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The Maine Learning Technology Initiative
Technology-enhanced middle
school mathematics
When Maine Governor Angus King first proposed last year to provide
a laptop computer to every middle school student, many educational
technology experts considered it to be a courageous experiment,
but were concerned
that it put the
cart before the horse—that technology would drive, rather than serve, educational
practices. “In past studies, we’ve found that the more successful
technology integration programs were those that focused first on the academic
environment and then on how technology could best enhance that environment,” says
EDC Vice President Glenn Kleiman, director of the Center
for Online Professional
Education (COPE). “What’s impressive about the Maine technology program
is that the laptops are already leading to very positive results in classrooms
throughout the state, and that many of the teachers, administrators, and parents
who were skeptical at the beginning are becoming convinced that every student
having a laptop computer is really improving students’ engagement and learning.”
The
Maine Learning Technology Initiative (MLTI) began last fall, when every seventh
grade student and teacher in every public middle school received a laptop,
for a total of 20,000 laptops in use. Next fall, that number will
rise to 36,000,
when the state will provide laptops for all seventh and eighth graders and
their teachers.
“There are a number of positive things that are happening
as a result of the laptop initiative,” comments EDC’s
Pam Buffington, who is serving as the MLTI mathematics mentor for
teachers throughout the state. “Administrators
report that they’ve seen an increase in attendance and a decrease in
disciplinary action. Some schools report that there has also been a significant
drop in the
number of seventh graders needing summer school.” Buffington adds that
many principals and teachers are finding the technology to be a “great
equalizer,” which is leading to improved achievement by students with
special needs and other at-risk students who have previously struggled in
school.
MLTI is the largest and most ambitious of about a half-dozen large-scale “ubiquitous
computing” initiatives and hundreds of small ones underway throughout
the country. Each of these initiatives provides a computing device for
every student
and teacher in participating grades or classrooms, ranging from the Macintosh
iBooks in Maine to Alphasmart Danas to Palm Pilots. The goals of the initiatives
are varied, according to Andy Zucker of EDC, who oversees a project to
coordinate evaluations of these experiments in ubiquitous computing. “What’s
driving the move to laptops? It’s not just test scores,” says
Zucker. “In
Henrico County [Virginia], it’s the digital divide, equalizing access
to technology. In Maine, the economic situation was also a major driver.
As traditional
industries in Maine decline, Governor King [who left office in January
2003] saw the laptop initiative as a way to prepare students for high-tech
jobs,
which would encourage high-tech industries to locate in Maine.”
In
addition to providing the laptops, Maine is providing professional development
workshops and resources aimed at helping teachers in all subject areas
integrate technology into the curriculum. Those workshops have been particularly
valuable
for mathematics teachers, who have tended to be “late adopters” of
technology, according to Buffington. “Most of the Maine mathematics
teachers have had a computer in their classroom, but they made little
use of it,” Buffington
says. “One of the reasons for that is that, in the past, workshops
about technology integration in math class have tended to focus on the
use of spreadsheets,
which have a high technical overhead. It takes quite a while for teachers
and students to learn how to use a spreadsheet for instructional purposes.
By contrast,
Web-based interactive tools found on the Internet are much easier technologies
to bring into the classroom, even though math teachers have previously
held the belief that there were few good tools on the Internet to support
what they have
to teach.” (This observation is consistent with findings from the
National Teaching, Learning, and Computing Survey, which found that math
teachers lag
behind teachers in other content areas in the use of the Internet and
software tools, perhaps because they emphasize calculators as the technology
of
choice for mathematics instruction. For more information on this study,
visit the Teaching,
Learning and Computing Web site.)
Buffington has identified a range of mathematics
resources on the Internet that are specifically designed to supplement
existing curricula and that
use technology
to teach mathematics concepts in unique and powerful ways. Many are
small software applications (called “applets”) that
work as virtual “manipulatives”—such
as online algebra tiles, geoboards, tangrams, and fraction bars—that
enable students to explore mathematic concepts and relationships through
building physical
or pictorial models (see Resources for links to these Internet pages).
For example, one applet called Plop It from
Project Interactivate focuses on measures of central
tendency (mean, median, and mode). When
using this applet, students enter data, and the applet displays a
bar graph along
with the three measures of central tendency. As students change the
data, the graph
changes as well. This enables students to explore, for example, how
the mean and median change when you add a few extreme values to a
set of
data. “In
traditional ways of teaching central tendency, kids tend to focus
on the algorithm without really understanding the concept,” says
Buffington. “The
applet provides an interactive component and different visual representations,
along with a sense of immediacy. They see the changes happening on
the screen.”
“Tools like these have been on the Internet for a while, but teachers haven’t
been able to find them,” adds Buffington. “I’ve taken the time
to do that background research for them.” She says that teachers have little
trouble incorporating the applets into their teaching: “Anyone who can
use a browser can easily use the applets.” In fact, the applets are often
easier to manage than physical manipulatives, which are costly, take time to
distribute and put away, and can be a challenge to administer in the classroom.
Because of the ease and availability of the technology, Buffington
can focus the workshops she runs for teachers and regional coordinators
on
the mathematics
content and effective teaching methods. The coordinators try out
the applets as learners and then discuss their uses and benefits. “The
teachers are thrilled, according to the pre- and post-workshop
questionnaires I’ve collected,” says
Buffington. “Teachers come in saying there isn’t any
value on the Internet, and they come out saying, ‘I’m
going to do this tomorrow.’”
Buffington has also gone
into Maine classrooms to use the applets with students. She finds
that the applets are particularly effective
with
students who haven’t
excelled in mathematics in the past. They open up new entry points
to deeper mathematics for students who may have struggled with
traditional algorithms,
for example, and they are particularly valuable for students who
are strong visual thinkers or best at learning through hands-on
explorations.
On a larger level, Buffington is finding that the
presence of the laptops opens up discussions with teachers that
may not have been
possible
before. “School
reform is never easy to discuss with teachers,” she comments. “If
you ask teachers to change the way they teach, they take it personally.
But if you present them with a laptop, the computer becomes the
focus of the conversation,
rather than the teacher. It’s no longer a personal issue.
And discussions about the laptop can open up other topics that
were hard to raise before—such
as restructuring the classroom setup or the class schedule.”
For questions or comments, contact mosaic@edc.org.
Copyright 2000-2003
Education Development Center, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
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