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Volume 1, Issue 3 ISSN
1528-5804
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Willis, E., & Raines, P. (2001). Technology and
the changing face of teacher preparation. Contemporary Issues
in Technology and Teacher Education [Online serial] ,
1 (3) . Available:
http://www.citejournal.org/vol1/iss3/currentpractice/article1.htm
Technology and the Changing Face of Teacher
Preparation
ELIZABETH
M. WILLIS and PEGGY
RAINE
Northern Arizona University
"There aren't just three Rs anymore-as in reading, writing
and 'rithmetic—there's a fourth: the Internet.' (from
Generations at Work)
Preservice Teacher Education and Technology
The federal government estimates that, with the
increase in student population and the demand for smaller class
sizes, the education system will require as many as 2.2 million new
teachers in the next 10 years. Many of these new teachers will be
graduates of colleges of education (
The Milken Foundation, 2001a ).
These educators will be charged with preparing
children and young people to be successful citizens and members of
a society that is increasingly being transformed by technology. The
workplace in such fields as medicine, transportation,
manufacturing, and entertainment has embraced technology in order
to stay current'so must education (
The Milken Foundation, 2001b ).
However, 'The education industry is the only
'knowledge business' still debating the utility of technology' (
The Milken Foundation, 2001b
) . Reed Hunt, Chairman of the Federal Communications
Commission, added 'There are thousands of buildings in this country
with millions of people in them who have no telephones, no cable
television, and no reasonable prospect of broadband services.
They're called schools' (
The Milken Foundation, 2001b ).
Dr. David Moursund, Executive Officer of the
International Society for Technology in Education (ISTE) suggested
that preservice teacher education programs have improved
preparation of future teachers in information technology, 'but they
still have a long way to go' ( The
Milken Exchange & ISTE, 1999 )
A study of teacher education programs initiated by
the Milken Exchange on Educational Technology and carried out by
ISTE suggested that 'these programs should increase teachers'
exposure to appropriate technology if they are to aptly prepare
them for today's classrooms'( The
Milken Exchange & ISTE, 1999 )
Although most programs for teacher education
provide some computer education for preservice educators, many do
not have up-to-date equipment or faculty with technology expertise,
which makes the situation no more promising for those just entering
the teaching profession than for inservice teachers (Hasselbring,
1991) who report their technology training as being about
computers, not learning with computers. The ISTE study found much
the same situation in today's teacher education programs: most
faculty-members do not, in fact, practice or model effective
technology use in their classrooms
The National Council for the Accreditation of
Teacher Education (NCATE) and ISTE have adopted a set of preservice
teacher competencies for technology education, standards designed
to prepare teachers to use technology (Wetzel, 1993), but colleges
and universities must make their own decisions concerning the
integration of technology into the teacher education curriculum
(Munday, Windham, & Stamper, 1991). The ISTE survey, titled
'Information Technology in Teacher Education,' determined that most
preservice faculty believe that future teachers do not receive
adequate training or effective modeling. It is important,
therefore, that colleges of education widen their offerings to
prepare preservice teachers to use technology effectively, and
begin modeling proper applications of technology and teaching
strategies in the learning process (Fawson & Smellie,
1990).
Integrated Secondary Teacher Education
Program (I-STEP)
Historical Context
In an attempt to address these national concerns
and the mission of the Center for Excellence in Education (CEE) at
Northern Arizona University 'to prepare education professionals to
create the schools of tomorrow,' the secondary education faculty
began a 2-year reconceptualization of the secondary teacher
preparation program in 1993.
The identified need for program revision did not
emerge as much from the faculty at this time as it did from the
administration. The CEE dean and the Instructional Leadership
department chair were urging the faculty to create a program that
was unique without sacrificing quality. They were also under some
pressure because the elementary school-based teacher preparation
programs, even then, were nationally recognized as reformation
leaders, while secondary education had changed little over
time.
The initial revision efforts centered on a
comprehensive evaluation of the secondary education program as it
then existed. Each faculty member responsible for teaching the
undergraduate and post degree certification courses (High School
Teaching Methods, Secondary Curriculum and Principles, Evaluation
of Learning, Content Area Reading, and Educational Psychology)
presented a thorough synopsis of what content was being covered and
how these courses were being taught. A great deal of conversation
ensued regarding overlap of content and effort, as well as the more
critical insights of existing gaps in the traditional program.
