if that's what you want to call the shallow images and appeals to our basest insticts we expose ourselves to constantly—installed as mental junk food into our brains like computer viruses.

      Exploitation.

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  3. Great post, John. This has been a very well thought-out entry, and a good read. Your skepticisms are also similar to some of my own when it comes to technology. While technology can be a valuable tool, it is often overused for things teachers could do on their own, with a chalkboard or a white board.

    A mix of new and old would be the best for our classrooms, I believe. Students live in a world where technology and the newest gadgets are incredibly important; as teachers, we cannot simply ignore this. I'm not arguing that it is right, but it is unavoidable that some students will learn better if the newer technology that is prevalent in their home and social lives is incorporated to some extent into some lessons. John Dewey argued that students are learning, basically, to be social beings, members of the community in which they live, in school. Technology, too, factors into this...they need to learn to use it in smarter ways, rather than just as distractions from life in the present. Something I really love in my placement is my mentor teacher's cell phone policy. Cells are super beneficial to quickly and accurately looking up translations of single words, their genders, or how to make them plural...thus, whenever a student is clearly off task with their phone, they get the "make your dumb phone into the smart phone it was intended to be" lecture. And it has actually been working.

    Although some people are entirely gung-ho about every new technology that could be adapted for education, like you, I think it is best to think critically about exactly which new gadgets will be used in the classroom, and how. While technology itself doesn't simply transform education, certain types of tech in the hands of the right teacher used at the right times can, I believe, be used in such a way to transform education at least in our own classrooms.

    Thanks so much for your post, John!

    Happy Sunday!

    Kelsey

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