Ramblings » cellphones classroom http://teachercalder.ca The ramblings of a geeky student success teacher Fri, 01 Nov 2013 14:16:40 +0000 en-US hourly 1 Cellphones in the classroom http://teachercalder.ca/2010/09/16/cellphones-in-the-classroom/ http://teachercalder.ca/2010/09/16/cellphones-in-the-classroom/#comments Thu, 16 Sep 2010 09:06:00 +0000 http://teachercalder.ca/2010/09/16/cellphones-in-the-classroom/ This morning, like all others, I awoke to the local radio station. At 5:45 am I simply cannot stomach the beep, beep, beep of an alarm clock. And the great part is that my local radio station ROCKS. They have an excellent morning show with good debates. I figure that any radio show that can make me frantically reach for my iPhone to send off passionate emails before 6:00 am are pretty impressive. This morning like many other media outlets (The Star article) the quick conversation was about cellphones in the classroom. Dalton McGuinty made some comments over the past few days about boards being able to allow cellphones in the classroom when appropriate. The quick 6:00 am banter on The Dock FM included the radio hosts commenting on how distracted their teens (and others) are texting and emailing in the classroom. This is what got me hopping.

I’ve harassed the poor morning show host Meg before (she is wonderful and comes into the local high school for literacy conferences on a regular basis) and so sent her off an email. This is what it said:

“If we DON’T use mobile devices in the classroom, who exactly is modeling appropriate use? How do they learn how to use them properly?

Why do we all have this vision of kids sitting in rows in order to learn? What kind of job is like that? By NOT having mobile devices in class we are saying that we don’t want kids collaborating, communicating and searching for information. COME ON!!! This is the 21st century!!! These are skills that are needed for success. Mobile devices are Powerful learning devices. So, never thought I’d say this – props to @Dalton_McGuinty ( his twitter handle). He gets that we need to change our view of education in order to prepare these poor kids for THEIR future, not our past.”

I received this response “Good points Jacyln. Hope you heard our discussion on this…..this email featured heavily:)”

I unfortunately missed this later discussion and am highly curious as to whether I was debated or agreed with. Either way I’m happy. If I was agreed with, than maybe more people (listeners) were swayed towards my opinion. If I was debated, then it would have been a great learning experience (if only I had heard it and responded).

This little early morning interaction reminds me how education has to change to reflect changes in society. Twenty years ago a “nobody” like myself would never have their opinion heard, considered and debated on a radio station like The Dock FM. Technology has facilitated communication and collaboration to a degree that it permeates almost every career. How on earth do we expect our students to learn how to use this technology to help them be heard and to share ideas if we use blanket policies to ban them from schools? Will they be distracting? YES! Absolutely! When students hand wrote and passed notes did we ban the pen and paper? No, because they were seen as integral to the learning process. Technology is integral to the learning process when used properly. Technology in itself is useless. You could have a classroom with laptops on every desk and an interactive whiteboard at the front, that functions exactly like a classroom from the 1950′s. Students are seated in rows typing out notes. The teaching needs to change along with technology use.

We need to ask our selves “is this helping students succeed in today’s world?”. What skills do they need to succeed? My guess is collaboration, communication and innovation. Recalling facts is not important if you can “google it”. Using that information to form ideas, arguments and communicate those thoughts are much more important. Technology can facilitate that. We can’t be sure what today’s students will be faced with in 50 years. How can I know what to teach them that will be relevant? Things change so fast. Maybe if we teach them how to learn for themselves, communicate and problem solve, they’ll be able to figure it out for themselves?

So, thanks to The Dock FM for the thought-provoking morning. I’ve also learned an important lesson – if I decide to harass you, I’d darn well better listen to the rest of the morning show! :)

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