Digital Native Taken Too Far?
Maybe it’s just me, but I have seen one too many of these videos now that depict the learning divide (or digital disconnect) that is occurring in this country soley due to the lack of technology’s use in the classroom. But it’s more than that. What is being depicted is a negative view of any learning that does not include technology. I just watched this remix of A Vision of Students Today by Mike Wesch, Did You Know; Shift Happens and Did You Know 2.0 by Karl Fisch and Scott McLeod titled, A Vision of K-12 Students Today. In it are unhappy student learners communicating that they simply cannot learn… can not be happy learning, demanding digital learning with the exclusion of any other form of learning. What follows is the script of the video (in italics) and some of my frustration. Please exucse the high degree of sarcasm in places.
Students will use engaging technologies in collaborative, inquiry-based learning environments with teachers who are willing and able to use technology’s power to assist them in transforming knowledge and skills into products, solutions, and new information.
- I am a 21st century learner
- I game 3/5 hours a week
- I will spend 16.5 hours watching TV this week
- 5.5 hours on the computer
- 2 hours reading a book
- I listened to 5 hours of Harry Potter on my ipod this week
- We expect to be able to create, consume, remix, and share information with each other
- My parents us email
- I text, instant message, blog
Well, we know that many kids are not reading books much (Books are what my parents read, not me! What good can come out of reading a book?), still watch a lot of television, and spend more time than ever with the computer and other media-rich devices. It used to be that good teachers expected students to create and share information with each other. Now, suddenly it is the student that is expecting this – but only with technology, of course. There is no way that they could create and share meaningful learning artifacts without technology, right? Here is part of the problem, I think. It is that schools became too passive in their pedagogy, too textbook driven, too teacher centered and too assessment driven. And, in the end, the result is boring classrooms and lessons, seemingly irrelevant learning, and disconnected students.
- 76% of my teachers have never used wikis, blogs, podcasts
- At least once a week 14% of my teachers let me create something new with technology. 63 % never do.
- 61% of my reading teachers never use digital storytelling software
- If we learn by doing, what are we learning sitting here?
- How do you learn?
According to this video, it really doesn’t matter how I learn. But this I do know. The concept of learning by doing is nothing new! The true crime here is that teachers and educational systems are making it hard to allow students to learn through the creation of relevant and meaningful artifacts. To imply that students today are incapable of learning anything while sitting and listening to someone else is just irresponsible. Perhaps 61% of reading teachers never use digital storytelling software, but does this mean that these same 61% are terrible reading teachers? What is the percentage of reading teachers who do very little at all with storytelling? I would guess it is also up there.
- What kind of education would you want me to have if I were your son, your daughter,
- By the year 2016, the largest English speaking country will be China.
- There are more honor students in China than there are people in North America
- But only 1/2 of us will graduate from high school. Will I?
- I will have 14 jobs before I am 38 years old.
- Most of those jobs do not exist today
- How will this (referring sullenly to a notebook with writing in it) help me?
- How could this help me? (holding and iPod or laptop in hand)
Yes, the state of US education is in trouble. But to imply that a book and pencil has no use in the learning process flies directly in the face of countries like China and India who are still learning with books, pencils, pens, and excellent listening and thinking skills, and disciplined minds. Of course, they also use newer technologies, as so should we all. But the tone here is such that unless we are using these newer technologies all the time, we are failing as teachers, that unless we are blogging or using wikis and creating digital stories, we are hopelessly defunct.
- Teach me to think, to create, to analyze, to evaluate, to apply. Teach me to think.
- Let me use the WWW… Whatever, Whenever, Wherever
- Let me tell a story… digitally
- Engage me! (repeated by 15 different bored students)
- We are digital learners.
Once again, engaging students and teaching them to think, to create, to analyze, to evaluate, to applly… is nothing new! But to imply that the solution alone here is to let students use technology and the internet whenever, whereve, for whatever,… is just plain nutty. The bigger failure here is that we, as educators, have often failed at helping students think, analyze, evaluate, apply, and create meaningful and relevant learning artifacts. Of couse, technology today can play a powerful role. Of course we need to embrace new cultural tools and new forms of learning. But the mere act of doing so does not guarantee improved thinking, analytic, and evaluatory skills. Excellent teachers are still required. This video discounts the power of an excellent teacher, with or without the use of newer technologies. It attributes all learning power to new technologies. Just let kids have at it with all the tools that they love to use, and learning will result (and in some cases, it certainly can).
