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INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY AND LEARNING IN THE INFORMATION AGE SCHOOL

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Title: INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY AND LEARNING IN THE INFORMATION AGE SCHOOL


1
INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY AND LEARNING IN THE
INFORMATIONAGE SCHOOL
  • DR. ROSS J. TODD
  • School of Communication,
  • Information and Library Studies
  • Rutgers, The State University
  • of New Jersey
  • rtodd_at_scils.rutgers.edu
  • www.scils.rutgers.edu/rtodd

2
Technological Change
  • 1708
  • Students today cant prepare bark to calculate
    their problems. They depend on their slates
    which are more expensive. What will they do when
    the slate is dropped and breaks? They will be
    unable to write
  • (Teachers Conference, 1708)

3
Technological Change
  • 1815
  • Students depend on paper too much. They cant
    clean a slate properly. What will they do when
    they run out of paper?
  • (Principals publication, 1815)

4
Technological Change
  • 1907
  • Students today depend too much on ink. They
    dont know how to use a pen knife to sharpen a
    pencil. Pen and ink will never replace the
    pencil
  • (National Association of Teachers Journal)

5
Technological Change
  • 1928
  • Students today depend upon store-bought ink.
    They dont know how to make their own. This is a
    sad commentary on modern education
  • (Rural Teacher, 1928)

6
Technological Change
  • 1941
  • Students today depend upon these expensive
    fountain pens. They can no longer write with a
    straight pen and nib. We parents must not allow
    them to wallow in such luxury to the detriment of
    learning
  • (PTA Gazette, 1941)

7
Technological Change
  • 1950
  • Ball-point pens will be the ruin of education in
    this country. Students use devices and then
    throw them away. Businesses and banks will never
    allow such expensive luxuries
  • (Federal Teachers Journal, 1950)

8
Technological Change
  • 1976
  • I can never imagine that anyone would ever need
    more than 640K
  • (Bill Gates, once a school boy library monitor)

9
Information Technology The Promise
  • flexibility to meet the individual needs and
    abilities
  • immediate access to richer source materials
  • present information in new, relevant ways which
    help students to understand, assimilate and use
    it more readily
  • motivate and stimulate learning
  • enhance learning for students with special needs
  • motivate students to try out new ideas and to
    take risks
  • encourage analytical and divergent thinking
  • reduce the risk of failure at school
  • encourage teachers to take a fresh look at how
    they teach and the ways in which students learn
  • help students learn when used in well-designed,
    meaningful tasks and activities
  • offer potential for effective group work.
  • http//production.edna.edu.au/sibling/learnit/itpo
    t.html 1996

10
Are search engines making today's students dumber?
11
The Learning Return on our IT Investment
Research to Date
  • Significant positive effect on achievement.
  • Use of online IT for collaboration across
    classrooms in different geographic locations has
    also been shown to improve academic skills.
  • Positive effects on student attitudes toward
    learning and on student self-concept more
    successful in school, more motivated to learn
    increased self-confidence and self-esteem when
    using computer-based instruction.
  • Technology is most powerful when used as a tool
    for problem solving, conceptual development, and
    critical thinking This involves students
    using technology to gather, organize, and analyze
    information, and using this information to solve
    problems

12
Current Research Suggests..
  • Changes brought about by technology are more
    evolutionary than revolutionary.
  • Level of effectiveness of educational technology
    is influenced by the teachers role in
    instruction, how the students are grouped, and
    the level of student access to the technology.
  • Constructivist or student-centered approaches are
    better suited to fully realizing the potential of
    computer-based technology.
  • inquiry, collaborative, technological, and
    problem-solving skills developed using
    technology can lead to increased positive impact
    on students independence and feelings of
    responsibility for their own learning.

13
INFORMATION AND TECHNICAL LITERACIES
  • The scaffolds for effective engagement and
    utilisation of information in all its forms
    (electronic, print, popular culture) for
    constructing sense, understanding and new
    knowledge

14
Learning through Information Technology3
Essential Dimensions
  • Understand the complex nature of information in
    this digital environment
  • Understand how students use this digital
    environment, and how they learn, or dont learn,
    through it
  • Understand the pedagogical implications
    effective instructional design

15
  • THE TANGLED WEB WE WEAVE
  • Information
  • Misinformation
  • Malinformation
  • Messed up information
  • Useless information
  • (Burbles, 1997)

16
  • THE TANGLED WEB WE WEAVE
  • Information
  • Misinformation
  • Disinformation
  • (Floridi, 1996)

