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Most educational organizations want the classroom to change; to improve teaching and learning by leveraging technology. The terms blended and flipped learning are touted extensively as useful educational goals.
However, to increase the probability of long term success and to reduce teacher/instructor frustration, organizations need to ensure that the broader fundamentals are in place before asking teachers to change. This is true whether the organization is a large university or school district, an eLearning business, or a small school of a few hundred students..
Fundamentals fall into a number of categories. I will consider one (infrastructure) in this article.
If teachers walk into a lesson and the technology regularly fails, even for just a few minutes, they lose confidence. They become frustrated and lose commitment (and who could blame them?).
For long term change to occur, the technology behind the scenes must be like the electricity system in a modern country – it must “just work” – all the time and every time. It must be invisible. If it fails, it must be able to be fixed quickly and painlessly.
Thus, there are some requirements for change in the classroom to begin. This is not an exhaustive list, but it contains some major points. While reading these points, rate your organization on a scale of 1 (Poor) to 5 (Excellent).
1. A solid, reliable, well designed network
a. The network (servers, switches,
operating systems) must be fast and reliable. They must work virtually
all the time. Logons should be fast and easy. Accessing systems (network
drives, online resources, etc.) must be fast and efficient.
b. Preferably there should be SSO (Single Sign On) for most resources.
Staff and students should have one user name and password that works
across all major systems, not a different password for each system. If a
password is changed, the change should flow through to all systems.
2. A fast, stable, campus wide wireless network
a. Wireless access is a key part of many modern organizations. The wireless network must “just work”. It should be easy to access, reliable and fast. It should saturate the entire campus, with limited or no areas with weak signal.
3. A fast and reliable internet connection
a. Access to the internet must be fast and
reliable. It needs to be of sufficient speed even when it is being
accessed by most students and teachers.
b. It must also provide fast and reliable external access to teaching
and learning resources that are on campus. Thus, the connection speed
into the organization and the connection speed out of the organization
both need to be fast.
4. A robust and feature rich LMS (Learning Management System)
a. Modern systems have moved beyond the
old concept of a LMS, and are really much more than they were 10 or 15
years ago. I prefer to call the ones that have evolved Online Learning
Environments (OLEs). The focus is on the learning, not just managing the
learners.
b. The system being used must fit the educational needs of the
organization now and in the coming years. Staff need to know that it
will grow with them to provide capabilities that they may not have
thought of yet. (I know of organizations that have had four LMS in a
decade, hoping each time that the newest one will be “right”. I know of
schools who invested in a system that didn’t suit their needs and then
wanted staff to change to “something better” two years later – after
staff had invested time and energy learning the system and creating
resources for use on the system.) Teachers deserve better.
c. Research, understanding and planning are vital. These aspects need to
be done by eLearning staff; staff who understand technology and
teaching and learning. This is not an IT decision. The IT department is
important to ensure that the technical aspects are appropriate, but the
LMS is a tool to enhance learning, not IT.
5. Reliable and suitable devices (laptop computers) for staff
a. If we want staff to embrace technology
to enhance learning and teaching, we need to provide them with devices
that empower them. The devices need to be powerful enough to do what
needs to be done, and reliable enough that they do not frustrate staff.
b. The devices also need to align with the educational goals of the
organization. For example, my school provided iPad and laptop devices to
all staff as the educational goals required the power of technology.
c. It is then a matter of budgeting, and this can be difficult. However,
it is a barrier that must be overcome. Money must be found to provide
devices to staff, and then money must be found to provide enough
professional development for staff to use the devices effectively.
6. A friendly, supportive, efficient IT support team. There are several important factors here.
a. The team must be friendly and
supportive. They must treat each person with respect and be genuinely
interested in helping to solve the current problem, even if they have
seen the same problem by the same person a few times. The unresponsive IT
support person who treats the teacher or student as lacking knowledge or
being an inconvenience has no place in an organization that is moving
forward. Staff and students must feel comfortable when they ask for
support.
b. They must be experts in all aspects of the technology within the
organization, or must be able to source solutions quickly. Reporting a
problem and having it fixed a week later, with little or no
communication in between, just doesn’t work.
c. Is it possible to have a “dream team” with all of the skills and the
appropriate attitude? The short answer is yes, and if you are lucky
enough to have one, ensure that they know that they are appreciated.
An organization with everything in place, ready to support change in the classroom, would score 5 in each of these areas. The resulting graph would look like the one below.
However, an organization that wasn’t prepared as well may have a graph that looks like the next one. This organization is not ready to implement technology enhanced learning.
The leadership of the organization needs to work to get the scores closer to a 5, making the graph larger and smoother. This will result in a greater probability of success.
What does the graph for your organization look like?
Creating change in teaching and learning doesn’t happen only in the classroom. It requires the background infrastructure to be robust, reliable and suitable for the task. However, it is only when this environment is appropriate that educators at the coalface can successfully implement change.
At SDM Technology Services Company we specialize in designing school networks and building technical dream teams to run an Office of Information Technology7. Call (570) 616-4200 today or use our contact form.
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