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© Project Tomorrow 2011

Technology –What Do Students Want!

February 16, 2012

Sandy Miller, Ed.Dsmiller2@laverne.edu

For interaction later, download red:green (free App)

© Project Tomorrow 2011

Speak Up Research Project

National and California Findings

K-12 Students, Parents, Teachers, Administrators

Julie Evans - 2011

Project Tomorrow jevans@tomorrow.org

© Project Tomorrow 2011

Project Tomorrow (www.tomorrow.org)

is the leading education nonprofit organization dedicated to the empowerment of student

voices in education.

© Project Tomorrow 2011

© Project Tomorrow 2011

The New 3 E’s of Education:Enabled – Engaged – Empowered

How Today’s Students are Leveraging Emerging Technologies for Learning

Speak Up 2010

National Findings:From Julie Evans

Speak Up 2011 Report Congressional Briefing April 1, 2011

© Project Tomorrow 2011

K-12 Students 294,339 Teachers 35,525 Parents (in English & Spanish) 42,267 Librarians 2,125 School/District Administrators 3,578 Technology Leaders 6,541/

1987 Schools / Districts 5,757/ 1,215

Top Participating States (# of participants)Top 12 (# of participants)TX, CA, AL, AZ, FL, NC, IL, MD, IN, NV, PA, WI

National Speak Up 2010 Participation: 379,355

National Speak Up 2010 Participation: 379,355

About our K-12 Schools: – 34% urban, 29% suburban, 37% rural

– 51% Title 1 eligible – indicating community poverty

– 34% majority-minority student population

© Project Tomorrow 2011

© Project Tomorrow 2011

What can the Speak Up findings tell us about the

future of learning?

What are the implications for Higher ED?

© Project Tomorrow 2011

hold great promise for

• creating a new learning environment

• engaging them in contextually-based content

• enabling greater personalization of the learning process

• empowering them to explore knowledge in new ways

Students say, “emerging technologies….

© Project Tomorrow 2011

The Student Vision for 21st Century Learning

Social-based learning

Un-tethered learning

Digitally-rich learning

© Project Tomorrow 2011

Three Essential Elements

Social–based learning

Students want to leverage emerging

communications and collaboration

tools to create personal networks of

experts

© Project Tomorrow 2011

Three Essential Elements

Un–tethered learning

Students envision technology-

enabled learning that transcends

classroom walls

(mobile devices and on-line learning)

© Project Tomorrow 2011

Three Essential Elements

Digitally–rich learning

Students see the use of relevancy-

based digital tools, content and

resources as key to education

productivity

© Project Tomorrow 2011

Speak Up Data Findings

Who am I?

Interactive Exercises

© Project Tomorrow 2011

Who am I?

1. Kindergartener

2. 2nd Grader

3. 6th Grader

4. 11th Grader

5. Administrator

2010 Characteristics

34% have smart phones

73% have MP3 Players/iPods

25% are using an e-book

50% of girls and 33% of boys update their

social networking site.

22% participate in 3D virtual reality worlds

© Project Tomorrow 2011

© Project Tomorrow 2011

Who am I?

1. Kindergartener

2. 2nd Grader

3. 6th Grader

4. 11th Grader

5. Administrator

6th Grader

© Project Tomorrow 2011

2010 Characteristics

34% have smart phones

73% have MP3 Players/iPod

25% are using an e-book

50% of girls and 33% of boys update their

social networking site.

22% participate in 3D virtual reality worlds

© Project Tomorrow 2011

Savvy and Fluent Sixth GradersMore so than their older siblings in high school

6th - 11th

Participate in #-D virtual reality worlds 22% 15%

Use educational games at home and school 47% 29%

© Project Tomorrow 2011

© Project Tomorrow 2011

Who am I?