The birth of a felt need within each faculty member
for substantive change in the program actually occurred at this
stage of acknowledging the deficiencies that existed'most
importantly, that we were not adequately preparing our secondary
candidates to meet the needs of diverse student populations, which
included differences across gender, ethnicity, culture,
mentally/physically challenging conditions, sexual orientation, and
varying achievement levels. Furthermore, it was recognized that
there was a rapidly increasing need for students to become more
skilled in the effective use of technology in classroom
instruction.
Growing out of the now clearly recognized content
duplication and gaps within the education courses, the arduous task
of conceptualizing a program that would correct these deficiencies
was begun. The secondary certification program, as it then existed,
was based on students' completing 16 credit hours of professional
pedagogy that could be taken any time during the sophomore, junior,
and senior years and in conjunction with their major content area
coursework. This meant that students were in varying stages of
their certification process, carrying varying course loads at any
given time. One of the earliest questions in program design
centered around this idea of time and timing. When should students
begin and end the professional coursework, and how should the
courses be blocked or sequenced?
At this time the faculty realized that, if they
were to move beyond just tinkering with the existing program to
radical redesign, they needed to have total control over the
students' schedule for the professional pedagogical semester, and
that this semester should come immediately before student teaching.
This meant that students must have completed their content
major/minor coursework, all liberal studies requirements, and the
prerequisite of an educational foundations course prior to their
I-STEP semester. With this decision made, it truly freed the
faculty to think about the program in nontraditional ways.
Framing the
Curriculum
Even then, however, the first thinking was that
some of the curriculum gaps could probably be addressed by simply
reconceptualizing curriculum within existing courses or
reallocating hours to a new course that more specifically addressed
diversity and context issues. But the critical question that kept
emerging was this: What should the graduates know, be able to do,
and be like, when they leave the program? By framing the
discussions around the issue of student outcomes, it became clear
that, before the form of the program could be decided on, it must
first be decided what would drive the design. Thus an extensive
investigation into what the faculty believed was begun, and the
literature indicated comprised the characteristics of effective
teachers, including novices.
The NCATE Knowledge Base Standards and the Council
of Chief State School Officers' Standards for Licensing Beginning
Teachers were used as springboards for multiple discussions that
eventually lead to the identification of the knowledge, skills, and
dispositions that were wanted for candidates upon completion of our
program to meet the needs of the classrooms of tomorrow.
Once these were identified, the form of instruction
that would best accomplish these objectives must be determined. The
faculty broke totally out of looking at the program in old ways, as
a series of isolated courses taken in sequence, and began to
imagine the program as student experiences that would lead to an
integrated understanding of learning theory, curriculum,
instructional methods, assessment/evaluation, and the contexts in
which all of these come together.
Through this focus on learning experiences, the
program was reconceived as an integrated 16-hour block of
professional study that would be team-taught by faculty members
from the secondary department. Three mornings a week, the 20- to
30-student cohort met on campus. One morning each week for 4 weeks
(with a 3-day intensive 5th week), the students met at one of two
school sites (a high school and a middle school) and then rotated
to the other school for an additional 5 weeks. At least one faculty
member was also present at the school sites to coordinate
activities and debrief with students at the end of each day's
experiences.
The integrated semester guarantees alignment of
course material through the team-teaching and planning. Formerly
fragmented topics are united around experiences and themes/issues
designed by the faculty team. Duplication of material is eliminated
by planned and coordinated coverage of important concepts. Placing
inquiry rather than response in the foreground, the curriculum is
experiential and project-based. Five habits of mind, adapted from
the Coalition of Essential Skills model (Sizer, 1992) form a
guiding framework for this inquiry.
Student work is directed toward a capstone
experience, which is a final exhibition that offers students the
opportunity to integrate their learning from all the areas of study
into a meaningful whole. This exhibition calls on students to
present their beliefs and plans for teaching as they would to a
hiring committee, incorporating the production of teaching
documents and professional presentations.
