Education Technology: Crucial, or Just Gadgets?A)Under enormous

游客2024-04-25  18

问题                Education Technology: Crucial, or Just Gadgets?
A)Under enormous pressure to reform, the nation’s public schools are spending millions of dollars each year on gadgets from text-messaging devices to interactive whiteboards that technology companies promise can raise student performance.
B)Driving the boom is a surge in federal funding for such products, the industry’s aggressive marketing and an idea self-evident in the world of education reform: that to prepare students for the 21st century, schools must embrace the technologies that are the media of modern life.
C)Increasingly, though, another view is emerging: that the money schools spend on instructional gadgets isn’t necessarily making things better, just different. Many academics question industry-backed studies linking improved test scores to their products. And some go further.
D)They argue that the most ubiquitous(似乎无处不在的)device-of-the-future, the whiteboard—essentially a giant interactive computer screen that is taking over blackboards in classrooms across America- locks teachers into a 19th-century lecture style of instruction counter to the more collaborative small-group models that many reformers favor.
E)"There is hardly any research that will show clearly that any of these machines will improve academic achievement," said Larry Cuban, education professor emeritus(荣誉退休的)at Stanford University. "But the value of novelty is highly prized in American society. And one way schools can say they are ’innovative’ is to pick up the latest device. "
The Appeal
F)Federal dollars for educational technology grew to more than $ 800 million last year, and industry analysts estimate that federal, state and local expenditures will total $ 16 billion next year. Money that once bought filmstrips and overhead projectors has spawned a thriving industry of companies that pitch their products as a way to help schools meet the federal priorities of the day. Glossy brochures that claimed whiteboards would help teachers reach Bush’s No Child Left Behind goals, for instance, now say the devices will help schools win "Race to the Top" grants from the Obama administration.
G)Nancy Knowlton, the chief executive of SMART Technologies, said that schools are desperate to find ways to engage multi-tasking kids, who often play video games before they can read and that some "strictly gathered research data", along with anecdotal evidence, show that her company’s products work.
H)"Students are engaged when they’re in class, they are motivated, they are attending school, they are behaving and this is translating to student performance in the classroom," she said. "Kids want an energized, multimedia learning experience. When you ask them to shut off when they enter the classroom, that doesn’t really work for them. "
I)Fairfax County public schools began installing interactive whiteboards several years ago, one of which landed in Sam Gee’s classroom at W. T. Woodson High School. On a recent morning, the popular history teacher dimmed the lights, and his students stared at the glowing, $ 3 000 screen. As he lectured, Gee hyperlinked to an NBC news clip, clicked to an animated Russian flag, a list of Russian leaders and a short film on the Mongol invasions.
J)Here and there, he starred items on the board using his finger. "Let’s say this is Russia," he said at one point, drawing a little red circle. "Okay—who invaded Russia?" One student was fiddling with(摆弄)an iPhone. Another slept. A few answered the question, but the relationship between their alertness and the bright screen before them was hardly clear. And as the lesson carried on, this irony became evident: Although the device allowed Gee to show films and images with relative ease, the whiteboard was also reinforcing an age-old teaching method—teacher speaks, students listen.
K)On its Web site, Smart Technologies cites more glowing testimony, quoting a former Fairfax high school teacher saying that after the whiteboards arrived, he saw "significant" increases in student performance "across all grade levels". Such statements reflect the fact that many teachers love whiteboards—industry groups say one in three classrooms will have the device by 2011. They also reflect the relationships that ed-tech companies cultivate with school officials to market their products, underwriting major education conferences and sponsoring professional associations.
L)Last year, the Arizona attorney general criticized Tucson Unified School District officials for accepting rooms, meals, an open bar and free iPods at a resort conference paid for by Promethean after the district spent $2.1 million on products. Mark Elliott, president of Promethean North America, said the company has since revised its ethics policy. But he and others said such events help the industry "keep its finger on the pulse" of what schools need. "The private sector engagement is a good thing," said Doug Levin, executive director of the State Educational Technology Directors Association, which lists Promethean, Smart Technologies and Apple among its $30 000 platinum sponsors. "It is the job of the public sector to evaluate claims of these vendors. "
The Reality
M)But according to many academics, industry claims about whiteboards are not based on rigorous academic studies. One frequently cited study, conducted by Marzano Research Laboratory and funded by Promethean, surveyed 85 teachers who volunteered to teach a lesson of their choice to two classes, one with the whiteboard, one without. The teachers then gave a test of their own design, with results showing an average 17-point gain in classrooms with whiteboards. "It’s a suggestive study—you can’t conclude anything," said Steve Ross, an education professor at Johns Hopkins University. "And that’s being generous. "
N)Even the study’s author, Robert Marzano, noted that 23 percent of the teachers reported higher test scores without the whiteboard, and some reported lower scores using it. "It looks like whiteboards can be used in a way that can lull teachers into not using what we consider good instructional strategies," Marzano said in an interview.
O)After using an interactive whiteboard for a year, William Ferriter, a sixth-grade teacher in North Carolina, came to a similar conclusion, deciding the whiteboard was little more than a badge saying "We’re a 21st-century school. " He spent weeks trying to devise collaborative lessons that he knows engage students. The best one, he said, brought kids to the whiteboard, where they used their fingers to sort words describing metamorphic(变质的)rocks, as a video played to the side. "It just allows you to create digitized versions of old lessons," he said. "My kids were bored with it after about three weeks. " [br] Students are often required to play computer games before they can read.

选项

答案 G

解析 细节推断题。定位段提到,根据Nancy Knowlton的说法,学校想尽一切办法让学生参与多任务,学生通常在阅读之前玩视频游戏。题干与定位段意思一致,故答案为G)。
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