Concern over American students’ international test results stirs fresh interest in ed-tech lessons from other countries
Primary Topic Channel: Global competitiveness
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With increasing anxiety, advocates of American education have been looking at other countries around the world and asking: What do they know that we don't know?
To be sure, educational and political leaders in many countries besides the United States understand that their people's well-being depends more than ever on the strength of their educational systems. They also understand the power of technology.
But in the U.S., where the belief that more young people must acquire "21st-century skills" has become a mantra in education circles, American students' comparatively poor showing on international tests, notably in math and science, has raised the level of concern among many school administrators, parents, business leaders, and government officials. They see growing evidence that U.S. students are being outperformed by their counterparts elsewhere in the world, and they have questions.
What lessons, they ask, might we learn from other countries about their approaches to education technology that we could apply to our own institutions? Have places such as Finland, Canada, Japan, Australia, Germany, and Britain--among 20 industrialized countries whose 15-year-olds outperformed American teenagers in science on the latest Program for International Student Assessment (PISA)--found some dramatic new keys to educational progress that Americans have yet to discover?
The answers, based on research reports and interviews with analysts who keep an eye on the international scene, appear to lie somewhere in the middle: Yes, it's true that other countries, including some in the developing world, have been taking an aggressive approach to using technology as a catalyst for educational expansion and improvement. But No, they probably don't know more about capitalizing on ed tech than Americans do.
Whether it's broadband for every school, whiteboards in every classroom, or laptops in every kid's backpack, there's no lack of appreciation among American educators for the value of ed tech and what it can do. But the disparity between what some well-off suburban school districts in the U.S. are accomplishing technologically in comparison with less-well-off districts has generated fresh alarms that the U.S. still faces a huge challenge in bringing disadvantaged schools up to par.
"Our [test] scores are just as good as anyone's at the top," says Colette Chabbott, an adjunct faculty member specializing in international education at George Washington University, but U.S. education has to be "geared to those kids at the bottom." American school leaders have known for many years that low test scores for so-called disadvantaged students throughout the country are a major problem, she points out, but "we're not going to change that" without addressing underlying social issues such as poverty and the large number of students for whom English is a second language.
Thanks UNESCO
Dear Bob You are right. We all neglected Unesco and its education information. Thanks million. But the reason is not " America's teachers still struggle to meangfully integrate technology with teaching and learning " as you say. Not at all. It is the teachers' union preventing online. Please remember the the Wisconsin case 2 months ago. It is just the fear to be jobless. Yes every technology leaves somebody jobless, technology goes on and those jobless people find new jobs because of that new technolgy. I hope unions see that. Best regards. mgozaydin@hotmail.com of Turkey
Posted By: mgozaydin, 2008-02-20 11:26 AM
one laptop for every children
Why dont you try to have all children in USA to have a laptop at 200 $ per piece. make it 10 $ per month installment. Even poor students can buy it. Instead of buying coca cola he can buy a laptop. mgozaydin@hotmail.com of Turkey
Posted By: mgozaydin, 2008-02-19 3:58 PM
UNESCO's Information and Communications Technology Recommendations for Schools
An important point that may be under-emphasized in this piece is UNESCO's substantial investment in developing and disseminating resources supporting "Information and Communications Technology" or ICT standards in national educational systems all over the world, except in the USA. UNESCO resources include policy and best practice guidelines for open and distance learning, e-learning and for using information and communications technologies for supporting teacher training programs. Information describing and detailing UNESCO's ICT & Education program can be found at here, on the WWW: http://portal.unesco.org/education/en/ev.php-URL_ID=42446&URL_DO=DO_TOPIC&URL_SECTION=201.html. Although Don Kenezek (ISTE Executive Director) is correct saying UNESCO consulted with ISTE during development of their ICT standards, ISTE's NETS standards and UNESCO's ICT standards are different in important ways. ISTE's NETS standards promote competencies required to use various digital "technologies" (physical artifacts; computers, networks appliances, etc.) and UNESCO's ICT standards promote "information use" for productive social and economic purposes. Using the metaphor attributed to Marshall Mcluhan, ISTE's standards are about the "medium" and UNESCO's standards are more concerned with "the message." UNESCO's ICT standards may have more in common with the American Library Association's advocacy for "information Literacy" standards than with ISTE's NETS standards: "http://www.ala.org/ala/acrl/acrlissues/acrlinfolit/informationliteracy.cfm" The differences between ISTE's NETS standards and UNESCO's ICT standards might play some part explaining why many of America's schools (and teachers) still struggle to meaningfully integrate "technology" with teaching and with learning. Robert Blomeyer (BobBl) rblomeyer@earthlink.net
Posted By: bobblomeyer, 2008-02-19 3:56 PM
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Attention Ms. Chabbott
I read your statements that results are not compareble. I think you try to convince yourself PISA is worthless. But not. Your statements also shows that you fear to be jobless, suggesting online is bad but to use computer with teacher is good. Do not worry. We need now millions of teachers to design online courses for the whole world. To be one requires a little afford.
Posted By: mgozaydin, 2008-02-20 11:42 AM