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Developing University-School Partnership in Multidisciplinary Technology Integration. Sergei Abramovich Rick Tomlinson Glenn Mott Stacy Rush Valarie Simmons SUNY Potsdam and Banford Elementary School - Canton. Overview. Theoretical background Description of the project
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Developing University-School Partnership in Multidisciplinary Technology Integration Sergei Abramovich Rick Tomlinson Glenn Mott Stacy Rush Valarie Simmons SUNY Potsdam and Banford Elementary School - Canton
Overview • Theoretical background • Description of the project • Multidisciplinary activities • Conclusions
Theoretical background • Assessment by NCATE Task Force on Technology and Teacher Education (1997): • Pre-service teachers rarely have an occasion for applying technology in their courses and are not engaged in role models of faculty teaching with technology • This finding applies to all content areas, including mathematics, science, and social studies
Context • It has been suggested by several authors that teacher education programs should provide learning experiences for pre-teachers in using a computer as an exploratory tool in both theoretical and applied contexts with a focus on “learning with technology, not about technology” (Shaw, 1997) during all stages of their education including regular coursework and student teaching.
Context • As Browning and Klespis (2000) have pointed out, pre-teachers should be given authentic experiences in developing technology-enabled activities for a pre-college classroom. • Willis (2001) has extended this recommendation by arguing that pre-teachers should be given opportunities for professional growth including teaching their own technology-enhanced lessons.
Three approaches to technology-enhanced mathematics pedagogy for elementary pre-teachers (SUNY Potsdam) • Introduce pre-teachers to the pedagogy through a computer-enhanced mathematics methods course • Offer a course that focuses on the design of technology-enabled lessons of mathematics • Introduce technology into a mathematics teacher preparation program that is grounded in pre-teachers’ participation in a methods course with a student teaching (field experience) component.
These three approaches parallel Garofalo’s (2000) notion of the primary user of technology • Teacher educator as the primary user • Pre-teachers are being prepared to be the primary users • Pre-teachers are being prepared to have their students to be primary users
Participants • Pre-service elementary teachers in a graduate program (SUNY Potsdam) • Third-grade students (Banford Elementary School) • University faculty • School faculty
Goals of collaboration • Develop set of multidisciplinary activities for younger children that integrate off- and on-computer activities, including the Internet and spreadsheets • Use spreadsheet as an exploratory tool • Using computers in elementary teacher education in the strongest sense
Goals of Collaboration • Affecting elementary pre-teachers’ beliefs about technology • Helping the school to integrate computers into curriculum
Multidisciplinary activity: Temperature project • Use of the Internet to collect data • Use of spreadsheets to represent data • Use of spreadsheets to analyze data • Use of spreadsheets to put mathematics in the context of temperature patterns • Use of sequential building of task complexity
Conclusions • Authors believe that the project: • enabled the pre-teachers to act as agents of change in the PDS environment • helped them to develop a disposition towards the fieldwork classroom as a site for inquiry
References • Browning, C.A., and Klespis, M.L., (2000). A reaction to Garofalo, Drier, Harper, Timmerman, and Shockey. Contemporary Issues in Technology and Teacher Education [Online serial], 1 (2). (http://www.citejournal.org/) • Garofalo, J., Drier, H., Harper, S., Timmerman, M.A., and Shockey, T. (2000). Promoting appropriate uses of technology in mathematics teaching. Contemporary Issues in Technology and Teacher Education [Online serial], 1 (1). (http://www.citejournal.org/). • National Council for Accreditation of Teacher Education. (1997). Technology and the new professional teacher: Preparing for the 21st century classroom. Washington, DC: Author.
References • Shaw, D. E. (1997). Report to the President on the use of technology to strengthen K-12 education in the United States. Washington, DC: President’s Committee of Advisors on Science and Technology, Panel on Educational Technology. • Valli, L., Cooper, D., and Frankes, L. (1997). Professional Development schools and equity: a critical analysis of rhetoric and research. In M. W. Apple (ed.), Review of research in education, pp. 251-304. Washington, DC: AERA. • Willis, J. (2001). Foundational assumptions for information technology and teacher education. Contemporary Issues in Technology and Teacher Education, [Online serial], 1(3), (http://www.citejournal.org/).