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Teaching Profession Teacher Leaders Network

The Time-Tested Dos and Don鈥檛s of Using Classroom Technology

By Paul Barnwell 鈥 February 12, 2013 4 min read
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The choices are endless. Should I set up a class blog or a Twitter account? Should I use ? Test out cell phone use in the classroom? How about ? ?

Throughout my nine years in the classroom, I鈥檝e been eager to test out possibilities for improving teaching and learning through technology use. It鈥檚 a messy process. Back in February 2010, I broadcast my eagerness to use cell phones in the classroom in 91制片厂视频 Week. Then I changed my stance, arguing in May 2012 that too much social media and gimmicky technology application in the classroom could lead teachers to neglect teaching students substantial skills.

Since then, I鈥檝e tested out Edmodo and continued to explore. After years of experimentation and reflection, here鈥檚 my current take on smart鈥攁nd not-so-smart鈥攚ays to use technology in the classroom:

Do: Teach students and simple editing. With these skills, students can capture and set up their own images to create authentic digital stories and presentations using , iMovie, Photostory, and other programs. , in which Will interviewed a classmate to create an audio slideshow profile of his involvement in our school鈥檚 Reserve Officer Training Corp (ROTC).

顿辞苍鈥檛: Rely heavily on Google image search or other copy-and-paste solutions for presentations. Yes, searching for appropriate images takes a little bit of effort. But it鈥檚 too easy, and doesn鈥檛 promote creative problem solving.

Do: Use Google Drive. I model the usefulness of a cloud-based service, showing the students how I update my lesson plans daily on Google Drive. I ask them how often they have misplaced a flash drive. Most hands shoot up. Before long, many students begin using Google Drive for other classes and assignments.

顿辞苍鈥檛: Allow students to give the excuse that they accidentally left their flash drives at home, resulting in the inability to work on a writing piece or presentation. With cloud-based services, students simply don鈥檛 need a flash drive to work on a variety of computer-based assignments. Few students lack internet access at home or on their phones, and we must teach students to take advantage of this more efficient approach.

Do: Use old-fashioned note cards for exit cards, four-corner discussion, and other 鈥渙ld-fashioned鈥 methods to gather real-time data about student understanding.

顿辞苍鈥檛: Let yourself get suckered into online polling programs or other digital tools to simply check for understanding or complete other formative assessments. I鈥檝e found this to be inefficient. Sometimes paper or verbal communication should trump the allure of using technology.

Do: Promote fluency, discussion, and presentation skills by having students use their cell phones or flip video cameras to record conversations, narratives, speeches, and other class assignments. For example, when my students are editing and revising, I ask them to record themselves with voice memo tools on cell phones, reading their writing aloud.

顿辞苍鈥檛: Rely so heavily on technology tools that speaking and listening skills go by the wayside. It鈥檚 too easy to engage students with a screen. Most teachers and parents of teenagers know how quickly they default to texting, chatting, and other communication that is filtered through a screen. Don鈥檛 over-use fragmented, text-based digital communication when you can use the same tools to enhance and critique more 鈥渢raditional鈥 skills relating to extended writing pieces, interviewing, and speaking.

Do: Encourage students to make phone calls when researching information or contacting sources outside the classroom. Having real-time conversations requires non-filtered verbal communication skills, an area in which many students struggle. (This tip is for teachers, too, considering how inefficient emails can be in day-to-day school operations.)

顿辞苍鈥檛: Teach students to rely on texting and email when gathering information. Too often, the lag time hinders efficient planning, useful conversation, and data collection.

Do: Use or other screen-capture video software to model complicated instructions. This software records all key strokes and audio鈥攊f you choose to speak鈥攚hen you are modeling a task or directions on a computer. For example, when I begin teaching students how to edit audio using Garageband, as I move files and make commands, then I鈥檒l post the video file to the class Edmodo page for future reference.

顿辞苍鈥檛: Expect students to remember multi-step instructions with new software, apps, or programs. Anything beyond the one-step status update requires a model for students to refer back to, which is why Jing comes in handy, saving you constant nagging by students about how to do something.

As technology continues to evolve, there is no doubt I鈥檒l revise this list, utilizing, reflecting, and revising my practice. There鈥檚 so much out there鈥攖oo many ideas to try鈥攂ut these guidelines are serving me well. What am I missing? Any other 鈥渄os鈥 and 鈥渄on鈥檛s鈥 that you鈥檝e found effective in your classroom?

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