If you are like most teachers, you want to find a way to integrate technology in your classroom. It’s a digital world full of computers, and you would be doing your students a disservice if you kept them in a state of Luddite ignorance about today’s technologies.
However, many teachers run up against problems when they try to use technology more often. Some of these problems are age-old, while you are only likely to encounter others when you integrate technology in your classroom. How many of these have you encountered?
You know your child or student isn’t reading well or comprehending what they’ve just read. How do you help? There are dozens of programs out there that claim to help your child read, but how well will your child retain it when the program is over? Why has nothing else you’ve done worked? How do you make it so fun and interesting that it sticks with them for life?
Using Adaptive Reading Technology To Guide Individual Needs
Why it Matters
Sheila Jordan, Alameda County Office of Education Superintendent
We’ve been working with the San Mateo County Office of Education for three years to develop an integrated e-model that brings curriculum and data electronically to teachers so they feel like they’re in charge of and capable of integrating the data they need. Hayward has been such a wonderful demonstration site for this, and the entire community has embraced their work. Patrick Simon is an energetic, talented and articulate person. Hayward USD started with very little in place and it’s been very exciting to see such huge leaps.
Dale Vigil, Hayward Unified School District Superintendent
There are gender differences in learning styles specific to science, math, engineering and technology (STEM) that teachers of these subjects should keep in mind when developing lesson plans and teaching in the classroom. First, overall, girls have much less experience in the hands-on application of learning principles in lab settings than boys. This could occur in the computer lab, the science lab, or the auto lab – the principle is the same for all of these settings – it requires an overall technology problem-solving schema, accompanied by use and manipulation of tools, and spatial relation skills that very few girls bring with them to the classroom on day one in comparison to boys.
Let’s look at some of the reasons why girls come to the STEM classroom with less of the core skills needed for success in this subject area. Overall, girls and boys play with different kinds of games in early childhood that provide different types of learning experiences. Most girls play games that emphasize relationships (i.e., playing house, playing with dolls) or creativity (i.e., drawing, painting). In contrast, boys play computer and video games or games that emphasize building (i.e., LEGO®), both of which develop problem-solving, spatial-relationship and hands-on skills.