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Entries from December 1, 2009 - December 31, 2009

Saturday
Dec122009

Old folks and technology

We’re so far behind our students. How do we catch up and move past them so that we can then teach them things they don’t know?

When I read this quote from a teacher in Dangerously Irrelevant, I was just plain saddened. How has it come to pass that teachers no longer recognize that there are values, skills and understandings that they already bring to the classroom that are far more important than technology skills?

I think this old column still holds up pretty good...

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Old folks and technology
Head for the Edge – Nov/Dec 2002

John Lubbock, a 19th century astronomer, once wrote:

There are three great questions which in life we have to ask over and over again to answer:
   Is it right or wrong?
   Is it true or false?
   Is it beautiful or ugly?
Our education ought to help us to answer these questions.

I think of those words often when I hear educators worry about kids being more adept and comfortable with technology than those of us who were growing up when the earth was still cooling.

It’s hard not be humbled when a situation like this occurs as related by Monica Campana of Palm Coast, Florida, on LM_Net:

Last month Google was blocked by our district because kids were doing image searches and actual pictures loaded on Google image search hit page that aren’t blocked by our filter. Safe search in Google can be turned off by the kids. I vented, fumed, researched, emailed Google, but finally gave up and taught the kids how to use a few other search engines. One week later one of my seventh graders pulled me aside and whispered that we could still use www.google.ca - the Canadian version of Google, as of yet still not blocked. I had to laugh because I should have asked the kids in the first place.

Many of us turn to those younger than us for technology help. (Older I get the more it seems like the more young people there are around all the time!) When I need help editing a digital movie, I turn to my 16-year-old son. He downloads movies, burns CDs, and uses IM to visit with folks around the world. If I need help getting the networked printer to work in the office, our 20-something network coordinator is the one I ask. When her fingers fly through the control panels they are a blur. Hands down, kids can do the technical stuff and are more comfortable with much of this stuff than I will ever be. And my VCR DOESN’T blink 12:00 either.

In Growing Up Digital (McGraw Hill, 1999) by Don Tapscott calls the kids who have grown up with a mouse in their hands the Net Generation. Of these Net-Geners, he writes, “For the first time in history youth are an authority on an innovation central to society’s development.” I am not exactly filled with hope for the future when I think that the young, spiky blue-haired guy with more studs than a Minnesota snow tire is leading cultural change. (Darn, that sounded just like something my grandfather might have said!)

What I hope we don’t forget is that the same great issues of education that Lubbock identifies are still with us today and are perhaps more important than ever. When our students download music, we need to be there to ask if there is a copyright question involved (right or wrong). When they find sources of information on the Internet, we need to be there to ask them if the information is credible (true or false). When they put graphics into their presentations, we need to be there to ask them if those visuals contribute to the message they are trying to get across (beautiful or ugly). I like to think the questions we can help answer are more important in the long run than “How do you create a new background on a slide?”

We need to help make sure our students not only know how to use these new electronic marvels, but use them well. A short list of tools is below with some of the sensibilities about their use with which we geezers can still help:

Some technologies:    Some things with which old people can still help
Spreadsheets:    Math sense, numeracy, efficiency in design
Charting and graphing software:    Selecting the right graph for the right purpose
Database design:    End user consideration, making valid data-driven decisions
Word processing:    The writing process, organization, editing, grammar, style
Presentation software:    Speaking skills, graphic design, organization, clarity
Web-page design:    Design, writing skills, ethical information distribution
Online research:    Citation of sources, designing good questions, checking validity of data, understanding biases
Video-editing:    Storyboarding, copyright issues when using film clips and audio
Chat room use/Instant messaging    Safety, courtesy, time management

No matter how sophisticated the N-Geners are technologically, in matters of ethics, aesthetics, veracity, and other important judgments, they are, after all, still green. By virtue of our training and life experiences, we can apply the standards of older technologies (the pencil, the podium, the book) to those which are now technology enhanced. And we’d better. Given the choice of having Socrates or Bill Gates as a teacher, I know which one I would choose.

Increasingly the teachers and librarians who can survive and thrive in schools ever more permeated by technology will need to view themselves as “co-learners” in many learning experiences. Remember that “life-long learning” applies to us as well as the kids.

______________________________________________

So after re-reading this, I am asking myself "What in the hell are we doing in our staff development efforts in technology that is so belittling to teachers?" Have we truly lost sight of the fact that the end result should not be using technology well, but using technology to teach well?

Good grief!

And just remember...


 

Friday
Dec112009

Pogue and Paranoia

In a recent post, Free Speech Recognition, David Pogue questioned whether the poor ratings of an iPhone app were because users need to upload to the company information that they considered private with the potential that the company would then in some way misue that information. He commented on similar concerns that have surfaced around Gmail.

But Pogue's observation is right on target:

What I don’t understand is: Why don’t these same people worry that Verizon or AT&T is listening in to their cellphone calls every single day? Why don’t they worry that MasterCard is peeking into their buying habits? How do they know Microsoft and Apple aren’t slurping down private documents off the hard drive and laughing their heads off?

I mean, if you’re gonna be paranoid, at least be rational about it. 

I know folks who refuse to make an online purchase for fear of their credit card number being stolen. These are the same people who happily say that number over the telephone or give their credit card physically to shady looking waiters who disappear with it.*

It's always seemed to me that the world would be much improved if everyone throughout their lives were required to go back to school one week each year just to learn some very practical kinds of things. The first class** I would require would be "Understanding and Managing Online Risks." Why is sending your social security in respons to an email back to a bank you've never heard of not a good idea, but buying something from Amazon with your Visa is pretty safe? Why is it unlikely that mysterious people are reading all your boring e-mails, but why should you worry about sending an e-mail out that slams your boss? Is it safer to keep your photos on your home computer or on Flickr?

If only they would put ME in charge of the world!

*OK, I'll admit my personal paranoia demands that I only use a "cookie-free" browser to search for travel bargains since I've heard travel companies use cookie records to see how desparate you are for that booking.

** Other classes would include

  • Why You are Menace to Yourself and Others Using a Cellphone While Driving
  • Why Drinking Mountain Dew All Day Long is Not Good for You
  • How to Help Your Kids with Their Homework Without Actually Doing It for Them
Thursday
Dec102009

Conflicting conferences

As I often admit, I swing both ways - I am both an ALA and an ISTE member. (Now get your minds out of the gutter.) Like an increasing number of librarians, I have a tough choice to make nearly every summer: Do I attend the NECC ISTE conference or the ALA conference?

Librarian Diane Chen sent an e-mail to a listserv asking why this situation continues and I sent her question to Leslie Connery, Deputy CEO of ISTE, who has major, major ISTE conference responsibilities. With her permission, I am posting her reply here:

We, like you, are very aware of this problem [overlapping conference dates] and would like to find a solution that works for everyone. We know that some of ISTE’s most engaged leader-members are involved in both ISTE and ALA and that they would like to attend both conferences. We have the same struggle you do with regard to dates. I think we’ve both found the “sweet spot” for people and unfortunately – it’s the same sweet spot. A time when most American schools are out for the summer but before teachers are on vacation. And we, like you, have booked convention center space far into the future.

I’d love to get creative, think differently, and come up with a win-win-win solution for ALA, ISTE, and the educators we serve. I’m having difficulty thinking of creative solutions on this one but am more than willing to give it a try. 

Please let us know if you have some ideas on the issue or thoughts about how to proceed or simply would like to brainstorm. I don’t know if Doug chose his closing quote just for us but either way, it fit: The mind that is not baffled is not employed. The impeded stream is the one that sings. - Wendell Berry

So, any creative ideas for Leslie???