Classroom of the future
It’s common for us baby boomers to laugh that our children (and elementary-age grandchildren) instinctively understand computers better than we do. So it only makes sense that the more classrooms stocked with the latest digital technology, the better. It’s the new way to learn.
But does smart use of electronics equal smart kids? A New York Times article from early this month drops a few clues. “In Classroom of Future, Stagnant Scores” is a head-scratching piece about the Kyrene School District of Chandler, Ariz., which has been a pioneer in technological education. The trouble is, standardized reading and math scores are showing no improvement among students, even as overall test scores in the state are rising. “[T]o many education experts, something is not adding up—here and across the country,” the article reports. “In a nutshell: Schools are spending billions on technology, even as they cut budgets and lay off teachers, with little proof that this approach is improving basic learning.”
Since 2005, the district has spent $33 million on laptops, interactive screens, educational software, and teacher training in how to use it all. We’re not talking about rows of computers in the library to help kids with their research projects; this is a restricting of the whole system, in which students learn at their own pace and teachers act as facilitators rather than instructors. It’s a reasonable approach, with the inevitable downside: More money for technology means less for teachers, sports, music, and art.
Still, it might all seem justified if it weren’t for those flatlined scores. Advocates of the digital classroom say that standardized tests can’t measure the breadth of learning represented by technology. I understand the frustration with “test scores” being the measure of all things, but here’s one thing they do measure: reading comprehension. Outside of the math sections, it’s not necessary to know any particular content in order to do well on a standardized test, but you do have to know how to understand what you’re reading. At least two-thirds of most standardized tests involve reading a paragraph or two and choosing the best multiple-choice answer to the questions.
No innovation has changed the fact that reading is fundamental to education, not just for learning new content, but also for thinking itself—organizing, categorizing, making inferences. Several years ago a school librarian told me that the greatest hindrance to reading among middle-schoolers is not TV or video but computers, and since then other librarians have concurred. The very interactiveness that makes digital learning so attractive may actually be more detrimental than the mind-numbing boob tube. It makes students think they’re learning when they are only repackaging. It emphasizes polish and presentation over substance. And it creates a money pit that only gets deeper: In November, the Kyrene School District plans to ask voters to approve $46.3 million more in taxes to keep investing in newer technology. Technology is always newer: Every PC owner knows that his brand-new system is going to be obsolete in five years. If a school district is committed to state-of-the-art equipment, the demands on voters will never end.
“My gut is telling me that we’ve had growth [in student achievement],” district Superintendent David Schauer told the Times. My gut tells me that children should not go near a computer until they are at least 12 and have learned to read at grade level. Only until then will they have the necessary foundation to get real educational benefit from technology. Otherwise, the glitzy programs and games are a costly distraction.

















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back to top15 Comments to “Classroom of the future”
They need hands-on learning skills before moving to the more cerebral computer games and tasks.
As someone told me years ago about another technology disconnect, it’s not watching TV per se that is the problem, it’s what they’re NOT doing while they’re watching TV that sets kids up for problems later.
I’m with you, Janie.
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Janie is correct in that reading comprehension is the key to education. True in applied math also. Kids can learn “cook book” solutions to math problems without learning the math principles behind them. I had that problem. It comes back to you when you start dealing with higher math (calculus, etc.).
But my 4 yr old great grandson is comfortable with his dad’s iPad. He swipes his finger across the screen to find a game, and can punch numbers & letters with his thumbs while holding the iPad. I still can’t do that.
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Technology is great for learning, but only if the ideas are compelling. When the list of things to be learned is broken down into bite-sized facts and spoon-fed to the child with the words, ‘This will be on the test so you’ll need to know it,” there will be no learning. But if we spread a feast of great ideas, with or without technology, the children will learn. Not only will they learn… They will find learning a delight and want to learn more.
(And I’m a college graduate who was homeschooled through high school with the above as the crux of my education. I still find learning delightful!)
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I definitely agree that children should learn reading, writing and basic math without the aid of technology. These are hard skills that will come in use in whatever field the child pursues in life. Technology is only needed in some fields, in others it is merely auxiliary.
Another point in the article is the mention of sports, music and art suffering from lost funding. Music has been connected in several studies with increased math skills, and exercise and art are also important in cognitive development. Another reason for declining scores.
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Our son’s elementary school used a computer in the classroom primarily for the children to take self-tests on reading comprehension (on books the children selected, within a range based on their reading level). This allowed a parent volunteer to supervise the testing, while the teacher worked with students who really needed her help.
They also have a computer lab, where each class went on a regular basis for the students to practice reading or math using self-paced materials. My son often got frustrated because he did well enough on these exercises that the program would keep giving him harder and harder problems, way ahead of anything his teacher had covered. (Even his teacher once had trouble explaining one of them to him.)
If there had been a way for them to reset the level occasionally when it got too difficult for him, it would have been much better. But on the whole, it seems a good way to use the technology, to give students who need it more practice at grade level, and students who need to be challenged more difficult concepts that won’t be covered in the classroom for another year or two.
