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Is the use of laptops in the classroom beneficial or a distraction?

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Beneficial
74% 1007 votes Total: 1369 votes
Distraction
26% 362 votes

Beneficial

by Ernest Capraro

Created on: August 23, 2008

Laptops offer a whole new, improved realm of learning for students. By their very nature, they make all lessons interactive, keeping students engaged in the learning process. They can provide instant feedback and assistance, and serve as a source for limitless new knowledge. With proper supervision, the laptop driven classroom can be the ideal environment for any learner.

Laptops can put education directly into the hands of the students. With each student (or pairs of students) working at their own pace, they can complete, review, and repeat tasks as necessary for their understanding. Teachers can create interactive lessons, or direct students to learning resources that already exist (web sites, CD/DVD media, etc.). Traditional resources, such as texts and movies, easily roll over onto the computer screen, sharing the spotlight with more novel flash activities and educational games.

Many programs and activities offer immediate grading/scoring, providing students with the instantaneous satisfaction of knowing they did a good job. Conversely, it can also tell them when they need a vast amount of practice, and gives them the chance to hone their skills before moving onwards without a proper understanding of the topic, warding off future confusion and misconceptions. Better still, the immediate scoring lets students compare and compete with their friends and peers. Some programs even allow students to see their rankings compared to the entire school, or even the world.

It has always been impossible for a teacher to be everywhere at once, though heaven knows we try. A laptop cannot do away with that need, but it can help alleviate the burden, as some questions are easily answered with instantaneous, computerized help. Help menus and FAQ's exist to deal with the most routine questions, keeping the teacher's need to address them down to a minimum. They also help to build a student's self-reliance, as they realize that they can find answers on their own. Tools such as spell check and grammar check also help, not only in constructing well-written documents, but also in learning the proper spelling and usage of grammar (provided the students actually pay attention to the corrected versions). Students appreciate not losing points for improper punctuation (and no longer have an excuse when they do).

Research becomes more efficient, and supplemental information is readily available for those topics that spark interest in individual learners. Web resources exist on most any topic. People author pages on things that interest them (though a verification of these "facts" is sometimes necessary). Most professional journals are available online, and schools can subscribe to the most relevant ones. Universities and professional organizations are listed online, and it is possible to contact an expert in any field directly. (Some value interaction with curious minds, others ignore inquiries, but the only way to know is by asking.) Many local libraries are online now as well, so a student can locate and reserve library resources without having to wander the library, saving homework time that could be better spent actually studying those resources.

The biggest caveat to bringing laptops into the classroom is the need for supervision. In a poorly managed class, students can easily become absorbed in surfing the web, chatting, playing games, or even hacking into the school's network. It is necessary for the teacher to remain alert and involved with the classroom. Physically monitoring what the students are doing is helpful, though again, the limitation of not being able to be everywhere at once means that students can hide their inappropriate activities when the teacher is near. Computer controls are helpful tools as well. Filters can keep students away from inappropriate web content. Network access can be limited to those resources a teacher wants accessible. (There is no need to grant internet access when the files are all on the local server.) External drives can be disabled, and write access limited, to prevent students from installing their own games and software on the system. In short, there are many control options available.

More important than control, however, is accountability. Control is built around the idea that the students are going to try to do what they aren't supposed to. Creating barriers to inappropriate activities does not stop the students from trying, and they can be quite adept at finding ways to subvert the system. In fact, creating barriers to "the fun stuff" only poses a challenge to the students, who then take pleasure in finding a way to beat the system. The answer to this is to instill a sense of accountability in the students. The teacher (and parents too) need to let the students know that ultimately, their education is in their hands, and that it is up to them to make the best use of their school time. Providing learning goals can help in this matter. Software that allows students to track their progress is a motivator in this matter as well. If parents can monitor it as well, so much the better. Imagine their interest when they see that their child has completed 46% of the work with proficiency when the class average is 67%. Or imagine how pleased they will be, and the rewards they may lavish, when their child is leading that same group of students, with 78%. While rewards in the classroom can often backfire, the knowledge that work invested at school truly does impact their lives outside of school can be a strong motivator indeed. The choice to make the most of their school time will always lay with the students, as it always has.

Laptops offer great potential benefits to the classroom. As a learning tool, they are versatile and potent. Always, always remember, however, that they are only a tool, and have to be used properly, lest they be abused. Also remember that no one teaching tool is better than a combination of teaching tools. If you have laptops available, by all means use them and use them well. Just don't use them exclusively, or you do your students a disservice. Not all of life is conducted on a computer, and neither should be all learning.

Learn more about this author, Ernest Capraro.
Click here to send this author comments or questions.

Distraction

by Laura Leigh Fields

Created on: September 22, 2008

The use of laptops in the classroom is a distraction for children. While the Internet is truly an information super highway, it is also full of fun things that will catch a child's attention. By nature, children are curious and they want to explore. The fact that they are at school won't always stop that desire.

When a child is allowed to use a laptop at their discretion, there is no guarantee that it is being used for its original intent. This is especially true if a child does a keyword search and is directed away from their goal. They can get sidetracked and end up at a completely different place altogether.

Along those same lines, there are lots of dangers on the Internet. There are adults that want to hurt kids but will tell them all the right things to peak their interest. There are promises of fame and fortune. There are viruses and hoaxes. Children can get lured into a world of hurt through their own vulnerabilities.

At the same time, computers are just too fun. There are website about every possible thing in the world. Children can learn about their favorite cartoon characters. They can listen to new songs. They can even play games until their eyes cross. There is so much for a child to do online that learning is often the least of their worries.

The Internet is a great place for research but it is relied on too heavily for this. How many children are even familiar with the Dewey decimal system? Kids today don't spend time at the library as much as kids twenty years ago did. Why should they? They have become enabled by and too dependent on technology to actually read books and understand the printed word.

Computers make things too easy. Kids no longer have to worry about neat handwriting. They don't have to figure out Math problems on paper. They have no need to memorize the periodic tables. All they have to do is point and click. They can type out assignments and have them printed out. They can figure out Math with an online calculator. They can turn the periodic table into their wallpaper if they choose to.

In a sense, a computer is a toy. How can a child be expected to pay attention when they have a toy that has very few limits? Would you let a child play with a baseball in the classroom? Of course not, you would be too worried they could break something or be easily distracted.

This is the same theory with a computer. There are distractions around every corner. The child's potential is being broken when they are not encouraged to study with other methods. It is human nature if you give a child an inch they will take a mile. We can't blame them though. We, as adults, are at fault for not powering down the computer and showing kids that there is a great big wide world outside of the distractions of a computer.

Learn more about this author, Laura Leigh Fields.
Click here to send this author comments or questions.


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