SandhillshuskerW
Special Teams Player
I had this as a status update and was asked to make a thread. I am going to copy and paste what has been talked about already. I know that my opinions will probably vary from a lot of people that aren't in education, but if you are a parent you need to be aware that technology is a great thing, but it is also distracting many students from getting an education.
As a teacher, I am really beginning to hate technology. My students are way too addicted to their cell phones and iPads(which the district has provided for them) If you are a parent, please educate your kids to try to learn something in school and put down their technology for a little while.
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ShawnWatsonTry to incorporate technology to your classroom if the district has provided it. New technology isn't going away, sounds like you need to adapt or get a different job.
SandhillshuskerWI'm not talking about incorporating it, I do that already. I'm talking about students that are addicted to their cell phones and using their iPads for social media nonstop. I know that technology isn't going away, but parents need to do a better job of educating their kids the appropriate time to text their friends.
knapplcThere should be some way the school can block social media. That seems like a no-brainer for school-provided tech.
huskermike84I believe that there are apps that will block social media, I know for a fact that Apple has apps, don't know about android. Maybe you should send out a flyer to parents to make them aware of the issue.
Creighton Duke^^^^+1 to knapp
SandhillshuskerWThey have tried to block it and the kids are smart enough to get around it. They blocked Facebook and Snapchat and Twitter this year and the kids already found a way around it.
jawsDoesn't the school block it on the network? I mean that shouldn't be that hard to do. Also, is there any studies out there that actually suggest that all this technology helps with learning. I say that as a person that works and IT and the husband of a teacher.
SandhillshuskerWThey do block it jaws, the kids have figured out how to get around it. Also, I really don't know if there are any studies done. All I know is that technology is a wonderful thing when it's used correctly, but most of our students don't choose to use it correctly.
teachercdIn a public high school I could not even imagine how annoying it would be...lets face it, its even that its technology...its that they are just texting and snapping each other all day.
SandhillshuskerWVery true teachercd, I don't mind technology at all, but it's the texting and snapchatting that gets annoying.
C N RedThey probably have there phone set up as a hot spot so they don't need the school network. Schools need to outlaw all outside tech unless approved IMO. The kids don't need their own phones, ipods, ipads, etc in school.
SandhillshuskerWI agree C N Red. The kids can also get around the blocks that the school has on their iPads though. It's amazing how smart most of the kids are if they just apply themselves.
It'sNotAFakeIDWonder if there was a way you could truly integrate technology, learning, and their respective interests.
It'sNotAFakeIDYeah, we don't need phones in school. Love to see how that works out during a crisis.
teachercdHuh? Dude, no phones in schools worked out just fine for 100 years. Lets not go crazy here.
SandhillshuskerWThere is always a way to integrate technology but the problem comes with the students that abuse technology. The ones that are on their phones and snapchatting instead of doing the work in the classroom. I will also say that phones in the kids hands are terrible in a crisis. If we have a lockdown in our school we are supposed to keep students off of their phones so they don't make the situation worse.
STL HuskerSame problem teachers have had for ages. It's not the tech, it's the boredom and disinterest teachers have to fight. Take the tech away and they will find something else to play with. You have to find a way to make what you are teaching more interesting than updating their facebook status.
teachercdBro beans...kids under 18 don't use facebook...they think its for "old people" trust me! They use Vine, Instagram, Twitter and Snapchat. My kids laugh and giggle if I mention FB...then they say "Yeah, my mom/dad uses it, they try to get me to start a FB profile too, its for old people"
SandhillshuskerWThe only problem that I have with that is that I get tired of students playing the interesting card. School is not always supposed to be entertaining. I remember being bored in school at times, but I still did my job.
Creighton DukeSandhill, I commend you for taking up such an honorable profession, but this is just one aspect of the incredibly broken education system in this country. I'm sorry that, as difficult as your job already is, you have to compete with this nonsense on a daily basis. This generation of kids doesn't know how screwed it is.
STL HuskerIt's not a generational thing. I don't know your age, but you never played games on a graphing calculator, passed notes, talked to your friends, drew pictures in a notebook, or any other things kids did to fight boredom? Since your district is wealthy enough to provide ipads, then I also assume that you don't have many students struggling to make it to the next grade. If you relaly want your students to be engaged, then you have to make it interesting for them.
RedRedJarvisRedwhineDon't tell me how to raise my kids! Now back to our Xbox marathon.
