I was speaking with a teacher recently at a school where she has been using netbooks with students in class. It was a planning meeting. As we started to discuss the possibility of using Google Maps for part of the project, the teacher expressed that she’d love to–but she didn’t trust most of her students to stay online in class.
Is this a technology or a pedagogy issue?
I watched this video by a company that allows the teacher to control the computers in the classroom and, well, I wasn’t irate or indignant. I was torn. Are student computer monitoring systems the best way to help students focus on computers? Isn’t the real lesson here that schools need to teach into students’ behaviors and help them make better decisions?
These questions make me think about the digital v. non-digital debate. I think of Lisa Nielsen’s recent posting about embracing digital books in schools is a case in point. She endorses the use of digital tools saying that
Until educators see the value of conducting our reading and writing digitally, I believe our students will continue to drown in the paper. I am not promoting that we go out and purchase kindles or other eReaders for our schools either. The real opportunity is to embrace the technology our students already have access to and harness the power of the fourth screen to engage in their reading, writing, and thinking 21st century style.
I agree that digital means of reading and writing are necessary, but I would add that a hybrid model is far more likely to be embraced by non-technophilic teachers.
On an other end of the spectrum are those who vilify digital learning by building a paper castle: I give you Emory English professor, Mark Bauerlein. His idea that students aren’t necessarily learning better–nor are they smarter–because they can whiz around various web sites or occasionally organize themselves into productive social action. Don Tapscott’s glorification of the Net Generation, as he calls it, is, for Bauerlein, absurd.
Where do we draw the line–or how do we better understand the line–between technology itself and actual learning? How do we understand the role of teachers in wireless classrooms? Fortunately the answer to those questions is easy: just buy software to let teachers control the kids.

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