Seamless Integration

As I begin thinking about my philosophy for using technology in my classroom, one idea sticks out in my mind: that technology should be of actual use. If I’m using Kahoot! a couple times a semester, or sporadically using D2L discussions or some sort of blog in order to say “Sure, I use technology in my classroom!, ” then maybe I should just stick to my pencils and paper. So, I thought I should go on a little hunt for ideas on how real integration works in the classroom. I came across What is Successful Technology Integration? on Edutopia. The article begins with listing a few characteristics of technology integration that put words to some of the feelings I was having about how I’d like technology and integration in my classroom look: “routine,” “accessible,” “readily available,” and “seamless.” These characteristics are important, I think. But one other characteristic that stays in my mind is “purposeful.” I don’t want “routine” to mean gratuitous, I don’t want “readily available” to mean superfluous. “Seamless” is my favorite out of the bunch. Whether I’m using more traditional approaches to learning, or or newer, technologically based approaches, my students and I should be able to move in and out of each without the blink of an eye.

The article also offers examples of successful tech integration, types of integration, and frameworks for integration. And, I haven’t read it yet, but the article also links to The Gamification of Education, and I’m looking forward to reading how this will be looked at as a positive development.

Hopes for Digital Rhetoric and Pedagogy

As I mentioned in my group introduction, I am not particularly well-versed in teaching with technology. As a reminder, I have taught middle school Language Arts in Arizona with no special technological aid, English to children in China with the support of a smart board, and my EAP courses at St. Cloud State with the support of D2L. I’d be happy to perfect my use of those technologies alone, and to become a more engaging user of PowerPoint, but there is much more to be learned about technology in today’s classroom than just that. I’m hoping also to meet my students more where they are at. They engage with so many forms of technology simply by using their smartphones every day, and then walk into a classroom where that interaction is mostly gone; I hope to change that, and engage them more because of it. Technology is so immediate, and allows for multi-directional communication, not only a teacher-down model. I hope that teaching with technology will open class up to be more of a creative discussion than simply a tired lecture on information that the students could have read on their own. Becoming aware of the options available to me, and expanding my repertoire of tricks will allow me to design a classroom that is balanced rather than flashy (or dry), and hopefully allow students to access information on their own to address the problems we encounter.

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