That brings me to my next point, which is about the conversation we had about the educational value of Facebook and Twitter. I think these are great for social interaction, but I can never see myself actually being able to use it in a valuable, purposeful academic kind of way. I firmly believe in the distinction between academic and "society talk" as I am calling it because without a distinction, what is the point of instruction at all? Furthermore, what is wrong with someone from the 1890s being able to come into a classroom today and have a vague idea of what is going on? The traveller would not understand several things in the class like an overhead, projector, whiteboard, etc, more just the general structure and physical observations of teacher-student spacial relationship. I rather see this traveller's ability as one that maintains the dignity and core values of what teaching and education is - bringing information to students to expand their previous world of knowledge.
To that effect, I also do not agree with letting students talk however they want as long as they are getting the content correct. While I do not think kids respond to grammar pushes and strict formulaic language/teaching anymore, they also need to shoulder some of the responsibility to apply themselves and meet writing halfway. While I cannot think of the best way to phrase how best to accomplish this at the moment, and perhaps I am a bit idealistic because I have not been the teacher in the classroom yet, I do think that our students' needs can respond to and work well with a contemporary tailored approach to writing that strikes a balance between Facebook, slang, short social/cultural shots of thought and the standard, reliable, tradition that has lasted for hundreds of years.
(Wow, this was not supposed sound so much like a rant. Guess I just have a strong opinion on this... Cheers!)
I think one of the main issues with some kinds of technology is the issue of what type of language to use. Facebook, for most people, is a place where you can just say whatever you want. Usually, you're going to say something interesting so that people respond, but are you necessarily going to use correct grammar or academic-like terminology? Probably not. I agree that Facebook and Twitter are probably not any kind of solution to the issues of getting students to write better.
ReplyDeleteI disagree, somewhat, with disregarding some kinds of technology, though. The comments that you make about the core idea of a class are interesting, though. I can definitely see that you like history, haha. One of the reasons that I get a little standoffish towards changing is because it was done to me as well. "If I had to suffer through it, you should have to as well." However, that's slowly starting to change for me. I don't know if technology is necessarily a cure-all for the composition classroom. I'm just not seeing how it can truly help. Yeah, the discussion that we had on Thursday about the students using the Logo software to "create" things was good. It has heaps of value in teaching. I wonder if our society is leaning in more of an apprenticeship direction (well, more like a tech type of school anyways). Learning through doing is good, but how does that move into composition? The students need some kind of connection to how the writing that they're doing matters, and I don't know how to give that to them. If there was some way to make technology really work for them, though, it would be good. They can connect with technology. Any ideas? ;)