I attended the Colorado Digital Learning Day at the University of Denver with approximately 60 other individuals. Lt. Governor Joe Garcia gave a nice speech and read a proclamation from the Governor promoting digital learning. The crowd was wired, literally. Tweets were flying. Facebook statuses were being updated. The third graders from Clayton Elementary were using their iPads. It was definitely a digital moment.
The day’s main event was a national town hall webcast, which was hosted by Arne Duncan, U.S. Secretary of Education, and FCC Chairman Julius Genachowski. This program highlighted the technological efforts of several school districts around the country, including Englewood here in Colorado. There were live interviews with teachers and students who are doing some exciting things with technology in the classroom.
I felt the program did a great job of expanding the emotional bandwidth of teachers and school administrators who are expected to leave no child behind in the global race for academic achievement. Everyone agrees that we need more connectivity to get the remaining 1/3rd of the US on broadband internet and schools shouldn’t have to use outdated textbooks.The Denver group responded with a semi-audible groan when we heard that every student in Uruguay has a computer and Korea will have no hardback textbooks by 2015.Say what? It was as if we were thrown back into the space race of the 1960s with every other developed and semi-developed country in the world.We were pumped. Bring it on. Let’s go to the digital moon.
Yet, as the program concluded, I found myself somewhat disappointed. It was not because of what I heard but what was not addressed by most of the participants. It seemed the primary focus of the day was the enhancement of education through technological innovation. Little was said about using technology to transform an educational system in desperate need of a makeover.
The difference between enhancement and transformation is what separates contractors from architects. The first group seeks to improve how they build the house. Over time, they purchase better materials and equipment, develop more cost efficient processes, and utilize a higher-skilled workforce. But they do not design the house – they simply build it.
Architects on the other hand love to create and innovate. They are not content with the status quo.They want to preserve functionality and purpose but push the envelope in terms of structure and design.
Education Secretary Duncan admitted that our school calendar is still based on a 20th century agrarian model that structures education around 9 months a year, five days a week, and 7 hours a day. What he failed to acknowledge was that we also continue to utilize an industrialized educational model based on fixed seat time, group advancement and standardized assessment.
Education needs more than digital text-books and computer based group projects. We need to seriously pursue mastery-based learning that makes achievement the constant and time the variable, allowing students to move forward in their education as an individual regardless of whether they were born before or after September 1. We need adaptive curriculum tailored to a student’s academic progress and learning style. We need to silence the bells that move children from overcrowded rooms to even more crowded rooms every 60 minutes. We need more quality educational choices from which families can select what is best for their children and academically at-risk students can succeed. (We also need post-secondary institutions to stop mandating admissions based on outdated “achievement” criteria and to continue adapting more technology-based learning but that is a topic for a different day).
Overall, the initial Digital Learning Day was a great start to a national discourse long overdue. Millions of teachers, administrators, and students were able to come together via computers, projectors and the internet to applaud innovation and increased achievement.
But let’s not celebrate too little too soon. Technology must be more than just a tool to do school “better.” It must be an instrument by which we transform our educational future. We need teachers and school leaders to be “architects” committed to redesigning new learning models, not just “builders” trying to renovate turn of the century educational brownstones and colonial two-stories.
Even worse, we don’t want to come back next year to only find factoy-like schools in the middle of a corn field overly excited about an internet connection that too easily disconnects in bad weather. If that is the case, they should schedule Digital Learning Day on February 2 and hope it doesn’t snow.
Digital Learning Day at the Morgridge College of Education, University of Denver was just one of the hundreds of locations across the country joining the national celebration of the passion, commitment, and innovation that are essential elements of effective and engaging learning in the online environment. One of the things about DLD that I enjoyed the most was the great combination of people in attendance. We had fifth graders, university professors, familiy coalitions, online education providers, librarians, and Lieutenant Governor Joe Garcia sharing their perspective. It's not easy to find opportunities for gathering together creators, facilitators, learners, and policy makers who are all critical to the vision of putting technology to use in 21st century learning settings. We started the day connected to the national online town meeting, which provided the insight of national leaders in digital learning. A very special component was the segment on Englewood High School. It's very clear that Colorado is a leader in digital learning and I expect that next year's Digital Learning Day will provide even more evidence of this leadership and commitment.
Dr. Mary Stansbury is the Associate Professor & Domain Chair for Library & Information Science at University of Denver Morgridge College of Education
The University of Denver was proud to participate in Digital Learning Day by hosting one of Colorado’s DLD local events at the Morgridge College of Education. Both the national and local presentations provided some thoughtful examples of how digital learning is being used to enhance teaching & learning. We really enjoyed the opportunity to hear directly from the 5th graders from Clayton Elementary about how their teachers are using technology to support learning. Students provided specific examples of how their teachers are using netbooks, clickers, smartboards, podcast feedback, and Web 2.0 technologies like Wallwisher to strengthen their learning experiences. We're looking forward to participating in Digital Learning Day 2013!
Kathy Keairns is the Director of Web-Based Learning, Office of Teaching& Learning and Co-Chair, eLearning Consortiumof Colorado
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