Mobile devices and apps are discriminatory against people
that don’t have smart phones or even mobile devices at all. I don’t see how
apps could promote academic discipline when having the ability to use mobile
devices in the classroom would just tempt students to be off-task. Tablets
would be better because of a lack of texting capabilities. Maybe someday
textbooks will be accessible on school-provided tablets for students, certainly
solving many of the younger generations’ tendencies to develop back problems. I
definitely think game-based learning is incredibly beneficial to students’
willingness to learn and practice what they have learned. I personally remember
using many online games to learn about the solar system when I was younger. And
as a student that always struggled with math, using online games to practice
what I was learning in class probably would have proved equally, if not more,
beneficial. Being able to work in groups also allows students to get something
more out of what was said by the teacher when the students also hear their
classmate’s perspectives. In biology, many times when I do not understand
something, someone in my group is able to explain it differently than the
teacher did, and it begins to make more sense. I feel like students engaging in
personal learning activities wouldn’t get as much out of learning that way,
because most will pick the easiest way out and try just get by, by doing the
bare minimum, if they are allowed to teach themselves. Most won’t push
themselves in the way a teacher would push them. Augmented reality sounds like
the way that I learn best. If I am interpreting it correctly, augmented reality
is making the connection between what is being taught and how it relates to the
real world. This is not only beneficial to understanding, but to remembering,
information. This is definitely the most intriguing technological option to me because
I think the whole point of everything we learn in the classroom goes back to
how we will one day apply it in our careers. So I definitely think augmented
realities is the form of technology I would most like to implement in a
classroom. Natural user interfaces are very beneficial to students with
disabilities, to make learning easier for them and for their teachers.
Giving the child to learn wherever and whenever they want
may not necessarily be helpful. What about the children that have questions?
Who are they going to ask their questions to if they’re just watching an
informational video? What about children with behavioral problems? Who is going
to encourage them to focus and learn if they’re just watching an informational
video? Parents may not always be around or qualified to serve as a secondary
teacher to the online teacher. I agree that it is important for a teacher to
prepare students for the real world since the Internet doesn’t. BYOD programs
are unfair to students that don’t have either mobile devices or smart phone
mobile devices. I do think it is important, however, to teach students of their
available network connections other than they petty texting and social
networking most are currently used to, and that students with technology skills
have the potential to be more successful than those who do not. I also agree
that active learning where students can make connections to life outside of the
classroom is highly effective.
- megan singleton