Lesson 3 (1)
Lesson 3 (1)
Learning Outcomes:
Discussion:
Are students of today interested to use technology in order to learn? Do teachers have the
skills to use technology to enhance their teaching? With the 4th Industrial Revolution, nobody
can deny the influence of technology in our lives. As future teachers of the 21 St century, it is
high time that you prepare yourselves to integrate technology in your classrooms. Using
technology is a tool and a catalyst for change. What then are the roles of technology for teaching
and learning?
Explore:
As teaching and learning go together, let us explore what would be the roles of technology for
teachers and teaching and for learners and learning. According to Stosic (2015), educational
technology has three domains:
1. Technology as a tutor. Together with the teacher, technology can support the teacher to
teach another person or technology when programmed by the teacher can be a tutor on its
own. The teacher will simply switch on or switch off radio programs, television programs
or play DVDs, or CDs that contain educational programs. There are on-line tutorial
educational programs, too.
2. Technology as a teaching tool. Like a tutor, technology is a teaching tool, but can never
replace a teacher. This is like the handyman, which is just there to be reached. Like any
other tool, it is being used to facilitate and lighten the work of the teacher. It will be good
if the teacher can also create or develop technology tools that are needed in the
classroom.
3. Technology as a learning tool. While the teacher utilizes technology as the tool for
teaching, likewise it is an effective tool for learning. As a learning tool, it makes learning
easy and effective. It can produce learning outcomes that call for technology-assisted
teaching. Even the teachers who are teaching can utilize similar tools for learning. As a
learning tool, it is very interesting that even the elderly use these tools for learning for
life.
There are numerous roles that technology plays in the job of teachers. As a tool,
technology has opened wider avenues in management of resources and management of learning.
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Likewise, it has modernized the teaching-learning environment in schools. Here are some
examples of the roles that technology can do for teachers and teaching.
1. Support learners to learn how to learn on their own. All teachers fully understand that
subject matter or content is a means to achieve the learning outcomes. There are three
categories or knowledge according to Egbert (2009): declarative knowledge, structural
knowledge, and procedural knowledge.
a) Declarative knowledge consists of the discrete pieces of information that answers
the questions what, who, when, and where. It is often learned through
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The traditional sources of knowledge are printed books, modules and journals. Other
sources are primary sources such as information taken from research. However, knowledge or
content can be learned in many ways. But how can technology support the learning of
declarative, structural or procedural knowledge? To teach content, time is always an issue of
teachers. Oftentimes, we hear teachers say: "Too many things to teach, too little time to do."
Technology may be the answer, however the challenge is for teachers to use technology to learn
the technology first. As a facilitator of learning, the teacher can guide the students to look for the
resources and to utilized them appropriately. There are varied programs that can be used by
students off-line or on-line for students. What should be necessary is that the students are
engaged, the tasks should focus on questions like how, why and which in addition to who, what,
when and where.
Social interaction occurs in two ways where the participants ask for clarification, argue,
challenge each other and work towards common understanding. Social interaction through
communication occurs through technology (directly between two persons via email, a cell phone
or other communication technology). It can also occur around technology like students
discussing about a problem posed by a software program or with support of technology like
teachers and students interacting about the worksheet printed from a website. In all the three
modalities, communication occurs and technology is involved.
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For this particular role, what are the benefits derived from technology-supported
communication?
a) Enables any teacher to guide the learners virtually and making learning unlimited
because communication and social interaction go beyond a school day or a school
environment.
b) Enhances students' freedom to express and exchange ideas freely without the
snooping eyes of the teacher face to face.
c) Enables learners to construct meaning from joint experiences between the two or
more participants in communication.
d) Help learners solve problems from multiple sources since there is limitless
sources of information that the teacher can direct or refer to the learners.
e) Teaches learners to communicate with politeness, taking turns in sending
information and giving appropriate feedback
f) Enhances collaboration by using communication strategies with wider community
and individuals in a borderless learning environment.
g) Develops critical thinking, problem solving and creativity throughout the
communication.
There are several technology tools and software programs that you will learn in the coming
modules.
3. Technology upgrades learners’ higher order thinking skills: critical thinking, problem
solving and creativity
Twenty-first century learning requires the development of higher order thinking skills.
Technology has a great role to play in the development and enhancement of these skills.
Critical thinking is part of the cluster 01 higher order thinking skills. It refers to the
ability to interpret, explain, analyze, evaluate, infer and self-regulate in order to make good
decisions. With the use of technology, one will be able to evaluate the credibility of the source,
ask appropriate questions, become open-minded, defend a position on an issue and draw
conclusion with caution. All of these competencies are covered by Bloom's Taxonomy of
Analysis, Synthesis and Evaluation.
Teachers play a significant role in supporting learners with technology. How?
As a role model, teachers should display and practice critical thinking processes, so that
the learners can imitate them. Here are some ways that teachers can do to develop critical
thinking.
Most often teachers ask questions to find out if the students can simply repeat the
information from the lesson. Although these are necessary questions like what, who,
when and where, these do not develop critical thinking. Critical thinking questions should
ask for clarity, accuracy, precision, relevance, depth, breadth and logic.
Clarity: Here are some examples: Can you give examples of…
Accuracy: What pieces of evidence support your claim?
Precision: Exactly how much…
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Breath: What do you think will the other group say about the issue?
b) Use critical thinking tasks with appropriate level of challenge. Teachers should be
mindful of the readiness of the students. Students who have higher ability may
find the task too easy, thus getting bored early, while those who have low ability
may find the task too difficult. Thus, there is a need to have activities that are
appropriate for the learners. These can be determined by interview, observations
and other forms to determine the level of readiness.
By nature learners are curious. They ask lots of questions all the time. Why is the sky blue? Why
do I have to learn geometry? How do people choose what will they become in the future? Can
robots solve the problems of climate change? How? These questions will lead to critical
thinking, but some of these questions cannot be answered by the teacher. The unanswered
questions are avoided at answered unsatisfactorily. Sometimes teachers shut down the question
that curtails the first step in critical thinking. The internet as a problem solving and research tool
can help find answers to the questions.
Seven Creative Strategies (Osborn 1963). These have been simplified into fewer
categories. To be creative, one can use any of these strategies.
What should teacher do to support student creativity? Here are some suggestions:
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Further, teachers can do the following to develop and enhance critical thinking, problem
solving and creativity. As a future teacher, try these suggestions.
1. Encourage students to find and use information from variety of sources both on-line and
off-line.
2. Assist students to compare information from different sources.
3. Allow student to reflect through different delivery modes like writing, speaking or
drawing.
4. Use real experiences and material to draw tentative decisions.
5. Involve students in creating and questioning assessment.
To do these, the teacher should see to it that right questions are asked, student’s tasks should
be appropriate to the levels of challenge and curiosity encourage.
There are several critical thinking tools and technology software that can support critical
thinking skills. Some of these you will encounter in the succeeding modules.
Examine:
A. Reflect on the question: how does the role of technology change the teaching learning
environment? Reflect.
B. Choose
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