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Posts tagged ‘united states’

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The revolution has been canceled.

Open source textbooks a "threat" to ...
Image by opensourceway via Flickr

While doing some brainstorming today, I decided to do a search for articles about digital textbooks. One of the results was an article from David Warlick. In it, he mentioned how excited he was that his son had the choice of “bringing home a traditional, 400 page, five-pound, paperbound book, and a one-half ounce optical CD-ROM.” Of course, reality came crashing down when he realized the CD was little more than over-glorified PDFs.

He goes on to describe several characteristics he expects to see from digital texts. Some interesting ideas, it’s worth reading.

But what troubles me is that the article was written almost exactly 6 years ago. And in that time, there has been almost zero progress towards this end in most schools.

Depressing to say the least. That’s not to say there hasn’t been any progress at all. At Discovery, we have a Science service that has been approved for use as a textbook and is purchasable with textbook funds in the state of Oregon. Without a doubt, I think it’s on the right track. It has all the text one might want, but also videos, interactives, simulations, multimedia, bookmarking, read alouds, and assessment built into it. One could never accuse it of being an over-glorified pDF.

What’s concerning to me is how slow this adoption process is. While we’re working on getting it approved in several other states right now, for the most part a school can’t adopt a digital text even if they wanted to.

Think about that. It’s the year 2010 and most schools still can’t spend their textbook dollars on a digital solution. 21st Century skills? Meet 20th Century curriculum.

So what’s a teacher to do in this situation? The only thing they can… Pray they have an incredibly enlightened administration or fly under the radar. I think that’s what upsets me most. I see teachers that are doing incredibly innovative things to provide their students the best education possible, and more often than not they feel they have to hide their actions from the administration. In order to do what they feel is best for students and learning, they have to become fugitives within their own buildings.

In the end, for anybody who is patiently waiting for the digital revolution to come to them…. well don’t hold your breath. Unless you just happen to live in Oregon… or can convince your school/district to change the rules. Otherwise, if you want to do right for your students, you better be prepared to start a revolution of your own. Nobody else is going to do it for you.

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Thinking about assessment

Students taking a test at the University of Vi...
Image via Wikipedia

NCLB is bad. I know I won’t get many people arguing with that statement. However, it was created because people wanted to know that our education system was doing what we want it to. Of course, we could easily argue over what we actually want it to do, but ignore that for just a moment. Accountability is not a bad thing in itself. And if we’re spending time teaching people, we DO want to know whether we’re actually being successful, constructive, and making a difference. I mean, even if NCLB ceased to exist, that doesn’t mean we’d stop assessing our students, right?

SO. With that in mind… If you could wiggle your nose and make NCLB go away, how would you suggest we assess our students? Crazy ideas are perfectly acceptable here. BUT, you do need to consider that at some point there does need to be a way to compare information about the students. For example, when push comes to shove, colleges do need to know how students did. And parents are going to want to know how their students are doing versus other students, dogs and pet rocks in their district/state/country/continent/planet.

Whatcha think?