17
Disinformation Misinformation
  • Disinformation Deliberate attempt to mislead or
    deceive, resulting in inaccurate information
    arises whenever the process of information is
    defective
  • Lack of objectivity eg. Propaganda
  • Lack of completeness eg. Lack of evidence
  • Lack of pluralism eg. Range of viewpoints
  • Lack of security eg technical mishandling,
    virus, hacking
  • Misinformation An honest mistake, unknowing
    misrepresentation of facts out of date
  • Result availability of inaccurate information

18
  • Students on the WWW
  • Some Research
  • Evidence

19
Learning in an Information Age School
  • Understand the complex nature of information in
    this digital environment
  • Understand how students use this digital
    environment, and how they learn, or dont learn,
    through it
  • Understand the pedagogical implications
    effective instructional design

20
Electronic Information Seeking(McNicholas
Todd, 1996)
  • Design of research activities foster
    construction or foster replication (plagiarism)
  • Constructing an appropriate search
  • Working with search engines
  • Critiquing web sites and making quality
    assessments of the information
  • Constructing personal understanding

21
Connecting with WWW Information Research tells
us
  • High levels of information overload
  • Inability to manage and reduce large volumes of
    information
  • Failure to retrieve documents based on aboutness
    / topicality
  • Formulating ineffective search queries
  • Lack of in-depth examination of sites

22
Connecting with WWW Information Research tells us
  • Failure to utilise Boolean operators
  • High levels of insecurity and uncertainty
  • Lack of understanding of search engines
  • Simplistic searches based on guesswork or novice
    knowledge
  • High expectation of technology to make up for
    poor searching techniques
  • Limited use of systematic, analytic-based
    strategies

23
Interacting with WWW Information Research tells
us
  • Range of coping strategies including accepting
    errors and delegation
  • Absence of critical and evaluative skills
  • Not questioning the accuracy or authority of
    information
  • Inappropriately favouring visual cues

24
Utilising WWW information Research tells us
  • Information management issues time, workloads,
    deadlines
  • Make use of any somewhat-relevant sites
  • Tendency to plagiarise
  • Willingness to construct answers on limited
    information

25
How do Birds Sing?
26
  • Cybercheating goes digital
  • www.schoolsucks.com
  • www.evilhouseofcheat.com
  • www.freeessays.com
  • www.thesaurus.com
  • www.phuckschool.com
  • Also go to (for extensive listing)
  • http//www.coastal.edu/library/presentations/mills
    2.html

27
(No Transcript)
28
Learning in an Information Age School
  • Understand the complex nature of information in
    this digital environment
  • Understand how students use this digital
    environment, and how they learn, or dont learn,
    through it
  • Understand the pedagogical implications
    effective instructional design

29
Pedagogical Interventions
  • Systematic and explicit development of
    information literacy scaffolds
  • ? across school
  • ? planned
  • ? collaborative
  • ? diagnostic
  • ? guided, staged and transferable

30
How do students develop intellectual scaffolds
for working with IT?
  • Mysteriously someone else has taught them
  • Vicariously by sitting at a computer terminal
  • Serendipitously by just doing assignments
    through haphazard information seeking
  • Slavery getting someone else eg parents
  • Systematically and explicitly embedding
    learning scaffolds into teaching process

31
Its not just Good and Bad Websites!Creating
Meaning
  • Information on the Net represents peoples
    versions of reality, past, future, knowledge,
    culture, ideology, power
  • Need to make clear the ideologies and ideological
    workings of texts
  • Need to make explicit the belief systems
    inscribed in texts
  • To enable people to read the world and the word -
    past, present and future
  • (Misson, 1998)

32
Keys to Success in Using IT to Construct New
Knowledge
  • Have high levels of reading literacy (including
    visual literacy)
  • Able to define problems, frame questions, explore
    ideas, formulate focus, investigate, analyze and
    synthesize ideas to create own views, evaluate
    solutions and reflect on new understandings
  • Able to use technology and information tools to
    create information products that accurately
    represent their newly developed understanding
  • Can communicate ideas using oral, written, visual
    and technological modes of expression
    individually or in teams
  • Are ethical, responsible users of information who
    demonstrate concern for quality information and
    value different modes of thought.

33
The True but Little Known Facts about Women and
Aids, with documentation
  • http//www.ithaca.edu/library/research/AIDSFACTS.h
    tm

34
Ban dihydrogen Monoxide
  • http//www.netreach.net/rjones/no_dhmo.html

35
Martin Luther King JrAn Historical Examination
  • http//www.martinlutherking.org/

36
  • The Challenge
  • You
  • Begin
  • Constructing
  • The Road
  • By Walking
  • It
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