How Does Technology Facilitate Learning?
How Does Technology Facilitate Learning?
FACILITATE LEARNING?
LEARNING FROM TECHNOLOGY
Educational technologies have been traced historically to illustrations
in 17th century, books and slate chalkboard in 18th century classrooms.
Educational technologies in 2oth century include first lantern-slide
projectors, later radio and then motion pictures. And the
development of educational television in the 1950s and 1960s. During
the same period, programmed instruction emerged as the first true
educational technology, that is the first technology developed
specifically to meet educational needs.
So information was embedded in the technology examples are the
content presented by films and TV programs
The students’s role was to learn the information presented by the
technology, just as they learned information presented by the
teacher. The role of the technology was to deliver lessons to students,
just as trucks deliver groceries to supermarkets(Clark,1993)
The introduction of modern computer technologies in classroom followed
the same pattern of use. Before the advent of microcomputers in the
1980s, main-frame computers were used to deliver drill and practice and
simple tutorials for teaching students lessons. When microcomputers
began populating classrooms, the natural inclination was to use them in
the same way. In 1983 national survey of computers uses showed that drill
and practice was the most common use of microcomputers (Becker, 1985)
Later in the 1980s, educators began to perceive the importance of
computers as productivity tools. The growing popularity of word
processing, databases, spreadsheets, graphic programs, and desktop
publishing were enabling business to become more productive. This tool
concept pervaded computer uses according to a 1993 study by Hadley and
Sheingold. They showed that well- informed teachers were extensively
using text processing tools, analytic and information tools, and graphic
tools.
The development of inexpensive multimedia computers and the
eruption of the Internet in the mid-1990s quickly changed the
nature of educational computing.
Our conception of educational computing and technology use,
described below, does not conceive of technologies as teachers.
Rather, we believe that in order to learn, students should be
teachers, representing what they know rather than memorizing
what teachers and textbooks tell them.
Technologies provide rich and flexible media for presenting what
students know and what they are learning. A great deal of research
on computers and other technologies has shown that they are no
more effective at teaching students than teachers, but if we begin
to think about technologies as learning tools that learn with, not
from then the nature of students learning will change.
LEARNING with TECHNOLOGY
The ways that we use technologies in schools should change rom technology-as-teacher
to technology-as-partner in the learning process. Students do not learn from
technology, they learn from thinking. Technologies can engage and support thinking
when students llearn with technology.
How skilled are students at setting their own agendas and pursuing them?
Many students believe in their roles as passive recipients. However, our experience
and the experience of every researcher and educator involved with every technology
project described in this book show that most students readily accept those
responsibolities.
When given the opportunity, students of all ages readily experiment
with technologies, articulate their own beliefs, and construct, co-
construct, and criticize each other's ideas. When learners are allowed
to assume ownership of the product, they are diligent and persevering
builders of knowledge.