1. Kindergarten Boy

2. 3rd Grade Girl

3. 7th Grade Boy

4. 10th Grade Girl

5. Teacher

© Project Tomorrow 2011

Who am I? Profile characteristics:

Wishes for their ultimate school Online textbooks (29%) High tech science tools (39%) Online tools for organization (35%)

Access to mobile devices:

MP3 player/iPod (44%) Game player (53%) Laptop (44%)

Participates in

immersive virtual reality

environments (39%)

Uses Internet for research (51%) and online assessments (35%)

© Project Tomorrow 2011

Who am I?

1. Kindergarten Boy

2. 3rd Grade Girl

3. 7th Grade Boy

4. 10th Grade Girl

5. Teacher

© Project Tomorrow 2011

Who am I?

3rd Grade Girl with Average Tech Skills

© Project Tomorrow 2011

Who am I? Profile characteristics:

Wishes for their ultimate school Online textbooks (29%) High tech science tools (39%) Online tools for organization (35%)

Access to mobile devices:

MP3 player/iPod (44%) Game player (53%) Laptop (44%)

Participates in

immersive virtual reality

environments (39%)

Uses Internet for research (51%) and online assessments (35%)

© Project Tomorrow 2011

The New 3 E’s of EducationEnabled, Engaged, Empowered

Social-based learning

Un-tethered learning

Digitally-rich learning

© Project Tomorrow 2011

The New 3 E’s of Education:

Enabled, Engaged, Empowered

Key Trends to Watch:

• Mobile Learning

• Online and Blended Learning

• E-Textbooks and Digital Content

© Project Tomorrow 2011

The New 3 E’s of Education: Enabled, Engaged, Empowered

Key Trends: Mobile Learning

© Project Tomorrow 2011

If you were going to spend a month on an isolated island, what one mobile device would you absolutely need to have?

ipad

Smart phone

Digital reader

Hand-held game player

MP3/iPod

Latte frother

http://tinyurl.com/isolatedisland

© Project Tomorrow 2011

The New 3 E’s of Education: Enabled, Engaged, Empowered

Key Trends: Mobile Learning

Lower price tags

Instructional potential

Wide range of devices

© Project Tomorrow 2011

Key Trends: Mobile Learning

Smart phone jump of 42% from 2009 – 2010 & Little demographic difference

© Project Tomorrow 2011

• How can these mobile devices engage, empower and enable students?

• What do students say about using these devices?

The New 3 E’s of Education: Enabled, Engaged, Empowered

© Project Tomorrow 2011

1. Increase effectiveness of school:

Check grades

74%

Take notes for class

59%

Use the calendar

50%

Access online textbooks

44%

Students: How would you use your mobile device to help you with your schoolwork?

© Project Tomorrow 2011

2. Leverage capabilities for greater impact

Internet research – anytime, anywhere

68%

Collaborate with peers & teachers

53%

Create and share documents

37%

Record lectures/labs to review again later

35%

Students: How would you use your mobile device to help you with your schoolwork?

© Project Tomorrow 2011

What is the # 1 collaboration tool they want to

use?

1. Email

2. Social Networking

3. Instant or text message

53 % Students said they wanted to Collaborate with peers & teachers

© Project Tomorrow 2011

What is the # 1 collaboration tool they want to use?

• Email

• Social Networking

• Instant or text message

53 % Students said they wanted to Collaborate with peers & teachers

© Project Tomorrow 2011

CA Teachers’ biggest benefit and concern about using mobile devices at school…

48% of teachers say that the greatest benefit to using mobile devices:

increases student engagement in school and learning

68% of teachers say their biggest concernis students will be distracted doing other things

(texting, surfing, games)

© Project Tomorrow 2011

Administrators: How likely are you this year to allow students to use their own mobile devices for instructional purposes at school?

Administrators say:

© Project Tomorrow 2011

Would parents purchase a mobile device for their child to use at school?

Parents say:

© Project Tomorrow 2011

Would parents purchase a data plan to support their child’s use of the mobile device at school?

