Friday, September 30, 2011

Blog #2

As I research what I am thinking about proposing I am finding more and more refinements and problems with my research question. So far I have refined my question to Does technology being actively used in a classroom make the students more motivated and achieve better?

So far, I have one really good hit from my research.(http://www.waynecountyschools.org/150820127152538360/lib/150820127152538360/impact_on_student_achievement.pdf )  The impact of Education Technology on Student Achievement, what the research says by John Schacter. This study is from a school doing a meta-analysis study on the almost the same topic. The really great part is at the end where I was able to mine through all their sources, and find another great hit! http://books.google.com/books?hl=en&lr=&id=7spWIqyYdVIC&oi=fnd&pg=PA9&ots=UL2lO52c2b&sig=_c3PQ9cdU6-OM7sGkqbaegHNxD4#v=onepage&q&f=false ) The meta-analytic studies of findings on computer-based instruction by James A. Kulik.

The last research problem I found was Is technology enabling students to stay motivated and achieve better due to high order thinking?

The last study I found was on just that. ( http://eec.edc.org/cwis_docs/Vivians/Hopson_et_al.pdf ) However, the wrench they throw into my research is whether or not using a computer at home as well, as school enables the student to already be thinking with higher order thinking. But perhaps, this just backs up my research statement because if the students already have this skill set then teachers should definitely be using it.

My refined research statement is something like this, although I do not think this quite sums up what I am thinking "Are our teachers prepared to teach with technology in the classroom, in order to use the higher order thinking skills our  21st  century students already have, in order to let the students take more control of their learning, to be motivated to have more achievement

Both of these articles are really interesting because they both point to the fact that technology does make a difference in the achievement of students in the classroom.  However, the first one does bring up a research problem for me. It discusses a study called ACOT (Apple Classrooms of Tomorrow), which  came to the conclusion that neither traditional nor technology based classrooms made any difference for students.  The second article is like a gold mind that pins down different levels of students compared to what the students were studying, their achievement levels in the traditional classroom, and achievement levels in the technology classroom. It is a very cut and dry, quantitative, hard facts,  kind of study. I actually think, the most important thing that came out of this study was not their facts but the problem they discussed in the review section. Does the type of testing being done have more of an effect on the student then the technology or traditional based classroom? Meaning are we teaching the students to use the technology or the materials we want them to learn, or for a traditional classroom are we teaching them to take the test or remember the materials we taught them?

After these articles, I just had to find out more about ACOT and see if I agreed with the author of the first article I found. After reading this article, I do not believe that what the author said is completely true, and to be honest I do not think the author finished reading the article. The ACOT article is very critical to understanding if technology in a classroom works. I say this because after a ten year study, Apple was able to stage out the use of technology in the classroom. What I mean is they were able to actually label the types of use of the technology based on the teachers feedback. The point where the teachers found the technology ineffective in the classroom was in the very beginning of its use or their "Entry" level. On this level, the teachers and students were still working out the kinks of how to use the computers in the classroom. So I believe this opinion to be very dated, it comes from teachers in 1986 when most people did not know how to use computers as we do today. I think that many teachers may not even start at such a level in the classroom anymore because of the modern day experience with computers. In the last stage, " Appropriation" students and teachers began to use the technology in a natural way, and a teacher reports that the motivation of the students did improve!  So now my research problem comes down to our we enabling our teachers in teacher prep programs to step directly into  this "appropriation stage", since  most students now are able to use the computer quite easily and naturally. (http://www.psfshl.pudong-edu.sh.cn/E-Learning/ACOT/rpt08.pdf )

On my search to find if the teacher prep programs needed to enable teachers to step in that stage I found an article that says that the number 2 reason for computer based instruction to work right in the classroom is due to the preparation the teacher received in school. So far now we can see that, If technology based instruction is to be enabled so that students can begin becoming the masters of their own education, teachers must be correctly taught how to use technology properly in the classroom. http://scholar.googleusercontent.com/scholar?q=cache:LnG4yJ5ZTLcJ:scholar.google.com/+becker,+H.J.&hl=en&as_sdt=0,47 )

1 comment:

  1. This is great. I like how you continue to refine your question through the blog in response to each article. So it seems that you are ending on this issue of teacher preparation. I think this is critical especially because of the speed at which technology develops and the technological gap between generations. We need to reframe technological literacy as something students have coming in upon which we need to build.
    My primary suggestion for you is to begin to think in more concrete terms about your study. Who will participate? What will you measure? etc. This will help you refine your question even further.

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