Instructional
Design and Technology is prevalent in many contexts and is subject to the same
ebb and flow as any area that relies on technology as its cornerstone. Three
areas where this is most evident, and most relevant to my current position, are
health care education, P-12 education, and post-secondary education. Health care education trends are moving towards problem-based learning and simulations where the integration of
technology is key. P-12 education also
is also seeking the broader integration of technology into student guided
learning and solidifying knowledge and skills for the use of technology in the
21st Century. Post-secondary
education is leading the way in technology integration with the growth of
online environments and LMS for easier and faster distribution of information,
grades, and training. In all three
cases, the use of technology can help reduce the work on the instructors, after
the development and implementation stages are completed. With all of the benefits that technology
integration provides, however, there are inevitably going to be drawbacks and
obstacles. In health care education, the
use of technology is ideal for providing objective knowledge, but it is not yet
able to provide the interpersonal skills needed for working directly with
people. In P-12 education, technology benefits
the educators by allowing them to use technology for lower level learning and
memorization, but the technology has not yet proven to be significantly more
effective than the teacher’s instruction when assessed objectively. In post-secondary education, technology
presents challenges because very few of the current professors are willing to
broaden their current knowledge base to include the use of technology in their
instruction.
In my current
position as a professor for a new Occupational Therapy Assistant Program, my
duties include instruction, development of new curriculum, implementation,
assessment, and planning. We are a
Program of two – myself and the Program Director. The load is significant and it is challenging
to determine the best way to provide the knowledge needed to our students in
the most effective way possible. My
position mirrors the integration of all three of the types of education I have discussed
above: I am in the field of health care education, in a post-secondary setting,
with many of the same challenges that P-12 educators face. As a Program, we are trying to balance
simulation with hands-on learning and integration of interpersonal skill
development. Problem-based learning is
important and the method in which our students will be tested for their
national certification exam. We are a
Program in a post-secondary context which includes the use of a LMS and the
tendency to shy away from the new technologies that could aide in education
that are unfamiliar to both of us as practitioners and as educators with limited
experience in the classroom. Finally, as
in the situation of P-12 educators, we need to prepare our students for
documentation systems that are electronic and assistive technology that could
benefit future patients. We have to consider this without forgetting about the art of the practice of OT
which involves direct contact with people in times of great need and
vulnerability. I am hoping we can strike
a balance, which will be ever changing, between “modernization” of our field
with the use of technology and the “old school” way of interacting with
patients and achieving their personal goals.
On a more global
scale, the idea of educating the world’s learners is a much more complex
one. I believe our American education
system is attempting to integrate the complexities of a modern world with a
slow moving process in trying to convince those who are reluctant to “get on
board.” The models of IDT use in Asian
countries are based on significant governmental support, but that is not the
only method. There are creative teachers
in Japan that have struck out on their own to develop new, subject specific methods
that are shared among teachers in the same subject become a “tradition.” (Suzuki
& Jung, 2012) These methods are passed along and prove to be
effective. In Korea, IDT has been most
dominant in the corporate world. The
government in Korea has begun setting “national learning policies” (Suzuki
& Jung, 2012) for e-learning and teacher mandates for training every 3
years. Though it appears that both
Japan and Korea are incorporating technology into educating their children,
their methods seem to be based on governmental control and mandates. In the U.S., continuous teaching training is
required, but it is not concentrated on technology. The idea of governmental control of teacher
education could potentially provide the students opportunity, but it would not
provide for individuality of the need of the students in a particular state,
city, or district. Not all areas can
afford the training, equipment, and facilities that will allow the students the
exposure and use of technology. Over
time, this is occurring, but the implementation is gradual as the more
experienced teachers can be trained and educated on the benefits and use of
technology. Our national laws are
present, but not as restrictive as Asia.
Conversely, European education is much more traditional, emphasizing
didactic learning. Europeans are more skeptical of the online concept and see
the idea as restrictive and not as flexible.
Americans can learn from this idea as well: technology is not a
substitute for a teacher. It is an
enhancement, a supplement. Technology
does not automatically make teaching, or learning, better. Its judicious use is important, but not
exclusive.
Suzuki, K. & Jung, I. (2012).
Instructional Design and Technology in an Asian Context: Focusing on
Japan and Korea. In R. Reiser & J. Dempsey (eds.) Trends and Issues in Instructional Design and Technology (pp.
239-247) Boston, MA: Allyn & Bacon.
Yes, yes, yes. I love your suggestive nature. I too think that technology has a great way of offering "Time Saving" efficiencies regarding the instructor's role within learning environments. Also, I agree that, especially within the field of health, technology is not able to provide interpersonal skills needed for working with "real people:. and no, the "old School" way must never end or be forgotten. All of this technology is good to a point, but we must not become enslaved to it as so many subconsciously think that we should.
ReplyDeleteI enjoyed reading your post. As a teacher in a public school system, I work with teachers who are afraid of technology. Some of them are absolutely against trying new technology in their classroom. This is not good for our students because they are going to have live in a world that is greatly influenced by technology and they need as much experience as they can get now so they will be ready for what their future holds.
ReplyDeleteMy husband went to school to become an EMT and had to take a problem based test for his certification. I think that this would very beneficial to students in our public school system because it would show them how what they are learning in the classroom is related to their world. This will create a connection and get their attention because they see how it is important to them.
Funding for technology in classrooms is very difficult. I work in a Title 1 school in which about 70-75% of my students live at or below poverty level. The money my district gets for technology is very limited. We have some success applying for and receiving outside grants to help us purchase much of the technology that we do have. I know that more is needed but I thankful that we at least have something to use as a supplement in our classroom.