Parents say:

© Project Tomorrow 2011

Mobile Learning

Bottom line for Trend 1:

Educational experiences that are enabled by mobile devices and applications provide a multitude of un-tethered opportunities for students to be more engaged in learning and extend the learning process beyond the classroom.

© Project Tomorrow 2011

The New 3 E’s of Education: Enabled, Engaged, Empowered

Key Trends: Online and Blended Learning

© Project Tomorrow 2011

Who is learning online?

Growth in student experiences with academic online learning

Includes: • Online class taught by a teacher• Self-study online class • Blended class environment

© Project Tomorrow 2011

Who is learning online?

Take out your device with red:green downloaded app.

1. How many of you have taken an online course?

2. Do you know someone who has taken an online course?

3. Does your school offer online courses?

Includes: • Online class taught by a teacher• Self-study online class • Blended class environment

Administrator: Model of Online Learning provided to Students

© Project Tomorrow 2011

© Project Tomorrow 2011

What is propelling this new level of interest for online learning?

1. Increased personal familiarity by teachers and administrators.

2. Intensified demand by students and parents

3. Emergence of a new value proposition for administrators

54

© Project Tomorrow 2011

Benefits of an online class?

Views of students who have taken an online class

© Project Tomorrow 2011

Online and

Blended Learning

Bottom line for Trend 2:

Online and blended learning enables a greater personalization of the learning process and facilitates opportunities for students to collaborate with peers and experts, thus empowering a new sense of personal ownership of the learning process by the student.

© Project Tomorrow 2011

The New 3 E’s of Education: Enabled, Engaged, Empowered

Key Trends: E-Textbooks & Digital Content

© Project Tomorrow 2011

Speak-Up Survey results:

Current use of Online textbooks or Curriculum as part of regular work:

27 % of middle school students

37% of high school students

Student’s Ultimate school would use e-textbooksas a key component:

Gr 3-5 48%

Gr 6-8 53%

Gr 9-12 55%

© Project Tomorrow 2011

Higher Education Textbooks

• 1 in 4 texts will be digital by 2014*

• Apple’s iBook 2 (purchase texts with this App)-- $14.99--interactive, immediate feedback--currently 20,000 education apps-- companies that control 90% in US

(Pearson, McGraw-Hill, Houghton-Mifflin Harcourt)

--New app for teachers to write their own texts

* http://Blog.xplana.com/reports/

© Project Tomorrow 2011

Designing the Ultimate E-Textbook

Engaging Social-based Learning with the E-Textbook

© Project Tomorrow 2011

Designing the Ultimate E-Textbook

Un-tethered Learning Enabled by the E-Textbook

© Project Tomorrow 2011

Designing the Ultimate E-Textbook

Empowering Digitally-rich Content through the E-Textbook

© Project Tomorrow 2011

e-textbook

s and Digital

Content

Bottom line for Trend 3:

The use of e-textbooks and other digitally rich content engages students by providing a real world context for the learning process and allowing learning to extend beyond the classroom walls.

Parents are a strong force

57% of parents today consider instructional technology to be EXTREMELY IMPORTANT for their child’s success.

That is compared to 37% of teachers.

© Project Tomorrow 2011

© Project Tomorrow 2011

Parental Digital Choice

Parents value a interactive, collaborative relationships with their child’s teacher(s)

© Project Tomorrow 2011

Parental Digital Choice

Parents’ top 10 factors for evaluating the quality ofcomputer based games, websites or online classes

© Project Tomorrow 2011

Enabling Mobile TechnologySmart phone, ipad, Laptops, Bring Your Own

Device

Engaging Online LeaningOnline tutors, Online classes, Collaboration tools,

Chat rooms for students

Empowering Digital ContentCampus wide internet access, Online or e-texts,

Games and Virtual Simulations, Adaptive Software

© Project Tomorrow 2011

Ultimate School: Are we on the same page?

Ultimate School: Enabling Mobile Learning

© Project Tomorrow 2011

Ultimate School: Are we on the same page?

Ultimate School: Engaging Online Learning

© Project Tomorrow 2011

Ultimate School: Are we on the same page?

