2.
Research
Center for Applied Research
in Educational Technology (CARET), managed by ISTE, is an excellent
website to start looking for research about educational technology.
A search for some useful questions about technology literacy yielded
the following answers. Use the question links to view the research
evidence used to answer each question:
Q:
How can technology influence student academic performance? The
CARET site answers "Technology improves performance when the
application provides opportunities for students to design and implement
projects that extend the curriculum content being assessed by a
particular standardized test."
Q:
How can technology develop higher order thinking and problem solving? CARET
indicates " Technology can enable the development of critical
thinking skills when students use technology presentation and communication
tools to present, publish, and share results of projects."
American Association of School Administrators. (n.d.). Preparing
Schools and School Systems for the 21st Century. Arlington, VA.
-- This study points out 16 major characteristics of schools and
school systems capable of preparing students for a global knowledge/information
age:
“In the 21st century, schools will become
nerve centers, with walls that are porous and transparent connecting
teachers, students and the community to the wealth of knowledge
that exists in the world, Schools in the 21st century will not
be confined by their walls but will be encompassing of the entire
community and the world…. [They will become] digital hubs,
which will be open electronically 24-hours-a-day, 7-days-a-week,
365-days-a-year…”
Colburn, L.K. (2002, February). Integrating
laptops into multiple subject areas: Thoughts from teachers and students.
Reading Online, 5(6). -- This article presents some interesting ideas
about how tech literacy should be part of a school literacy curriculum.
This online journal contains several pertinent articles in the archives
of past issues.
McNabb, M., Cradler, J., Freeman, M., & Cradler,
R. (2002, November). On
the horizon: electronic student performance assessments for higher-order
thinking. Learning and Leading with Technology, 30(3). p50(5).
-- The authors present many valuable ideas which deserve to be quoted:
“Assessment-centered lessons, units, or projects
require teachers to identify learning outcomes and to explicitly
link all lesson components, criteria, and rubrics for assessing
what students are learning. Additionally, programs with embedded
assessments can provide students and teachers with immediate feedback
about what is being learned.... Methods for using technology to
expand the domains of what can be measured, however, are emerging.
For example, networked environments provide ways to measure individual
and team performance strategies in problem-solving simulations.
Students can use digital authoring tools as simple as Inspiration
and HyperStudio to demonstrate their mental maps of relationships
among facts, concepts, and processes."
Moersch, C. (2002). Beyond
Hardware: Using Existing Technology to Promote Higher-Level Thinking. Eugene,
OR: International Society for Technology in Education. -- Dr. Chris
Moersch is the author of the LoTi assessment survey used across New
Hampshire. His book provides a framework for using existing technology
to develop and revise lesson
plans that promote critical thinking skills.
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