1. What surprised you, concerned you, or intrigued about students’ access to
technology in their homes? I am surprised at how much
parents are allowing their children to use computers in their bedrooms. This to me is just promoting children to test
the limits of the things that they really shouldn’t be doing. There are a lot of children being given cellk
phones. Cell phones are one thing but
smart phones? They have constant access
to internet and parents again are not monitoring their usage.
2. What kinds of household spaces related to technology, or rules about
using technology, were similar or dissimilar to your own household environment?
Students are allowed to use computers and cell phones where ever they
want to. I personally didn’t allow my
daughters to use computers in their bed rooms.
They were allowed to be on the computer in the living room only. I was always walking by to monitor what they
were doing. I personally think that more
parents need to be monitoring what their children are doing online and be more
involved in their lives. They also need
to become more technologically inclined.
3.
Could this chapter be helpful for
teachers who seek to integrate technology into their classroom activities in
more meaningful ways? Give an example from
the chapter.
Yes this chapter could be helpful for a classroom teacher. One of the things that they could consider is
routines and restrictions (pg 172). They
could enforce that students complete certain parts of their assignments before
they would be allowed to use their computers to do social projects or
research. It would be important for the
classroom teacher to be very structured and to make sure her students knew what
she expected. They must also know the
consequences if they don’t follow the rules.
I thought the chapter helped teachers go beyond stereotypical assumptions about students use of technology outside of school. It was nice to see how low SES students gained access to technology and used technology in sophisticated ways and that some higher SES students were more restricted in their technology use.
ReplyDelete