. Five
Ways to Waste the Potential of Classroom iPads
In this
helpful article in Edudemic, tech consultant and former high-school history
teacher Tom Daccord lists mistakes he’s seen schools making with iPads in
classrooms and points the way to more-effective use:
- Focusing only on content
apps – Some teachers think iPads are useless if apps in their subject area
aren’t available. But a Latin class, for example, could use apps like
VoiceThread to record students speaking Latin or having a collaborative
discussion about Cicero. Students could use Animoto for a lively student
presentation on Latin vocabulary, or the Socrative app for a Latin quiz,
or Explain Everything to create a grammar tutorial. Daccord says there are
limitless possibilities across subject areas using four basic types of
apps: annotation, screencasting, audio creation, and video creation.
- Unprepared teachers – To
ensure that tablet computers are used effectively, teachers need some
serious PD, says Daccord: “Decades of research has shown that when
teachers have access to new technologies, their instinct is to use new
technologies to extend existing practices. Without guidance, iPads become
expensive notebooks used by students in very traditionally structured
stand-and-deliver classrooms.” And giving teachers their own iPads to play
with outside school is poor preparation for effective classroom use. They
need training on workflow issues like cloud computing, the interaction of
different apps and file types, file format compatibility, file conversion
tools, all-in-one management solutions, and translating these concepts so
students can use them.
- Treating iPads like
computers or laptops – “iPads are devices meant to complement computers,
not replace them,” says Daccord. iPads simply don’t have equivalent
functionality. They are best for helping students (especially young
students) kinesthetically connect with their work by zooming, rotating,
pinching, or swiping. iPads can also be used to take pictures, record
audio, and shoot video. Students can use them to tell multimedia stories,
screencast the solution to math problems, create public service
announcements, and simulate tours of ancient cities. “Active consumption,
curation, and creativity suit the device,” says Daccord.
“Stand-and-deliver teaching does not.”
- Having multiple students use
an iPad at the same time – “Carts that rotate through several classrooms
force teachers to take time away from learning, create a nightmare of
student accounts, and often focus attention on workflow systems rather
than learning,” says Daccord. If funding shortages make one-on-one iPad
allocation impossible, he recommends putting full class sets into a few
pilot classrooms for an entire year – and pick classrooms whose teachers
will use the iPads to their fullest extent.
- Not explaining why we bought
all those iPads – “Letting the purchase speak for itself isn’t enough,”
says Daccord. “Districts need to explain why they’ve invested in these
devices.” Their use has to be in service of teaching students essential
skills, taking advantage of “the incredibly immersive and active learning
environment the iPad engenders and the unprecedented opportunities to
develop personalized, student-centered learning.” School leaders should
make the case that with these devices, students literally have the world
at their fingertips – “and the only limitation to what students might do
in this vast space is the vision of educators.”
“5
Critical Mistakes Schools Make With iPads (and How to Correct Them)” by Tom
Daccord in Edudemic, Sept. 27, 2012; Daccord can be reached at tom@edtechteacher.org; the article is at http://edudemic.com/2012/09/5-critical-mistakes-schools-ipads-and-correct-them/
I agree with many point of this article. While I feel that I would need an ipad to "play" with just to get started (how to turn it on and so forth...) I would also need LOTs of training on the most effective way to use it in a classroom.
ReplyDeleteI am wondering if it would be most effective for the staff or a group to go to a day training or for one or two people to get trained then help the staff on a one-to-one basis.
I think that we will find that there will be a wide variety of in the staff's familiarity with whatever technology we choose to go with. Several members of the staff already have iPads and could lead sessions for those that have the least experience. Perhaps, those that have greater skill with the iPad (or whatever) might want to attend further training that could then be passed along to others.
ReplyDeleteI also think you hit a key point when you mentioned that the bulk of the training is going to need to be in the educational uses of the technology.