Friday, March 23, 2007

What about THIS generation?

The subject of new teachers and their use of technology in the classroom seems to be coming up a lot lately. As a high school technology trainer, this subject is near and dear to my heart. Will Richardson wrote recently about talking with The Next Generation of Teachers. In speaking with graduate students, Richardson told them,

"You know, there’s a lot of pressure on you in my circles because many people think nothing is going to change until the old guard retires out and you guys take over.”


While I agree with this statement to some extent, the issue I have with the concept is that, at this point, the "old guard" has been teaching the next generation how to teach. We are looking for a fundamental change here, a transformation from ground zero. Ryan Bretag (my edtech "partner in crime" and great inspiration) responded to Richardson's post and discovered in doing a spot check of local universities that the educational technology preparation around here was woefully lacking for their pre-service teachers. If we don't convert the old guard, that change will be painfully slow.

The shift so many of us so desperately seek is not going to magically happen because new people are coming in the door. We seem to be waiting for a "Friedman flat-world-esque convergence" to happen. We need the will, the means, the support, the energy, the desire, the faith, the tools and the means to come together. It's bigger than "young people will do it"; the old guard needs to buy in now to generate real power real soon. We need to create what Gladwell would call "positive epidemics" of our own in our own schools.

2 comments:

Patrick Aroune said...

Lisa

Interesting discussion. I have a question to ask. Wouldn't a district or school, seeking to change the culture of change with the infusion of technology, recognize that terms like, "old guard" only stratify the generations of teachers within a district? Shouldn't a district look to leverage the individual expertise all professionals bring to the classroom, new and experienced alike?

Lisa Meinhard Sly said...

You're absolutely right. It's always good to look in the mirror and see what verbage I'm using myself! I suppose I was reacting to the "new generation" comment with an antonym but, as you say, that perpetuates the separation. Expertise in pedagogy, delivery, technology -- all our instructional and learning components -- is the key factor, not age or years on the job.