Technology Integration
Since the implementation of I-STEP in 1995, the
faculty teams have rotated and changed each year/semester, and
program continuity has become an ever-increasing challenge. Even
with the commitment of the university, the professional college,
and the department of technology, the major question continues to
be how to meaningfully integrate technology into classroom
instruction with the varying levels of expertise of the many
faculty members who teach in I-STEP.
From 1995-1997, members of the educational
technology faculty did guest presentations/instruction on what was
available to classroom teachers in the name of technology and some
direct instruction in one of the heavily used and under equipped
computer labs, with regular I-STEP faculty following along. Over
time, one of the secondary education professors became quite
technologically proficient, and if he was teaching in I-STEP, the
infusion of technology increased. He designed an I-STEP Web page
complete with assignments, additional resources, and so forth.
However, few required assignments within the course curriculum
necessitated student development of technology artifacts. And when
he rotated out of the I-STEP faculty, much of the technology
integration was lost.
Therefore, in 1999, it was decided to restructure
one of the existing 3-hour required courses into a new course
entitled Diversity, Technology, and Literacy in Secondary
Education. Based upon the belief that schools should represent a
force for social justice in our society, this cou r se demanded that students critically reflect
on their personal and collective identities and on the many faces
of diversity and equity in today's schools and communities.
Focusing on major sociocultural and political
issues related to schooling, students are asked to examine their
own notions of why schools are the way they are and to re-imagine
the possibilities for the way they should/could be. Beginning with
a focus on self, students progress through a series of
self-assessments that help them understand the influence of their
family of origin on their current identities, beliefs, and
behaviors. Dispositional reflections are completed each week to
monitor personal growth in developing an ethic of caring, valuing
diversity, efficacy, and so forth. Shifting the focus to learners,
classroom diversity and equity issues are investigated and
experienced. Finally shifting the focus to teachers/teaching,
students are challenged to re-imagine current teaching practices
that disenfranchise and marginalize many students.
In addition, the course includes the following
technology objectives: understanding the uses of technology on
changing teacher roles and diverse learning environments,
understanding the ethical implications of technology, and using a
variety of computer applications in developing class projects.
Every secondary education preservice teacher now takes this course,
whether they are in the innovative I-STEP section or any of the
traditional program sections.
For the 1999-2000 school year, two graduate
assistants, skilled in technology, who were also former classroom
teachers, taught the technology strand in both the I-STEP and
traditional programs. However, in each case, the regular secondary
education faculty members were also present at the time of
laboratory instruction, so that in the future they would be able to
teach these technology components themselves; thus professional
development of university faculty as well as preservice training is
taking place simultaneously.
The technology direct instruction takes place in
either a Mac lab or a PC lab for a block of time no less than 1
hour and 15 minutes per session. This technology integration
includes direct instruction and the production of student artifacts
in the areas of multimedia presentations, Internet/WWW
investigations, spreadsheets, and desktop publishing.
During the course of the semester, each student is
a member of two interdisciplinary teams charged with solving
authentic school-related problems. These teams do research on the
Internet, as well as in appropriate books and journals, to
formulate possible solutions to each problem. The final projects
are presentations to mock school boards and special education
evaluation teams. A required component of these presentations is
electronic supporting documentation using MS PowerPoint, a
multimedia presentation software that allows the inclusion of
graphics, sound, movies, and animation, in addition to text. Click
here to see a student presentation, Afro-Centric
Curriculum .
Additionally, each student is required to create a
WebQuest
that they would use with their high school/middle school students
in each of their respective content areas. The preservice students
design these WebQuests as authentic problem-based assignments in
which some or all of the information that learners interact with
comes from resources on the Internet. Examples include such titles
as, 'When Will I Ever Use This: An Exploration in the Topics of
Algebra,' 'The Importance of Physical Education: Developing Your
Own Workout Plan,' and 'Where No Musician Has Gone Before.'
Students also become familiar enough with
spreadsheets to understand their multiple uses for everything from
setting up a worksheet to calculate grades to keeping athletic team
statistics or club accounting records. Students can keep budget
information for a school store, enter hours of work, or set up
"what if" situations for solving math and statistical problems.
