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Thursday, January 26, 2012

Blog Assignment #3


The tides are turning; the only thing that is constant is change itself.  Marc Prensky’s article, “Digital Natives, Digital Immigrants” takes an interesting approach to the future school scene. Technology over the last fifty years has advanced exponentially. Every day, it seems, there is something new, and young people under twenty seem to be the ones to introduce it to the world, or the world to it. As teachers we have a front-row seat to view these changes.  Our students will be bringing the newest lingo to the classroom, and newest devises to share with their friends. As teachers we also have an interesting role in how that new lingo and technology is received, promoted, accepted and propagated. Our students will be the programmers, developers, and creators of tomorrow’s technology. We as teachers can suppress and limit its use and acceptance or we can embrace it, incorporate it, and teach using it. It’s either sink or swim. It will be interesting to see what the next decade brings and what the classroom will look like in the next few years.

Yet, I also think, the more things change the more they stay the same, and “there is nothing new under the sun” Prov. 1:9 (NIV). Some of what Prensky inferred sounded like science fiction of the fifties and sixties portraying that by the year 2000 we would be flying around in hoover crafts, and living in space abodes. Prensky takes a radical approach to the future of education, and core curriculum. He goes a little too far in saying that, “reading, writing, arithmetic, logical thinking, understanding the writings and ideas of the past, etc – all of our ‘traditional’ curriculum,” will become obsolete, and need to be deemphasized. I think that these things will, and should, continue to have their place of importance, but I do agree that their delivery can adapt to the ever blossoming realm of technology.

1 comment:

  1. I liked your interoperation of Prensky's article, what he is saying is like science fiction. It always seems like the next generation will be those who are flying around in hovercrafts and yet none of that technology has come to pass generation after generation.
    He is very drastic in saying that core curriculum will become obsolete. I mean, if that becomes obsolete why had teachers at all, take the science fiction one step further and have students learn completely through technology without human interaction.
    I was wondering, because I know you and your wife desire to eventually go to AFrica, how you see the value of technology for situations like that? I want to go teach in Mexico where none of this will be available and I feel like it almost sets people up for failure because we rely to heavily on technology and the ease that it brings us in finding curriculum or lessons.

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