Learning From Cyber-Savvy Students
Hird, Anne (2000). Learning from cyber-savvy
students: How Internet-age kids impact classroom
teaching. Sterling, VA: Stylus Publishing.
CH
1: INTRODUCTION: CHILDREN, ADULTS, AND THE THINKING
MACHINE
QUOTE: “…children can traverse the globe on the Internet
before they are allowed to leave the back yard on a
bicycle.” p.1
The
Internet is changing commerce, the workplace,
entertainment—and possibly, schools. Schools are
lagging behind banks, libraries, retailers, and medical
centers in their utilization of the Internet.
Many educators were (and remain) skeptical about the
Internet. After all, microcomputers have been around
more than a decade without transforming instruction.
Theme
The
Internet is permeating children’s lives outside school:
playing and trading computer games, meeting in chat
rooms, emailing…what happens when these cyber-savvy kids
enter the classroom?
Introduction
For
a year, the author searched for a
technologically-advanced school, and finally found one—a
private, independent school that serves 130 students in
grades 4-8. This school is a recognized leader in
computer use and exceeds the norm in infrastructure,
training and tech support, and integration of computers
into classrooms.
Subjects
 |
Participants were 34 8th-grade students in
two interdisciplinary social studies classes: 42%
African American, 27% Caucasian, 11% biracial, 10%
Latino, and 10% Asian American. |
 |
This school (we’ll call it “Cityview”) has an
acceptable use policy regarding its computers. |
 |
Students learn about the computers in a variety of
ways: trial and error, collaboration, online help,
printed manuals, and asking teachers. |
 |
Computers are just a part of their busy lives: most of
these students go online no more than 3 times per
week. |
Methodology
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Interviews |
 |
Online Discussion Board |
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Students’ research papers and web sites |
CH
2: NEW POSSIBILITIES FOR LEARNING: THE PROMISE OF THE
INTERNET
With the first wave of computers in the classroom, they
weren’t connected: “…it became common to find a $2000
computer installed in a classroom that still lacked a
$25 telephone.”
Why
did educational television and radio fail to transform
the classroom? The author thinks it’s because they were
one-directional (broadcast only) media. By contrast,
the Internet, at least in its infancy, was designed
specifically to encourage collaboration among academics
at major research institutions.
Within the next 10 years, Internet technology should
improve to the point that students can become more “lead
actors” than passive observers.
The
Internet may also enable Artificial Intelligence tools,
currently the province of advanced researchers, to be
brought into the classroom. Such tools can be used to
explore complex problems.
The
Internet can provide a safe environment to try out new
roles or learn new life skills.
The
Internet can define communication spaces according to
common interests and shared information rather than
geographic location.
Initial Internet surfers were content to view
information; now, people expect to be able to DO things
online.
The
Internet blurs the distinction between school and home,
work and play. It transcends time.
What is Constructivist Learning?
-
Authentic problem solving
-
Collaboration
-
Active engagement
-
Multiple perspectives
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Multiple modes of representation
-
Reflection on the learning process
--(Honebein,
1996; Savery & Duffy, 1996)
 |
In the constructivist view, learning isn’t something
given by teachers to students and passively absorbed,
but rather an active, social and creative process by
which students construct learning. |
 |
In the constructivist approach, the teacher abdicates
center stage to the students, who help define problems
and projects and then take more responsibility for
their decisions. |
 |
In the constructivist approach, learning tends to be
more “real-world relevant”. |
 |
Learning does tend to be “messier” with the
constructivist approach. |
The
Internet has some features that support constructivist
learning:
 |
A
vast information repository, constantly updated,
letting topics be researched that formerly would have
had to have been abandoned for lack of research
resources |
 |
Information from diverse perspectives |
 |
Information in a variety of media (text, pictures,
audio, video, maps) |
 |
The possibility of intraclass, interclass, even
worldwide collaboration |
 |
The possibility of posting one’s one work on the
Internet |
CH
3: PATTERNS OF RESPONSE TO INNOVATION: SCHOOLS AND
TECHNOLOGY
Historically, schools have been by turns highly
resistant to new technology (they’ve also been
susceptible to overblown promises about the “next big
thing”).