Spreadsheet worksheets are tools of practical value that require
minimal math skills to accomplish tedious calculations and gain
understanding of mathematical concepts. Students in this course
learn how to design a gradebook using a spreadsheet. (Brownell,
Youngs, & Metzger, 1999).
A final technological artifact produced by each
student is a newsletter
they might send home to parents or that their own students might be
taught to create. Using word processing for desktop publishing
allows students and teachers to create newsletters for their
classrooms, clubs, or for parents. They learn appropriate
formatting and uses of graphics and text for communicating ideas
and issues, or just reporting on current activities. Throughout the
semester, students are investigating and reading articles about the
ethical implications of technology in classrooms, pondering such
troubling issues as gender equity, equity of access, students with
special needs, copyright, and responsible use of the WWW.
Clearly, it is recognized that technology in
preservice teacher education, as well as in society at large, is a
powerful vehicle for change. It has become a catalyst for
challenging attitudes, long held beliefs about the way things have
always been done, classroom practices, and the way students learn.
Future teachers will be in classrooms full of the 'N-Gen' (Internet
Generation) who have grown up digital (Tapscott, 1998). Therefore,
beginning teachers no longer have a choice about using technology
in their classrooms of tomorrow if they hope to understand and
reach this generation of students who have learned technology as a
second language.
Conclusions
To gain insight from the stakeholders (professors,
graduate assistants, and students) into the new course, 'Diversity,
Technology, and Literacy,' a study to examine changes in attitudes
of preservice secondary education majors toward technology and
perceptions about technology in the classroom was initiated.
Further investigation into the perceptions of the professors and
graduate assistants about the technology activities taught in the
course to revise and improve the presentation in succeeding
semesters was conducted.
Findings provided new directions and implications
for the course and the secondary teacher education program at the
university. In fact, the findings about changes in students'
attitudes and self-efficacy using technology have already impacted
the course delivery and have provided faculty with information
about the usefulness of this model of technology integration for
the program of teacher education (Willis, Raines, Sujo de Montes,
Kotcho, & Garcia, 2000).
Students reported positive changes in attitude and
self-efficacy using various computer technologies, which supports
past findings that 'the confidence and expertise...were seen to
grow through relevant practical experience' (Oliver, 1994, p. 75).
The student improvement came not necessarily from using the
specific tools and applications, but from participation in
technology-centered activities and, perhaps, from the value put
upon the use of technology by the course designers and instructors.
This provides evidence that this course, which integrates
technology activities into the curriculum in a systematic way, is
necessary and important to our teacher preparation program (Willis,
E., et. al., 2000).
The investigation further revealed useful insights
into the specific technology offered in the course. Students
clearly noted that they thought learning presentation software such
as MS PowerPoint was the most relevant technology activity. They
also pointed out that learning about a strategy, such as a
WebQuest, is most useful when they had to do it themselves and
produce a tangible artifact. Students also suggested that more
effort be directed toward Web-based teaching and learning. Their
comments about the lack of access to technology are important ones,
too, for us as a teacher preparation institution. We must find ways
to provide computer technology education that does not deter or
limit student participation (Willis et al., 2000).
Student input was utilized by the instructors in
the spring 2000 semester to revise and enhance the technology
component of 'Diversity, Technology, and Literacy,' one of the
goals for conducting the study. For instance, all classes are now
conducted in a lab, which 'has made practical use a lot easier'
(Mark Kotcho, e-mail communication, April 2000). Also, graduate
assistants have assumed that the students know more and, therefore,
are not focused on the applications themselves, 'but the practical
(hands-on) instruction so they (the students) can see it in action'
(Kotcho, 2000).
We also gave them examples of problems during our first year teaching and
connected them to the technology and how it could have made things
easier. We concentrated much more on the relevance of the
technology to the classroom, as opposed to concentrating on the
instructions of all the functions of each program' (Dulce Garcia,
e-mail communication, April, 2000).
