Research offers a way to start conversations that can affect educational reform. Considerations on Technology and Teachers is a collection of some of the best research articles from the Journal of Research on Technology in Education (JRTE) over the past five years. JRTE editor Lynne Schrum and the editorial review board chose these articles because they provide context about where we have been and how we should be moving forward, both in research and in practice. Topics include the impact of project-based learning on teachers' technology use, e-portfolios in teacher education, and the outcomes of a campus 1-to-1 laptop program. At the conclusion of each article, the original authors reflect on their study, examine the landscape since their research was published, and provide suggestions for further study.
These are some of the big issues that the world is focusing on in 2008. The Global Education website invites you (students, and teachers too) to develop a visual response to one of these issues.
How can children lead productive and satisfying lives in the 21st century if in school we are having them use technology from the 20th century? The hallmark of the 21st century global workplace is the computer. According to a recent Pew Internet and American Life Project study, "The Digital Disconnect: The Widening Gap between Internet-Savvy Students and Their Schools," students spend 27 hours a week online at home and an average of 15 minutes a week at school. Students are not using computers to any appreciable degree in school because district leaders are not providing computers to students to any appreciable degree.
Activities: Students research and construct a time line that stars from the
middle of the 19th century and projects into to the near future. Appropriate
pictures will be drawn or placed on the time line to help emphasize historical
facts that include scientific discoveries, industrial applications, and current
events that may be related.
This activity might be best in small groups. It will give an opportunity for diverse learners to succeed and express their views in a non-threatening environment.
Students will research and construct a pamphlet that includes: symptoms of
disease, genetic causes of disease, genetic testing, population/risk, possible
treatment, genetics screening techniques, cost, social and ethical
implication.
The links above are fantastic - I can see a million possibilites with this task.
Students will use one or all games to review basic information and Punnett
Square problems. These games use soccer, basketball and the game show idea deal
or no deal.
Activities: Students research and construct a time line that stars from the
middle of the 19th century and projects into to the near future. Appropriate
pictures will be drawn or placed on the time line to help emphasize historical
facts that include scientific discoveries, industrial applications, and current
events that may be related
I am amazed at how much I have already learned in a month. Kimberly won't always be our instructor, but hopefully we will know where to find technological help from now on.
to create connections with others which extend our learning
Creating a connection with our students should be a main priority. Furthermore, class blogs will provide a safe environment for our students to ask questions and take advantage of technology
To see what controls are available from the major cellphone companies, click to "What Mobile carriers need to do for kids" (see also ConnectSafely's "Cell-Phone Safety Tips"). [See also the New York Times on how 3G or smartphones are taking off and how 71% of women make the decision about their family's wireless choices, including phones and service plans.]
ust because they crave attention? Why do teens post such personal information online for all the world to see?
Mimi Ito, one of the principal investigators of the Digital Youth project. Of particular interest to parents concerned about teen social networkers' safety are findings by C.J. Pascoe mentioned by Dr. Ito, for example that: "Contrary to common fears, flirting and dating are almost always initiated offline in the traditional settings where teens get together and extended online. Her work clearly shows there's a strong social norm among teens that the online space isn't a place to find new romantic partners, but a place to deepen and explore existing offline relationships." Exceptions: marginalized teens "whose romantic partners are restricted for cultural or religious reasons" and gay and lesbian teens (the latter are "not reaching out online for random social encounters but using the expanded possibilities online selectively to overcome limitations they're facing" in their offline social networks); and the very small percentage of teens most at risk of sexual exploitation