Homeabout services support projects newscontactHeadlines

TeachersFirst Brings Civil War History to Life
5/13/2013

ReSource of the Day

This month's TeachersAndFamilies TogetheRead theme.

 

May 7, 2010
Technology In Education: Integral, Not Supplementary

Several prominent national organizations, including the National Governors Association, the U.S. Department of Education, and the Federal Communications Commission, have recently published recommendations for dramatically improving American education and America's available broadband technologies.

The Source for Learning, Inc., a national not-for-profit company that has employed technology in support of learning for more than thirty years, takes the new recommendations one step further. SFL says that education and technology are inextricably interwoven, and the appropriate use of technology will enable tomorrow's students to be far better learners. This release consists of excerpts from The Source for Learning's position paper; the full document is available here.

The twenty-first century classroom

Imagine what a twenty-first century classroom ought to look like. Teacher and students are learning together, with the teacher guiding students' exploration and discovery. The classroom uses technology effectively, not because specific hardware/software is in place, but because of the informed manner in which the teacher and students use the capabilities that connectivity produces:
• Students collaborate with others, both in the classroom and elsewhere.
• There is flexibility in the grouping of students and exploration of subject matter.
• There is a willingness to adopt rigorous standards, and to accept flexibility in meeting those standards.
• Teachers and students understand and abide by the ethical, social, and legal issues and responsibilities related to an evolving digital culture.
• Students have a variety of options available by which they can construct, remix, manipulate, comment and demonstrate what they are learning as an ongoing process.

This use of technology should apply not just to formal instruction, but also to the delivery of continuing professional education for teachers and administrators.

If our students do not measure up because we have failed to carry out the necessary changes, the loss will be theirs, but the fault will be ours.

Expanding the vision

SFL supports efforts to (1) align content standards to a set of realistic core principles and (2) increase the ubiquity of true broadband connections in the nation's schools, homes, and wireless devices. In the hope that we can assist in that process, we offer the following suggestions and observations.

• Above all else, making broadband digital resources universally available and affordable will be a major challenge. Unless all children have connectivity--in school and at home, every day--we will be building our new model on a very shaky foundation.
• Schools must focus on developing teachers' digital literacy. Good teachers will always continue learning; good schools will facilitate that process.
• The network environments of schools and corporations are often different. Schools will need to be judicious in adapting information systems designed for businesses.
• Many schools have found that open-source software is a real-world resource for students and staff at a fraction of the cost of using similar commercial offerings.
• Cloud computing applications such as Google Docs save money and make staff and student work available regardless of the end user's location. The power of web-based collaborative tools continues to grow and show great potential in education.
• Schools should strive for interoperability of data collection systems.
• It is difficult to balance users' needs for information against network security. Access should be controlled based on individual needs and on students' accomplishments.
• Assessment will remain a challenge. However, the digital classroom offers some new assessment opportunities: digital work product is easily preserved, and it can be evaluated against clearly conceived rubrics for teachers to act upon immediately.

The transition to a truly effective twenty-first century learning environment will not happen uniformly. Some schools will move more quickly than others. This is not a one-time transition, but a process of continual evolution and improvement. For students and teachers, change will be the only constant.


Web site: Read the Complete Position Paper

 

Other News Stories

May 13, 2013
TeachersFirst Brings Civil War History to Life

December 18, 2012
Help For Kids Hurt By Superstorm Sandy

October 23, 2012
School Readiness Goals - A Collaborative Partnership

August 20, 2012
SFL's Broadband for Education Initiative

July 30, 2012
Contest Winners Learn At Conference

May 8, 2012
School Readiness - A view from the U.S. Department of Education

April 5, 2012
Early Childhood Educators Seek Consensus on School Readiness

March 5, 2012
SFL and NHSA to Host School Readiness Goals Summit

January 5, 2012
Review Head Start - Common Core Correlation Project

November 21, 2011
SFL's Educational Wireless Broadband Pilot Energizes Teachers

November 1, 2011
SFL Board Member Becton Honored

October 17, 2011
SFL Featured On The Discovery Channel

August 12, 2011
TeachersFirst.com Creates Interactive Whiteboard Guide

June 14, 2011
SFL Releases TeachersFirst 3.0

June 13, 2011
The Source for Learning, Inc. Partners with The National Head Start Association

January 3, 2011
SFL Staff Member Visits China

December 20, 2010
SFL Launches SFLMedia

November 11, 2010
GrowUpLearning Featured on Lifetime Television

October 24, 2010
Source for Learning Staff To Present at Major Conference

April 20, 2010
SFL Releases 2009 Annual Report

April 15, 2010
MySciLife Proposal Video Now Available

April 14, 2010
School Principals Learn New Tools To Build Literacy

March 28, 2010
Finalists: The Thinking Teachers of TeachersFirst!

January 31, 2010
PreschoolFirst Experts Help Shape $10 Billion Grant Fund

January 12, 2010
Lou Frey, Jr. Joins The Source for Learning Board

January 10, 2010
Child Care Training Program Celebrates Success

August 31, 2009
Everything Teachers and Parents Need to Know About Swine Flu

August 1, 2009
TeachersFirst Webcast Helps NECC Attendees Share with Colleagues

June 23, 2009
TeachersFirst Membership Reaches 10,000

June 23, 2009
T.H.E. Journal Interviews TeachersFirst's Candace Hackett Shively

May 2, 2009
10,000 Resources for K-12 Teachers

April 21, 2009
Technology Encourages Sharing of Earth Day Projects

April 8, 2009
SFL Responds to President Obama's Education Plan

April 1, 2009
SFL Releases 2008 Annual Report

February 25, 2009
SFL Announces Educational Wireless Broadband Contest Winner

December 16, 2008
TeachersFirst Announces Interactive OK2Ask Seminars

October 17, 2008
Teachers to Candidates: Educational Equity Most Important

October 5, 2008
The Source for Learning Teams with NEBSA on Wireless Broadband Competition

September 30, 2008
Globetracker's Mission Returns

August 1, 2008
PreschoolFirst to Present at 2008 NAEYC Conference

July 14, 2008
TeachersFirst presents at Educational Computing Conference

July 7, 2008
A New Name in Online Learning Resources

June 15, 2008
TeachersFirst Will Present at the 2008 NECC Conference

May 8, 2008
TeachersFirst Helps Teachers Build Collaborative Projects Online

October 10, 2007
Board Member Gen. Julius Becton Receives Marshall Medal

June 7, 2007
PreschoolFirst Receives Computerworld Award

April 10, 2007
TeachersFirst Creates Educator Advisory Board

April 2, 2007
TeachersFirst 2.0 Launched

March 17, 2007
Board Member Doris Voitier Receives Profiles in Courage Award

February 7, 2007
Board Member Dr. Carter Ward Honored By School Boards Association

January 17, 2007
NITV Launches NAESP PreschoolFirst Partnership

November 15, 2006
TeachersAndFamilies Announces TogetheRead

October 16, 2006
TeachersFirst Creates Dates That Matter

December 1, 2005
NITV Elects Steven J. Gorski CEO

December 4, 2004
NITV Celebrates 25th Anniversary

June 1, 2003
NITV Chooses Dr. Sally Flagler's I-PAS for PreschoolFirst

January 1, 2003
USA Today Names TeachersAndFamilies a Best Bet for the Web


search
share this siteshare
Contribute Now