This was an interesting
week for me because I am always looking for new and effective ways to
introduce technology into my teaching. I am also always looking for
ways to make homework an effective tool to use in the classroom, and
not just something the students dread being handed at the end of
class.
We read about two
different technologies this week from Using Technology with
Classroom Instruction That Works. The first was a discussion
about reinforcing the effort the students have in the classroom. The
second had to do with homework and how we use it in the classroom.
Looking at both of these, I can clearly see the ideas about
behaviorism playing a role in them. As Dr. Orey says, behaviorism is
something that many people looked down on and think is out of date,
yet it is something that we always seem to use in out classrooms
(Laureate Education, Inc., 2011).
Behaviorism is simply a
punishment and reward based system where the goal is to be able to do
more rewarding than punishing. The students understand this idea
because it gives them immediate feedback from a behavior or action
they did. That is why this is something that is practiced in
classrooms all the time.
In the first area we
read about, reinforcing the effort of students, we learn about using
a behavior modification chart for all students. It allows us to
“Explicitly teach students about the importance of effort (Pitler,
Hubbell, Kuhn & Malenoski, 2007) and it gives student the chance
to “keep track of their effort and achievement” (Pitler et al,
2007). This gives us a couple of opportunities to allow students to
grow and learn in this area. They can see for themselves where they
are in the rubric and that will allow for immediate feedback, but
they can also see where they can work towards. This would work well
to implement technology because the students could do something like
this online. I know for our school’s grading program, there is a
section where we can fill in behavior and study skills. Using
technology, the students could track their own behavior and compare
it to both what the teacher sees, and where the student would like to
get.
The second area we read
about what making homework that is meaningful to the students. This
is something that teachers across the country use, homework, but it
is hard to find good ways to encourage the students to do the
homework. Usually, when the homework comes out, the students start
to groan. This system of homework really plays right into the ideas
of behaviorism. If the students do well on the assignment, they get
a good grade. If the students do poorly on the assignment, they get
a negative grade. I also believe that technology is a really
important aspect to all assignments. Pitler says:
Technology
facilitates homework and practice by providing a wealth of resources
for learning outside of the classroom, making it easy for students to
work on collaborative homework assignments and providing “drill and
practice” resources that help students refine their skill (2007).
I tend to be a teacher
that gives a lot of technology related homework in my classes. For
example, we are working with a Wiki project right now where there are
groups of students creating a web page discussing the different forms
of rocks. To me, this sort of project does bring out some of the
stronger points of behaviorism. The students get immediate feedback
from not only their teacher but also their peers. It also teaches
the students how to give this feedback to them.
Technology has created
an interesting opportunity for teachers. We live and teach in a
world right now that, although the popular belief is that we do not
like the idea of behavorism, it is almost one of the most prevalent
thoughts out there. Whenever we hear of students wanting that
immediate feedback on the assignment they are taking, they are
exemplifying one of the main principles of behaviorism. This idea of
getting your feedback quickly is very much along the ideas of a
rewards/punishment system.
This brings me to a
question to think about. I am a major pusher of technology at my
school. I believe that since this is what the students are used to
and all about at home, we should strive to make sure we try to use it
at school. My area of concern is when I have an older teacher I am
working with that will flat out refuse to let the students use things
like Wikipedia.org, or even the Internet. Should this be an area
that we are being a little more forceful with the teachers that do
not want this change to happen? I imagine that within this class,
there are mostly students that either use technology as best they
can, or are looking for ways to use it, and I believe that we should
be striving to do that more in all the subjects we teach.
References
Laureate Education, Inc. (Producer). (2011a). Program four:
Behaviorist Learning Theory [Video webcast]. Bridging learning
theory, instruction and technology. Retrieved from
https://class.waldenu.edu/webapps/portal/frameset.jsp?tab_tab_group_id=_2_1&url=%2Fwebapps%2Fblackboard%2Fexecute%2Flauncher%3Ftype%3DCourse%26id%3D_550904_1%26url%3D
Pitler, H., Hubbell, E. R., Kuhn, M., & Malenoski, K. (2007).
Using technology with classroom instruction that works.
Denver, CO: Mid-Continental Research for Education and Learning.
Behaviorism is found in the use of technology in the classroom more than what people think it is. Like you said, student’s receiving immediate feedback on a blog assignment or wiki assignment is directly linked to positive and negative reinforcement. I completely agree with you in that aspect.
ReplyDeleteA question I have for you in regards to your wikispace assignment that you mentioned above is also related to the behaviorist model. How do you plan on giving positive or negative feedback to a student on a wiki assignment if they are refusing to participate in the assignment? I have used wikispaces for a few years now in my classes and I always get frustrated with students that seem to sit around and allow everyone else do all the work. How do you handle situations like this?
another question in regards to your wiki assignments as homework. I am not sure where you teach or what your students backgrounds are comprised of, but one thing I find to be extremely difficult when assigning homework that is technology based, is that not all students have access to the internet at home. How does this affect the way some teaches can rely on homework via the internet or even the completion of an assignment as homework?
The only reason I ask is because these are extreme road blocks that most teachers have to face when it comes to integrating technology into your lessons, especially homework assignments.
To be honest about the wiki assignment, this is my first time giving one and I was not completely confident when I gave them the assignment. I felt it was the sort of thing that if I waited to give them until I was 100% confident in the assignment, I would have never given them the assignment. It has had a few snags, I did have a students login information disappear but otherwise, it is working well. It is interesting to see the students quickly learning how to use the website, even more so than I did.
ReplyDeleteAbout your questions, the first one will be something I deal with when I grade the projects later in the week. It is the sort of thing that tracks changes to the wiki, as I am sure you know. I am hoping that helps me see how much each person contributed. My other plan is going to be at times give the students the same sort of project, but where they all make their own wiki project.
The second question is a little harder to deal with. I know one thing I am doing is giving the students a lot of time to work on the project. To do this, instead of covering each type of rock, igneous, metamorphic, and sedimentary rocks, from the textbook, I actually had the students do all the learning from research. This freed up a lot of time to give the students to work on the project. I do happen to know though that there is only one student in our junior high that does not have Internet access. Since they are in 8th grade, it is something that I did not have to deal with this specific project.