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Technology Curriculum

I. Overview

At UCAP, issues of equity are inherently a part of the school’s work. In considering technology use at UCAP, issues of equity and access need to be forefronted for, at least, three reasons:

  • First, low income students and minorities--particularly Blacks and Hispanics--are generally less likely to have access to computers at home than are their White or wealthier counterparts.

  • Second, as the nature of many jobs has changed with the introduction of technology, students need technology skills to compete in the today’s work force.

  • Lastly, even when students like ours have used computers in previous schools, research suggests that these used to reinforce the limiting educational opportunities too often afforded to lower income or to working class students.

Computers are used at UCAP, with a few notable exceptions, almost exclusively for word processing. Further use of computers by students needs to happen in academic classrooms and will depend on teachers receiving professional development. For UCAP to move beyond current levels and types of computer use, technology professional development at the school must (as Larry Cuban has suggested):

  • "understand teachers’ expertise and perspectives on classroom work”

  • "engage teachers fully in the deliberations, design, deployment, and implementation of [our] technology plan” and

  • redesign “the infrastructure of technical support and professional development” so that it is more “responsive to the organizational incentives and workplace constraints teachers face.”

In regard to potential technology use, UCAP’s technology mission statement contains goals for student learning as well as objectives related to staff-related professional development. These technology-related goals are:

  • to utilize UCAP’s technology to its fullest extent and in alignment with the teaching goals and strategies of UCAP staff;

  • to make available numerous and varied opportunities for students to use technology in meaningful ways as part of their academic development at the school.

  • to make available professional development opportunities (and provide staff with adequate time) to facilitate the use of technology in the classroom; and

  • to make available additional technology-related resources (hardware or software) to meet new or existing goals for the classroom use of technology.

II. Skills

The curricula of UCAP’s Technology Specials elective classes--offered separately to first- and to second-year students--offer outlines for the types of computer skills that UCAP students should acquire.

Additionally, UCAP teaching staff have named the following technology-related skills as being important for students to learn. These skills are borrowed from The International Society for Technology in Education’s National Educational Technology Standards for Students.

  • Students should use technology tools to enhance learning, increase productivity, and promote creativity.

  • Students should use technology tools to collaborate in constructing technology-enhanced models, preparing publications, and producing creative works.

  • Students should use telecommunications to collaborate, publish, and interact with peers, experts, and other audiences.

  • Students should use a variety of media and formats to communicate information and ideas effectively to multiple audiences.

  • Students should use technology to locate, evaluate, and collect information from a variety of sources.

  • Students should use technology tools to process data and report results.

  • Students should use technology resources for solving problems.

III. EVIDENCE OF LEARNING

“For all of the investment in educational technology, there is a surprising lack of hard data on its effects.”

Since quality assessment data on technology use in schools is lacking, determining how to evaluate the impact and the effectiveness of technology as a tool for teaching and learning is a daunting task

As a starting point, though UCAP could:

  1. measure the impact of technology on our students by determining to what extent UCAP has provided access to computers beyond what our students have outside of school (or had at their previous schools);

  2. determine if and how UCAP students have previously used computers as learning tools and compare that data to what UCAP has offered students in terms of computer use;

  3. examine how computers are allowing UCAP teachers to alter, enhance, or make possible learning activities that would, otherwise, not be possible.

UCAP is only beginning to grapple with the issues related to assessing the impact of educational technology. However, in finding ways to assess the value that classroom technology adds, UCAP might contribute to the discussion concerning the return on our educational technology investments.

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