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"We Need Teachers, Not Computers"

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Pretty soon technology may replace teachers altogether; Teacherbots: Tomorrow's Solution Today? http://goo.gl/0s9TQ #satire

Esther, Very insightful piece, thank you! As a distance learning educator in Psychology, I also spend a great deal of time researching the 'latest and greatest' technologies that could be incorporated into my class. But I knew long ago after I began teaching DL that I would only use a new "tool" if I thought students would benefit from its inclusion (in a tangible way, such as increase engagement, facilitate actual learning - and not to use it just for the sake of using it). As for technologies shoved down my throat, so to speak, I'm sure that varies by institution, and luckily for me, we have faculty input from choosing the LMS, to designing our own courses. Plus, no one is force to teach online courses (disclaimer: I'm an adjunct). As for the perception about the technology gap between us educators and the 'younger' generation, I think your analysis is spot on. That perception is real, and based on some aspect of reality, but definitely not generalizeable for either group. I do know faculty who still use chalk on a chalkboard, and others who are EdTech geniuses, and have seen students who've never used FB or Twitter as well. I've found my role as a DL faculty is to train students on the online course technologies (like how to post in a discussion thread, or insert an image into a wiki - well, I have to explain what a wiki is first...). My bottom line as an advocate for online learning is that 'the teacher matters.' Even with the best software and videos available, an instructor is key to guiding the student through the process of discovery. I don't think (I hope anyway) we won't be replaced by automated online courses... Cheers, Jack

As a technology leader in a school, I see things differently. Teachers DO need a lot of training. I do not think tablets are the be-all and end-all or that applications are the new textbook; far from it. What I see is teachers thinking that technology is an add-on and not a tool, like the ruler is a tool, like a textbook is a tool, like construction paper is a tool. They do not know how to integrate and resist efforts to do so. However students that don't know how to use certain technologies or tools pick up extremely fast when a constructivist approach is used. Technology is the one area that student do an excellent job of transferring skills. It has been my observation and experience that what teachers may need five hours to understand, students pick up in one class period when it comes to technology use. Every year I look forward to new young staff that has no past practice to revert to using.

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