Creighton DukeThis whole "make it interesting" bit needs to stop. This generation is so tuned out to what is around them, preferring the non-judging world of cyberspace the human interaction. In addition, how is the HS teacher supposed to compete with the vastness of the internet?
STL HuskerDuke, this is a serious question, but are you at work right now? I find your comment very interesting coming from someone who is so actively involved with an internet forum. I also think your school needs a new IT person if they are able to get around the safeguards and are can have access to the entire internet. It's really not that hard to block content on the network and/or the ipad.
EbylHuskerIt doesn't need to stop, because it's a real problem. A great many teachers are completely unable to teach in a manner that has any attempt at holding kids' interest. Sometimes it is the teacher, sometimes it is the system the school admins have in place, many times both. So it doesn't need to stop, it's a real problem. But that doesn't negate the fact that there is another side to the problem - parenting.
SandhillshuskerWThank you Creighton Duke, I am glad that some people outside of education also see the "make it interesting" arguement as crazy. STL Husker, I'm not saying that I was never distracted in school, but I still focussed when I needed to and got my work done. Even the students in my school that struggled with school still got their work done. Society needs to stop making excuses for students and hold them accountable for their own actions and make them take responsibility for their...
EbylHuskerIt's not crazy. It's one part of the equation, and a part that needs to be addressed.
saunders45Blocking stuff on the local network is useless when the kids all have smartphones...
SandhillshuskerWMy only question for people that are fans of the "make it interesting and the kids will learn" arguement.......If your job is not interesting that day, do you not do it? Kids need to learn that life isn't always interesting and they need to still do their job. Their job right now is learning and striving towards a high school diploma. It's not always interesting, but then again the real world isn't always interesting either.
EbylHuskerIf you want to start a thread, I'll be more than happy to address all the points you bring up. So if you want to have a real discussion about this, go for it. I'm not going to do it here, though.
STL HuskerI agree. Too much to say without it's own thread.
Creighton DukeNo, I am not at work. I don't see the relevance of the question.
In regards to "making it interesting", teachers have their hands tied. 1. Teach to the test; gotta make AYP 2. Allow millions of distractions in the classroom With so much competition and such little discretion, "making it interesting" seems like an incredibly tall task.
EbylHuskerPolitics would probably be the best place. Make a long post, describe the situation and your thoughts on it. Include what restrictions are placed on the ipads, both in class and systemically through the IT guy, etc. I'd like to get the whole picture, because every school is different with these situations.
As a teacher, I am really beginning to hate technology. My students are way too addicted to their cell phones and iPads(which the district has provided for them) If you are a parent, please educate your kids to try to learn something in school and put down their technology for a little while.
[SIZE=.8em]Hide Comments[/SIZE]
ShawnWatsonTry to incorporate technology to your classroom if the district has provided it. New technology isn't going away, sounds like you need to adapt or get a different job.
SandhillshuskerWI'm not talking about incorporating it, I do that already. I'm talking about students that are addicted to their cell phones and using their iPads for social media nonstop. I know that technology isn't going away, but parents need to do a better job of educating their kids the appropriate time to text their friends.
knapplcThere should be some way the school can block social media. That seems like a no-brainer for school-provided tech.
huskermike84I believe that there are apps that will block social media, I know for a fact that Apple has apps, don't know about android. Maybe you should send out a flyer to parents to make them aware of the issue.
Creighton Duke^^^^+1 to knapp
SandhillshuskerWThey have tried to block it and the kids are smart enough to get around it. They blocked Facebook and Snapchat and Twitter this year and the kids already found a way around it.
jawsDoesn't the school block it on the network? I mean that shouldn't be that hard to do. Also, is there any studies out there that actually suggest that all this technology helps with learning. I say that as a person that works and IT and the husband of a teacher.
SandhillshuskerWThey do block it jaws, the kids have figured out how to get around it. Also, I really don't know if there are any studies done. All I know is that technology is a wonderful thing when it's used correctly, but most of our students don't choose to use it correctly.
teachercdIn a public high school I could not even imagine how annoying it would be...lets face it, its even that its technology...its that they are just texting and snapping each other all day.
SandhillshuskerWVery true teachercd, I don't mind technology at all, but it's the texting and snapchatting that gets annoying.
C N RedThey probably have there phone set up as a hot spot so they don't need the school network. Schools need to outlaw all outside tech unless approved IMO. The kids don't need their own phones, ipods, ipads, etc in school.
SandhillshuskerWI agree C N Red. The kids can also get around the blocks that the school has on their iPads though. It's amazing how smart most of the kids are if they just apply themselves.