This video implies quite strongly that learners today (“digital natives”) are ONLY digital learners and that learning any other way (meaning without new technology) is simply a waste of time… it doesn’t work any more. To embrace such a view that throws away books, pencils and othe more traditional learning technologies, and discounts the ability to listen and process relevant information, that writing in an analog world is not writing and has no value, that the only form of social learning is the digital form, that public speaking is a dying artform,… is a huge mistake. To buy into this idea that this digital generation cannot learn unless digitally connected is wrong. The learning community in general would be much better served by videos that depict best practices and strong rationales for any technologies rather than gloom-and-doom, woe is me, China is going to take over the world types of messages. For, I think, these types of messages as in this particular video serve only to “preach to the choir” and get played mostly by the very communities that aspouse the inherent values and ideas presented in the video. Yes, this generation thinks, socializes, and learns in new ways. Yes, we need to harness these new forms of learning in a very digital world. Learning networks. Social learning. Creation tools. Creative tools. Tools to facilitate collaboration beyond physical space…. There are so many fantastic learning tools and opportunities out here like never before. We should be using them in the classroom. But, at no point should we be communicating to both kids and the educational community at large that unless we are using ALL of these tools ALL the time, we are somehow flawed…. educational fuddy duddies. And, there is no reason why kids cannot and should not learn by listening to a developmentally appropriate “lecture”, from reading a book or textbook, by writing with a pen or pencil… on paper, by participating in a community project or apprenticeship,… The heart of the issue really is engaging students in meaningful learning, both with and without technology. Be a great teacher! And yes, to be relevant and meaningful today, technology must be used to a new level. Teachers must stay fresh and current in all that they do – not only with technology.
Just please stop making and promoting these kinds of videos that portray a distorted and flawed view of learning.
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April 19th, 2008 at 12:16 pm
Correct! We need to encourage students to think! See the new book on amazon.com: “Teaching and Helping Students Think and Do Better”.
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January 10th, 2009 at 11:39 pm
Dear ransomtech: Thank-you for this summary and taking time to compose this thoughtful observation. I am ‘fuddy duddy’, now retired from classroom duty. Missed making toilet paper Santas and Angels with students this year. I am also new blogger. Have been reassessing my career and self-questioning, Should I have had more tech in classroom? I started teaching when a reel-to-reel movie was a big deal. Anyhoo…I enjoyed this discussion because I integrated tech into classroom but the 21st century child is the same as the 20th century child. The classroom, in my old-fashioned view, is an apprenticeship into the global world. The classroom is a safe, cozy corner to try out words, numbers, shapes and social face-to-face connections. I am not saying isolate from INTERNET & etc. your column just makes good case that technology is not the classroom nor the curriculum. Ditto comments re.powerpoint, which is just modern outline on the board. Have a good term.
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January 11th, 2009 at 3:06 pm
Thanks for the comments, Happy Flower. Reassessing and self-questioning are critical attributes of a learner, of which you are. Welcome to the blogosphere where we can all help each other question and learn. My only issue with what you state is the idea of the classroom being a safe, cozy corner that is isolated from the rest of the world. There is certainly something to be said for that, but it is no longer a world that reflects the reality of most of our students. When the classroom ceases to be a small microcosm of the real world, relevancy quickly begins to wane and students become better prepared for success AT and IN school rather for success AFTER and OUTSIDE of school. There is certainly a delicate balance here that needs to be achieved.
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March 6th, 2009 at 6:09 pm
ransomtech: Great post. I am a teacher who didn’t have a computer growing up, so I am what you might call a little computer illiterate. Just learned how to blog this week. I have been enrolled in a Technology in the Classroom program, and there seems to be a ton of new things that teachers can use to better instruction. But like you said, technology should not be the end all when talking about teaching. Technology can aid instruction, but there is still much to be gained in the classroom with the “outdated” traditional forms of educating students. Regardless of the technology used, if the work is not engaging to the students, then it will do no better than that “outdated” style of teaching.
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March 6th, 2009 at 6:14 pm
@maple11 – Thanks for the comment. You’re absolutely correct. Engaging kids must come first. That may or may not involve newer learning tools. Use the tools that are at your disposal and use them well. But, keep learning and engagement with ideas and concepts in focus at all times. Drop the ball on these foundational elements and the tools do little more than mask the problem.
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