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Technology is here to stay and develop and will only become more demanding of our time and resources and abilities. So how do we manage it, for ourselves but more for our children? That is what I would like to see more research and dialog on. I read an article (NY Times perhaps, and probably a link from World Community) that indicated early exposure to computers probably wires the brain differently. So as culture inevitably heads in this direction, what happens to children with limited early exposure to computers and thus whose brains are wired in the old-fashioned way?
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Cherievon, they should have no problem adjusting. The reading and problem solving skills that I learned before we got a computer have enabled me to adjust to each new technology as it became available. I can learn a new program and navigate a touch screen just fine; in fact, I used to help other mature students who were intimidated by computers in college. It is a myth that children need to start young on computers. In fact, it was my mother’s insistence that I learn the old-fashioned technique of typing that helped me be able to use a computer efficiently.
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Phos, that’s encouraging. I am still of the persuasion that my daughter, in homeschooling her 4 children, is correct in staying off the computer primarily. But I do wonder when some of these “studies” are published. Of course, everyone has an agenda…
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Pauline, #5. That can be terribly frustrating. They did that in Radio Operator’s school. In learning morse code, as soon as we passed 5 words per minute (wpm), they put us to 7 wpm, as soon as 7, it was 10 wpm. No chance to practice at all. Constant pressure trying to do something you can’t do. Some couldn’t take it. One guy cracked up and heaved his typewriter (remember those) out the window. They sent him home for two weeks, then back to it. I think he eventually graduated.
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I grew up at just the right age where computers became available as I was going through elementary and middle school. My parents limited game time quite strictly up until high school and there wasn’t nearly as much to do on the computer (no internet). I believe I’m better off because it didn’t take over my life from a young age. It definitely didn’t hurt me as a now-practicing engineer; I work on a computer all day every day and can use it much more efficiently than most people.
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I think a big concern in allowing children to use technology at such a young age and for so long is the affect on their vision. Have any studies been done on whether children have glasses at younger ages now than in the past?
I disagree with studies that “show” that a child’s brain is “damaged” by early exposure to TV and computers. My son started reading at 28 months, primarily I think because of an excellent PBS preschool show (WordWorld) that we would let him watch. Now at 4 years old he is reading at a 2nd grade level. He may just be extraordinary, also, I don’t know. I’ll have to see how old our 27 month daughter and 6 month old son are when they begin reading.
I do think it is foolish to allow children to play on the computer or watch TV all day when they should be playing, reading, and active – especially outdoors. And I do think it is silly to have tons of computers in classrooms for elementary school children to use all day long. However, keeping a child away from a computer until 12 years old, without serious commitment and non-use by the parents, is just not going to happen in a lot of households. We’re planning on homeschooling, but we’re not going to use online programs in elementary grades, but using a search engine to find pictures of ladybugs or wallabies that you just read about in a library book is a good supplement to learning. Technology really opens up a lot of possibilities for supplementary use.
Putting specific ages on beginning computer use, or I suppose even for exposure, just seems like a way to rope me into more mommy-guilt. But, I’m 26, and a product of a technology generation, so I guess I have a different perspective.
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Sounds like the above-mentioned school overdid the technology bit. In my homeschool, there is a limited exposure to the computer. They may only play 1 hr of games on Saturdays. My 10th Grade daughter uses it occasionally for research and word processing, my 8th Grade son uses it for language arts, my 4th graders and my 1st grader are all learning to type on it. The youngest 3 all read well above their grade levels. When they do research, I have them use books. In fact my 5 year old loves to research things, and knows significantly more than I do about birds and dinosaurs! What a joy it is to watch them learn – I think I’d miss some of that if they were stuck on a computer all day.
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Good article.
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BeckyF,
I believe there is evidence that more children get glasses at earlier ages now than in the past, but there are a number of possible explanations in addition to computers.
When my younger son was little, I read that keeping a light on in his room while he slept was not good for his eyes, that for some reason darkness was important during those night hours of sleep. (I did my best to make the night light as dim as I could, but he needed some light because he would throw up any time all the lights were out, such as during a power failure.)
More recently, I read that lack of exposure to daylight for enough hours during the day contributes to vision problems. When kids spend too much time indoors with artificial lighting, regardless of what they’re doing, they’re not getting as much daylight as kids did in the past.
I’ve also read that what kids eat is a significant factor. Today’s kids eat a lot more processed foods than in the past. They may get enough of the standard vitamins from fortified foods (or they may not, since I’ve also read those aren’t absorbed as well), but nutritionists keep finding other nutrients that aren’t in processed foods that we don’t get enough of.
I don’t know how many of those explanations are accurate, but it seems likely that all of those things contribute to some extent to more kids needing glasses.
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“My gut is telling me that we’ve had growth [in student achievement],” district Superintendent David Schauer told the Times.
My gut is telling that David Schauer is lying through his teeth. And, unlike his gut, my gut agrees with the test results.
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