Wednesday, November 13, 2019

What is your vision for technology integration?

Photo Credit Brad Flickinger creative commons.org

At Spring Hill Elementary, there have been a number of recent changes that lead us to consider, What is your vision for technology integration?

This school year, SHE is fortunate to have a 1:1 student to mobile device ratio in grades K-5. What does this look like in the elementary classroom? There have been a number of studies which claim that providing each child in a school with a computing device will not only increase academic achievement, but has become an absolute necessity due to the nature of an ever-changing technological society (Sutton, 2015). Sutton (2015) shares our understanding that simply providing children with digital devices does not guarantee academic improvement, but it is the way in which teachers themselves embrace and utilize these resources that is the ultimate variable of success.

One argument for 1:1 initiatives in public schools is to foster experiences for students that have an authentic engagement with their learning that could take root through inquiry, be organized through project- or problem-based approaches, and be tailored to their own unique interests and experiences (Office of Educational Technology, 2019).

The Office of Educational Technology (2019) reports that this concept requires teachers to reconsider their role in the classroom to include risk-taking, the biggest of which is stepping back and becoming a facilitator of student learning. At the same time, they must also integrate new tools to empower learners as problem-solvers and risk-takers themselves.

For more information on What Is Successful Technology Integration? Visit www.edutopia.org.

littleBits Pro Library

Photo Credit Ultra-lab www.flickr.com/photos/62141688

Last fall, Spring Hill Elementary was awarded a WVDE SPARK grant to support STEM/ STEAM initiatives in West Virginia schools.  The grant was utilized to purchase the littleBits Pro Library as an integral feature of the reimagined library/ maker space at Spring Hill Elementary.  

John Spencer defines a maker space as "simply a space designed and dedicated to hands-on creativity."  This project helps to establish a space for the students of SHE that will foster the generation of ideas, problem-solving, ingenuity and innovation.  

Included in the maker space are enrichment opportunities for creating digital and physical products which support science, technology, engineering, the arts, and mathematics.  Other areas of impact include development of communication skills requiring listening, speaking, writing. and reading, design and creativity, and responsible digital technology citizenship.  

More making opportunities in schools leads to a maker mindset, which is essential to the 21st Century learning experience.  According to John Spencer, a maker mindset develops students skills to revise, pivot, change, and persevere.  By embedding a maker space within the library at Spring Hill Elementary, students will be engaged in creative thinking connected to content, experiencing a greater depth of knowledge, solving complex and real-world problems.

To read more about STEM in education, check out this excellent Forbes article, When STEM Becomes STEAM, We Can Change the Game featuring friend and colleague, Dr. Jenny Nash!