Ultimate School: Empowering Digital Content

© Project Tomorrow 2011

The future of learning?

What Students Want…

Learning that is:

Enabled Engaging

Empowered

© Project Tomorrow 2011

Speak Up!

.

Julie EvansProject Tomorrow

jevans@tomorrow.org949-609-4660 x15

Copyright Project Tomorrow 2010. This work is the intellectual property of the author. Permission is granted for this material to be shared for non-commercial, educational purposes,

provided that this copyright statement appears on the reproduced materials and notice is given that the copying is by permission of the

author. To disseminate otherwise or to republish requires written permission from the author.

Top Time-Saving Web Resources

Tungle: http://www.tungle.me

Yousendit: http://www.sendthisfile.com

Slideshare: http://www.slideshare.net

Tripit: http://www.tripit.com

© Project Tomorrow 2011

Web Resources Show your students you are “technology savvy”

LiveBinders

http://www.livebinders.com

QR Readers: http://qrcode.kaywa.com

http://www.i-nigma.com

Drop Box http://www.dropbox.com

© Project Tomorrow 2011

Flipped Classroomshttp://www.thedailyriff.com/articles/the-flipped-class-

manifest-823.php

Actively transferring the responsibility and ownership of learning from the teacher to the students in a Flipped Classroom

Students have control over how they learn content, the pace of their learning, and how their learning is assessed

Teachers become guides to understanding rather than dispensers of facts

© Project Tomorrow 2011

21 Things that will Become Obsolete in education by 2020http://www.thedailyriff.com/articles/21-things-that-will-become-obsolete-in-

education-by-2020-474.php

1. DesksThe 21st century does not fit neatly into rows. Neither should your students. Allow the network-based concepts of flow, collaboration, and dynamism help you rearrange your room for authentic 21st century learning.

© Project Tomorrow 2011

21 Things that will Become Obsolete in education by 2020http://www.thedailyriff.com/articles/21-things-that-will-become-obsolete-in-

education-by-2020-474.php

5. The Role of Standardized Tests in College AdmissionsThe AP Exam is on its last legs. The SAT isn't far behind. Over the next ten years, we will see Digital Portfolios replace test scores as the #1 factor in college admissions.

© Project Tomorrow 2011

21 Things that will Become Obsolete in education by 2020http://www.thedailyriff.com/articles/21-things-that-will-become-obsolete-in-

education-by-2020-474.php

7. Fear of WikipediaWikipedia is the greatest democratizing force in the world right now. If you are afraid of letting your students peruse it, it's time you get over yourself.

© Project Tomorrow 2011

21 Things that will Become Obsolete in education by 2020http://www.thedailyriff.com/articles/21-things-that-will-become-obsolete-in-

education-by-2020-474.php

8. PaperbacksBooks were nice. In ten years' time, all reading will be via digital means. And yes, I know, you like the 'feel' of paper. Well, in ten years' time you'll hardly tell the difference as 'paper' itself becomes digitized.

© Project Tomorrow 2011

21 Things that will Become Obsolete in education by 2020http://www.thedailyriff.com/articles/21-things-that-will-become-obsolete-in-

education-by-2020-474.php

12. Centralized InstitutionsSchool buildings are going to become 'homebases' of learning, not the institutions where all learning happens. Buildings will get smaller and greener, student and teacher schedules will change to allow less people on campus at any one time, and more teachers and students will be going out into their communities to engage in experiential learning.

© Project Tomorrow 2011

21 Things that will Become Obsolete in education by 2020http://www.thedailyriff.com/articles/21-things-that-will-become-obsolete-in-

education-by-2020-474.php

14. Education School Classes that Fail to Integrate Social TechnologyThis is actually one that could occur over the next five years. Education Schools have to realize that if they are to remain relevant, they are going to have to demand that 21st century tech integration be modeled by the very professors who are supposed to be preparing our teachers.

© Project Tomorrow 2011

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