Blog Journal 1
Blog Journal 1
Teachers and students alike have
become reliant on the benefits of using technology in the classroom. It allows
the teacher give the students independence in class to complete their own
assignments. This will therefore cause the student to feel more accomplished
and grow their self-esteem of their academic work. While the students are
learning to solve their own problems and collaborate with their peers in a
responsible and appropriate manner, the teacher is able to facilitate the
learning environment and even learn a thing or two from their students while
doing it.
ISTE educator standards should be
general standards for teachers in all aspects of their job, not just in the
technology portion. The interaction from teacher to student should always be a
learning engagement. There is so much a teacher can learn from his/her students
on a daily basis. The standard of Collaborator is an important one to me because
being able to collaborate with your students and understand what they want from
a course provides them with an understanding that you value their opinion and
respect them as a human being. Many teachers forget this idea and simply talk
to their students instead of engaging in a conversation about the course. Helping
my future students to be good technological citizens is going to be the most
difficult standard for me to meet with my current skillset. The way people behave
online and the information they share has changed immensely from when I first
started out learning about technology in elementary school. I want to be sure
that I give my students the correct information to navigate the internet safely
and without harm.
I agree
with some of the essential ideas of the label “digital native”, yet I don’t
agree with some of the stigmas that have come to surround the idea. I know
plenty of people who have been born to be “digital natives” that read, can be
focus on things for a long period of time, and who learn best in a “traditional”
classroom setting. These seemingly generic biases don’t fit people as individuals
and glaze over the fact that many people learn differently from one another.
This is a key factor in how a teacher conducts a class and should not forget this.
Our “digital immigrant” teachers tend to struggle when the pieces of technology
that we have become to rely on to present a lesson to a class fail. They fumble
around for ages trying to regain their footing and, in my cases, tend to end up
asking students for help. In a matter of second the problem is resolved and
they are able to return to their lesson with a large time chunk removed from
their instruction. I foresee this issue always being around as every day new
digital natives are being born to an age of new technological advances that
educators will always be trying to keep up to trend with.
Exactly! The standards compass teachers' life in all aspects. It is much more than just using any specific pieces of tech. I also like the way that you use the term "facilitating the learning environment" because it describes one of the major shifts of teachers' role in the classroom nowadays. We hope to cultivate our students to be a better learner and a responsible digital citizen other than simply knowing which buttons to push.
ReplyDelete