One could think of this phrase in many different ways: a
musician who creates music that is not appreciated at first listen or even in
their day (but is eventually respected worldwide), an artist who has a strikingly
different technique or style (that doesn’t become applauded until long after
their death), a political movement that appears radical when initially taking
place (but is large part of everyday life given time), and John Dewey’s ideology
that supports technology in the classroom (although what we think of as technology
in the classroom did not exist yet).
Okay, John Dewey wasn’t exactly pushing for computers,
televisions, and iPads in the classroom, but he had a strong opinion about what
would create a better education. To prepare for class this week we were asked
to read My Pedagogic Creed by John
Dewey and John Dewey: A Significant
Contributor to the Field of Educational Technology by Peter Rich and Thomas
C. Reeves. When I think of John Dewey, I think of a well-known intellectual, a great
philosopher – not one of the ‘founding fathers’ for the ideology behind
educational technologies, as the article by Peter Rich and Thomas C. Reeves does.
The point that really struck me about Dewey’s views of
education and it’s relation to technology was the same question that keeps
crossing my mind:
“Does technology in the classroom take away from the people
to people interactions and relationships?”
To my unexpected surprise, the Peter Rich and Thomas C.
Reeves article suggested a good viewpoint based on Dewey’s ideas. They talked
about how technology should be used to allow for experiencing in the classroom.
In My Pedagogic Creed, Dewey
expressed that experiences were main components to a better education. When
originally reading this, I had thought of experiences as being between people
and in nature or the “real world”. One of the great abilities of educational
technologies are that they can bring experiences into the classroom –
experiences that students may otherwise not have. It was interesting to start
to think about technology as an experience too. The article also brings to
light the idea that Dewey believed in independent thinking but not the
elimination of the teacher. His thoughts are that the teachers are to serve as
a guide. In My Pedagogic Creed he
states “The teacher is not in the school to impose certain ideas or to form
certain habits in the child, but there as a member of the community to select
the influences which shall affect the child and to assist him in properly
responding to these influences.” Based upon this statement of Dewey’s and the
article, it seems to me that technology can be a means for experiencing (or
being the influence in the child’s education) and that the relationships in the
classroom will not necessarily be lost because the teacher will act as a guide
for helping students to navigate these influences (or educational
technologies). Thinking about educational technologies from this viewpoint
helped to ease some of the apprehensions I have about technology in the
classroom.
So no, Dewey had no idea of what the future and technology
in classroom would consist of but his beliefs about experience being central to
learning appear to be similar to those who design educational technologies
today. In this sense, I think it’s fair to say Dewey was ahead of his time.
Megan - I like that you point out how Dewey was not ahead of his time, yet he had the ability to look beyond the present. If Dewey were alive today I wonder what he would think of the use of technology in the classroom. I think effective use of technology does not negate the role of the teacher. Rather, the teacher acts as a facilitator and uses such technology to enhance learning. We do see abuses of technology in schools, but I think it is important to learn how to effectively incorporate different mediums into our practice. I am glad to see you are becoming less apprehensive towards technology, but maybe that is not such a bad thing!
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