Educational technology is expensive, not only in the
initial purchase of hardware but in ancillaries (e.g.,
ISP bills), training, and maintenance costs.
Historically, teachers have only been interested in
those technologies that help them do what they would
have done in the classroom anyway---the day-to-day
routines in most classrooms have remained constant.
These routines largely support the delivery of
information to students by teachers.
Schools are also set up to promote uniformity: the same
learning goals, the same texts, standardized testing.
The more creative the technology use, the more such
uniformity may be disrupted.
The
Internet Also creates challenges:
 |
Since computers promote collaboration, they bring up
new challenges such as how a system predicated on
individual accountability can assign individual grades
for collaborative projects. |
 |
The Internet has contributed to an exponential
explosion of information. |
 |
The hyper-linked structure of the Internet can be
disruptive to sequential learning. |
 |
Computer skills are now necessary in many (if not
most) endeavors, so teachers, regardless of their
academic discipline, are now in a sense computer
trainers. |
 |
Computers change very quickly, so skills must be
constantly updated lest they become outdated. |
Typically, the first way to use a new technology is to
do what has already been done, but better. Innovation
comes later. Most instructional web sites are in this
initial stage, delivering the same notes and quizzes
that were given on paper.
Do
new technologies foster change in teachers, or is it
just that new technologies are more apt to be used by
teachers who are already innovative teachers in their
classroom teaching?
The
Internet could make paper textbooks obsolete.
The
Internet could shift students’ roles from passive
observers to active manipulators of software
simulations. Simulations also:
 |
Provide a safe environment for learning new life
skills. |
 |
Are capable of modeling complex phenomena. |
Computers have already made it possible for a person to
access huge amounts of data. The next step in the
evolution of computers might be to use artificial
intelligence to help find patterns in that data.
The
Internet has facilitated creation of knowledge spaces
defined by interests rather than geographical location.
The
Internet redefines time; e.g., it can blur the
distinction between work time and free time.
CH
4: ONLINE AND OFFLINE: IT’S ALL REAL
Beginning with curiosity aroused by giving computers to
his twin daughters, the author spent months
investigating how teens were using the Internet. He was
struck by how they did not distinguish between online
and offline activities and relationships. Unless he
asked, teens tended not to point out that one friend was
a “face-to-face” friend while another friend was
exclusively online.
Most students are less interested in their computer’s
hardware and capabilities and more interested in what
they can do with it.
CH
5: FUN, BUT NOT ALL GAMES: LIVING AND LEARNING ONLINE
Not
surprisingly, teens visit sites related to their
interests: e.g., sports, entertainment, celebrity fan
sites, funny sites. They really like sites that meld
communication with content (e.g., when a movie star’s
web site has chat rooms and discussion boards).
Teens also get news from the web, liking it because
they can choose what to view instead of having
someone else choose (as with TV news).
Teens use the communication features of the Internet to
augment rather than replace face-to-face communication.
They also seem to use it just a few hours per week.
Well, hopefully that’s enough to give you the flavor of
the book. Here’s a listing of the other chapters:
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CH 6: INFORMATION AND MISINFORMATION: STUDENTS’ ONLINE
RESEARCH |
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CH 7: MEETING THE REAL PERSON FIRST: STUDENTS’ ONLINE
RELATIONSHIPS |
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CH 8: BUT IS IT SAFE? STUDENTS’ ONLINE CONDUCT |
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CH 9: THE INTERNET GENERATION IN SCHOOL: USING
TECHNOLOGY IN THE CLASSROOM |
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CH 10: CATCHING UP TO KIDS: WHAT SCHOOLS CAN DO |
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