It'sNotAFakeIDWonder if there was a way you could truly integrate technology, learning, and their respective interests.
It'sNotAFakeIDYeah, we don't need phones in school. Love to see how that works out during a crisis.
teachercdHuh? Dude, no phones in schools worked out just fine for 100 years. Lets not go crazy here.
SandhillshuskerWThere is always a way to integrate technology but the problem comes with the students that abuse technology. The ones that are on their phones and snapchatting instead of doing the work in the classroom. I will also say that phones in the kids hands are terrible in a crisis. If we have a lockdown in our school we are supposed to keep students off of their phones so they don't make the situation worse.
STL HuskerSame problem teachers have had for ages. It's not the tech, it's the boredom and disinterest teachers have to fight. Take the tech away and they will find something else to play with. You have to find a way to make what you are teaching more interesting than updating their facebook status.
teachercdBro beans...kids under 18 don't use facebook...they think its for "old people" trust me! They use Vine, Instagram, Twitter and Snapchat. My kids laugh and giggle if I mention FB...then they say "Yeah, my mom/dad uses it, they try to get me to start a FB profile too, its for old people"
SandhillshuskerWThe only problem that I have with that is that I get tired of students playing the interesting card. School is not always supposed to be entertaining. I remember being bored in school at times, but I still did my job.
Creighton DukeSandhill, I commend you for taking up such an honorable profession, but this is just one aspect of the incredibly broken education system in this country. I'm sorry that, as difficult as your job already is, you have to compete with this nonsense on a daily basis. This generation of kids doesn't know how screwed it is.
STL HuskerIt's not a generational thing. I don't know your age, but you never played games on a graphing calculator, passed notes, talked to your friends, drew pictures in a notebook, or any other things kids did to fight boredom? Since your district is wealthy enough to provide ipads, then I also assume that you don't have many students struggling to make it to the next grade. If you relaly want your students to be engaged, then you have to make it interesting for them.
RedRedJarvisRedwhineDon't tell me how to raise my kids! Now back to our Xbox marathon.
Creighton DukeThis whole "make it interesting" bit needs to stop. This generation is so tuned out to what is around them, preferring the non-judging world of cyberspace the human interaction. In addition, how is the HS teacher supposed to compete with the vastness of the internet?
STL HuskerDuke, this is a serious question, but are you at work right now? I find your comment very interesting coming from someone who is so actively involved with an internet forum. I also think your school needs a new IT person if they are able to get around the safeguards and are can have access to the entire internet. It's really not that hard to block content on the network and/or the ipad.
EbylHuskerIt doesn't need to stop, because it's a real problem. A great many teachers are completely unable to teach in a manner that has any attempt at holding kids' interest. Sometimes it is the teacher, sometimes it is the system the school admins have in place, many times both. So it doesn't need to stop, it's a real problem. But that doesn't negate the fact that there is another side to the problem - parenting.
SandhillshuskerWThank you Creighton Duke, I am glad that some people outside of education also see the "make it interesting" arguement as crazy. STL Husker, I'm not saying that I was never distracted in school, but I still focussed when I needed to and got my work done. Even the students in my school that struggled with school still got their work done. Society needs to stop making excuses for students and hold them accountable for their own actions and make them take responsibility for their...
EbylHuskerIt's not crazy. It's one part of the equation, and a part that needs to be addressed.
saunders45Blocking stuff on the local network is useless when the kids all have smartphones...
SandhillshuskerWMy only question for people that are fans of the "make it interesting and the kids will learn" arguement.......If your job is not interesting that day, do you not do it? Kids need to learn that life isn't always interesting and they need to still do their job. Their job right now is learning and striving towards a high school diploma. It's not always interesting, but then again the real world isn't always interesting either.
EbylHuskerIf you want to start a thread, I'll be more than happy to address all the points you bring up. So if you want to have a real discussion about this, go for it. I'm not going to do it here, though.
STL HuskerI agree. Too much to say without it's own thread.
Creighton DukeNo, I am not at work. I don't see the relevance of the question.
In regards to "making it interesting", teachers have their hands tied. 1. Teach to the test; gotta make AYP 2. Allow millions of distractions in the classroom With so much competition and such little discretion, "making it interesting" seems like an incredibly tall task.
EbylHuskerPolitics would probably be the best place. Make a long post, describe the situation and your thoughts on it. Include what restrictions are placed on the ipads, both in class and systemically through the IT guy, etc. I'd like to get the whole picture, because every school is different with these situations.
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