Integrating Technology Into the Curriculum: Teacher
Training
Copyright 1996 Miguel
Guhlin
"Technology has altered the basics of education. Only by applying
technology, can teachers have the power to create, customize, or modify
the learning environment demanded by the new basics and information
needs of learnersÓ in the 21st Century "(See, 1994). The trick
is to do today what will be needed tomorrow. Education has been woefully
behind for various reasons, although not because we have lacked complete
access to technology. Among these reasons is lack of comprehensive
staff development for teachers. In a time when teachers are trained
by lectures on inservices, other ways of educating our teachers exist.
Over the past three years, I have had the opportunity to facilitate
the integration of technology into the curriculum at the district
and campus level. It is a difficult process that must begin with the
teachers. Let me repeat that. The process of integrating technology
into the curriculum must begin with teachers. On each campus I have
visited and worked on, technology must be integrated one classroom
at a time, each teacher shown how to use the tools of tomorrow one
day at a time. Twenty hours later of hands-on instructional technology
staff development, twenty more hours of in classroom modelling and
feedback, technology is beginning to be integrated into the curriculum.
As teachers begin to use Kid Pix 2 to make multimedia slide shows
with their students, their focus changed from teaching knowledge to
facilitating the learning process. Teachers also tended to assist
students in organizing and presenting that information. This move
from knowledge-givers to learning facilitators is supported by the
following study about teachers identified as high-level implementors
used technology within a process-oriented approach to enable students
to reach well-defined curricular objectives (Wiburg, 1994). Research
also demonstrates that teaching with technology does influence teaching
style toward an increasingly student-centered and active learning
orientation (Wiburg, 1994).
Proponents of change are quick to jump on the bandwagon. They cite
the research that states the annual cost of school dropouts in the
US is $100 billion. They are also quick to point out that for less
than half that, every school in the U.S. can be provided with hardware
and software. Yet, change will not come with a computer in every classroom,
nor without $10,000 spent on the latest and best multimedia software.
It will come if and when teachers are trained. To add to providing
each school with hardware and software, we must add that teachers
be well-trained and well-supported. It is now well known that one-shot
inservice workshops have very little long-term effect on classroom
practice (Kinnaman, 1990). Some researchers suggest that staff development
must be a continuous process and be available to teachers at the campus
level (U.S. Office of Technology Assessment (1988) & California
Technology Project (1991)).
Three key components of successful instructional technology staff
development I have noticed are listed below:
1) Teachers must earn the right to use computers in their classrooms
anddemonstrate how they are being used instructionally with students.
(20 hours of training will start them off; make sure to provide them
with a computer at the beginning of the training).
2) Teachers must have ready access to the hardware and software that
supports the curriculum they are teaching.
3) Teachers must have someone to model how to integrate technology
into the classroom on an ongoing basis with their students, as well
as provide feedback to them. No hands-off consultants.
The buzzwords in educational technology are tool-based software and
one-computer classroom methodology. Tool-based software is best summarized
by the statement: ²Ask not what computers can do with students but
rather what students can do with computers.Ó One-computer classroom
methodology refers to cooperative groups engaged in creative problem-solving
and decision-making via a simulation.
These two buzzwords take on meaning as students use information management
tools (WP/SS/DB/Hypermedia) to solve the simulation, share ideas,
and information. How can teachers be well-trained? Only if they are
well-supported. This means that while integrating technology is a
road teachers can walk, the job of paving and keeping the road clear
falls to the administration. Over the next few issues of TechEdge,
we will discuss the process of integrating technology at both the
campus and the district level, outlining exactly what needs to be
done at each level.
References
California Technology Project Assessment Team. (1991). An assessment
of educational technology applications in California public schools
(1990-1991). Chico, CA: California State University.
Kinnaman, D.E. (1990). Staff development: How to build your winning
team. Technology and Learning, 11 (2), 24-28.
See, J. (March 1994). Technology and Outcome-Based Education: Connections
in Concept and Practice. The Computing Teacher, 30.
Wiburg, K. (February 1994). Integrating technologies into schools:
Why has it been so slow? The Computing Teacher , 6-8.
U.S. Congress, Office of Technology Assessment. (1988). Power on!
New tools for teaching and learning, OTA-SET-379. Washington, DC:
U.S. Government Printing Office.
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