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SETDA forum illuminates key ed-tech trends
From interactive whiteboards to digital textbooks and high school reform, SETDA's annual Education Forum gave educators sound advice for using technology to advance learning

 

Primary Topic Channel:  Tech Leadership

 

Robert Marzano discussed how, when used appropriately, IWBs can positively impact education.

Attending this year's annual State Education Technology Directors Association (SETDA) Education Forum was like sitting through a timeline of technology integration in schools during the last few years: Participants heard about what's now the norm (interactive whiteboards, or IWBs), what's hot on everyone's list (digital textbooks), and what's on the horizon (national high school reform).

Educators, administrators, and ed-tech vendors from around the country attended the forum, titled "Defining the Future of Learning Today." Of course, before you can define the future, you must remember where you've come from.

In his opening keynote, Robert Marzano, CEO of Marzano Research Laboratory, presented his organization's newest research report, titled "Evaluation Study of the Effects of Promethean ActivClassroom on Student Achievement," which details how interactive whiteboards can affect student learning.

"I was nervous to do this report," Marzano said, "because you always hope for positive results, but you never know what to expect. I'm happy to show you these results, because they clearly show that technology … makes a positive impact on learning."

During the 2008-09 school year, 79 teachers from 50 schools participated in independent studies to determine how using Promethean's ActivClassroom affects student achievement in their classroom.

According to the report, when interactive whiteboards were incorporated into the classroom, there was a percentile gain of 17 overall, meaning students at the 50th percentile would move to the 67th percentile if they had been taught with the help of an IWB.

"We saw that the more the tech was used in the classroom, meaning the more time spent using it, the higher the percentile increase. However, sometimes, during the most prolific uses of the tech, the percentile decreased. This is due to teachers not appropriately using the technology," Marzano said.

He went on to explain that there is a "sweet spot" in using IWBs: If an experienced teacher who's been using technology for two or more years uses the board appropriately for 75 percent of the class time, and has enough training to be confident in his or her use of the technology, student achievement gains were highest.

Whether the IWB was being used correctly also was studied through varying factors associated with IWB use, such as student skill in IWBs, teacher skill, and use of IWB reinforcers (functions such as applause, drag and drop, hidden content, voting, and so on).

"You have to make sure it's not all bells and whistles," said Marzano. "The teachers [who] didn't see improvement with IWBs were usually those who didn't make sure the content, and not the add-ons, came first. Content, and knowing what you're trying to teach, is key."

The study also revealed what teachers need to do to use their IWB correctly and efficiently with regard to presenting content. For example, content should be:

 
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The statistical analysis in Marzano's study is completely, shockingly wrong. I sent an e-mail to his organization.

Posted By: beth639, 2009-11-10 2:28 PM

Yes a Reform needed

1.- Develop a National Curriculum in DC 2.- Develop Beautiful ONLINE courses in DC bay the best teachers and technicians of the world according to this National Curriculum 3.- I am working on to provide netbooks for K12 $ 8 per month for 36 months. So everybody can have netbook. You need 56.000.000 of them. May be lower price. 4.- Children may go to school or at home as thet wish. Same ONLINE courses . You may add projection at schools. Best advice USE THE EXPERTISE YOU CAN BRING TOGETHER IN DC for 56.000.000 K12 students Muvaffak GOZAYDIN of Turkey educated at Caltech and Stanford. I learned all these in USA .

Posted By: mgozaydin, 2009-11-10 3:16 AM

Addressing the 4 criteria of Education Reform

"At the policy level, there are four measures that can [define] successful reform," said Lyndsay Pinkus, senior policy associate for the Alliance for Excellent Education, "and those measures are breaking the cycles of inequity, preparing for 21st-century employability, reducing the economic costs of failure, and maintaining America's global competitiveness." Educational technology is the key to addressing each of these measures. Edtech can help level the playing field by exposing students to an equal pool of new ideas; it definitely helps prepare students for 21st century employment by ensuring they are tech saavy; it help ensure a financially secure future by saving school budgets on things like transportation, printed textbooks, etc, and it prepares our students with the kind of innovation it takes to be competitive on a global level. I work for Broadband for America, a national coalition looking to expand and enhance access to broadband technologies, and one key issue is that of education. We believe broadband holds the key to bringing our education system to the next level by addressing a host off barriers that have traditionally been holding our education system back. Check us out and join us at: http://ow.ly/uRlJ

Posted By: broadbandaccess, 2009-11-04 2:28 PM

interesting blogposts about the validity of the Marzano study

Here are a few posts from bloggers who are expressing criticism of the Marzano study: http://iwbrevolution.ning.com/profiles/blogs/taking-aim-at-marzano-and-1 and “Dissecting Marzano’s Promethean Research” by “admin” of Ed Tech Leadership “http://edtechleadership.com/wordpress3/?p=246 and “Peer-review” of Marzano’s IWB Study Report, part 1-4, Jonathan Becker, Ph.D, http://edinsanity.com/2009/06/03/marzano_part2/ There's a good debate about the use of IBWs at Classroom 2.0, “Are IWBs transformative to your teaching and/or classroom?” http://www.classroom20.com/forum/topics/are-interactive-white-boards?x=1&id=649749%3ATopic%3A283495&page=1#comments Thank you for allowing me to share alternative viewpoints on this issue as well as critical views of Marzano's research methods in this study.

Posted By: cshidner, 2009-11-04 1:16 PM

 

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