The use of graduate assistants to teach the
technology component in a course is convenient and adds to the
synergy of the class. However, this same convenience may bring
unexpected consequences. For instance, faculty may so heavily rely
on the graduate assistant(s) to teach the technology component that
they delay the development of their own technology skills. From the
graduate assistants' point of view, the professor retains control
of the course design and activities. They must abide by the faculty
requests for technology activities, even when they do not represent
the full utilization of the technology skills and expertise that
the graduate assistant may bring to the course.
This finding underscored the need for providing
opportunities for university professors to update their technology
skills, as well as giving teaching assistants some leverage in the
course design and management. By combining these resources, the
students win by getting both perspectives and expertise, resulting
in a much richer technology experience.
Direction for the Future
In keeping with the findings and a recent
Technology in Arizona study, the authors continued to revisit and
revise the technology integration in the teacher education program;
specifically addressing the following recommendations to the
Arizona Board of Regents:
-
University educational technology courses should
further focus on and emphasize the ISTE Foundation Standard
category Application of Technology in Instruction.
-
All the university teacher education programs
should ensure that all the ISTE standards are addressed through any
combination of courses offered.
-
All course content offered in the Regent's
universities' educational technology courses should be assessed
using performance-based measures rather than just content knowledge
assessment.
-
University faculty working with preservice
teachers should have the necessary skills to teach and model the
integration of technology in diverse K-12 classroom settings and do
so in their own instruction.
-
University faculty teaching educational
technology courses should be provided opportunities for ongoing
professional development. (Willis, Tucker, Rowland, Wong, &
LeCrone, 2001).
References
Brownell, G., Young, C., & Metzger, J.
(1999). A PC for the teacher . New York: Wadsworth
Publishing.
Fawson, E.C., & Smellie, D.C. (1990).
Technology transfer: A model for public education. Educational
Technology, 30 (4), 19-25.
Hasselbring, T.S. (1991). Improving education
through technology. Preventing School Failure, 35 (3),
33-37.
ISTE Standards Projects: NCATE (2001).
[Online]. Available:
http://www.iste.org/standards/ncate/found.html
Munday, R., Windham R., & Stamper J.
(1991). Technology for learning: Are teachers being prepared?
Educational Technology, 31 (3), 29-32.
Oliver, R. (1994). Factors influencing
beginning teachers' uptake of computers. Journal of Technology
and Teacher Education, 2 (1), 71-89.
Sizer, T.R. (1992). Horace's school:
Redesigning the American high school . Boston: Houghton
Mifflin.
Tapscott, D. (1998). Growing up digital:
The rise of the net generation . New York: McGraw-Hill.
The Milken Exchange & the International
Society for Technology in Education. (1999). Will new teachers be
prepared to teach in a digital age? [Online]. Available:
http://www.mff.org/publications/publications.taf?page=154
The Milken Foundation. (2001a). Information
technology underused in teacher education. [Online]. Available:
http://www.mff.org/edtech/article.taf?_function=detail&Content_uid1=131
The Milken Foundation. (2001b). Aligning
learning with the digital age. [Online]. Available:
http://www.mff.org/edtech/article.taf?_function=detail&Content_uid1=66
.
Wetzel K. (1993). Teacher educators' uses of
computers in teaching. Journal of Technology and Teacher
Education, 1 (4), 335-352.
Willis, E., Raines, P., Sujo de Montes, L.,
Kotcho, M., & Garcia, D. (2000). Technology integration in a
pre-service secondary teacher education program: A closer look.
Manuscript submitted for Publication.
Willis, E., Tucker, G., Rowland, P.,Wong, P.,
& LeCrone, J. (2001). Technology in Arizona: A summary of
the report to the Arizona Board of Regents. Paper presented at
the 12th Annual Conference of the Society for Information
Technology and Teacher Education, Orlando, FL.
Contact Information :
Elizabeth M. Willis
Educational Specialties/Educational Technology
The Center for Excellence in Education
Northern Arizona University
PO Box 5774
Flagstaff, AZ 86011
Becky.Willis@nau.edu
Peggy Raines
Instructional Leadership/Secondary Teacher Education
The Center for Excellence in Education
Northern Arizona University
PO Box 5774
Flagstaff, AZ 86011
Peggy.Raines@nau.edu
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