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Anabela Mesquita Polytechnic of Porto ISCAP, Portugal Technologies in the 21 st century bridging the gap between students and teachers I II International Forum on Teacher Education

Technologies in the 21st century – bridging the gap between students and teachers

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Page 1: Technologies in the 21st century – bridging the gap between students and teachers

Anabela Mesquita – Polytechnic of Porto – ISCAP, Portugal

Technologies in the 21st

century – bridging the

gap between students

and teachers

III International

Forum

on Teacher Education

Page 2: Technologies in the 21st century – bridging the gap between students and teachers

Agenda

Contextualization

Some results from a study in Portugal

Examples of projects to help teachers to use technologies in the classroom

GainTime project

eFinLit project

Page 3: Technologies in the 21st century – bridging the gap between students and teachers

Contextualization

3

Change the way teachers teach and students learn

Technologies and strategies can be used in education

Computerized Grading, Electronic Textbooks, Simulation Technology, Gamification, Flipped Classrooms, Active Learning Classrooms, Massive Open Online Courses, Collaborative Distance Learning Environments, the Active Learning ForumTM platform,Learning Management Systems.

How to motivate teachers to use technology in the learning process?

Page 4: Technologies in the 21st century – bridging the gap between students and teachers

The implementation of technologies in education are an important matter.

UNESCO and European Commission are encouraging the use of technologies in Education - development of digital contents that should be open and available to everyone (OER).

“Is higher education taking into consideration the needs and expectations of the students regarding the use of technologies?”; “Are technologies being used in the classroom?”; “Are teachers using them?” and if not,

why?

Page 5: Technologies in the 21st century – bridging the gap between students and teachers

Some results from a study done in Portugal

Sample - 337 students

Majority (84%) prefer face2face learning methods.

12,3% said preferring b-learning method.

Majority (96,2%) have a smartphone.

Youngsters were also asked which social media they use daily.

Do teachers use social media in the learning

process? Majority replied “No” (71,8%).

Only 27,5% said “Yes”.

Which technologies do teachers use?

Work developed with Paula Peres and Fernando Moreira

Page 6: Technologies in the 21st century – bridging the gap between students and teachers

Study results

On one hand, they say they use very often Moodle to “Study / do homework (Moodle)” with 73% of the answers. However, they also say that teachers rarely use Moodle.

BUT if they use Moodle to “Study / do homework (Moodle)” this means that teachers communicate with them via Moodle.

◦ There might be some difficulty for teachers to transmit correct message concerning the use of the technology in the teaching-learning process when we are with a generation that has and uses technology most of the time (96,2% has a smartphone).

Would you like your teachers to use technology as a support to the learning process?

◦ Majority (96,5%) say “Yes”.

Page 7: Technologies in the 21st century – bridging the gap between students and teachers

Study resultsWhy do you think teachers do not use technology?

Students have the perception that teachers know how to use the technology but the overall process is not adequate so these “technological” students include it in a formative natural process.

To confirm this statement and the previous results, 84% of the students prefer face2face methods and only 12,3% prefer b-learning.

Why teachers do not use technology Number of answers

Teachers do not have the necessary competences to do so 13

The program is very long 31

Teachers have the competences but do not have time 83

Technology should not replace face to face contact 1

The content is not adequate for the technologies 57

Teachers have the competences but are not confident enough 28

There are no technological tool adequate to the content 32

Page 8: Technologies in the 21st century – bridging the gap between students and teachers

Reasons for teachers to give up using technology and social media

A new technology appears and so the “old” one is replaced by the “new” one.

The challenges that new technologies represent to teachers. This may encourage teachers to abandon a certain technology and replace it by another one.

Lack of success of students when a teachers uses a certain technology. So the “fault” of lack of success is given to the technology (and not to the method used).

Lack of response of students on the use of a technology can also contribute to the decision of not using it anymore (ex: forums, blogs, etc.).

This may mean that we also need to concentrate efforts on the teachers and on how the teacher can and should use the technology as a pedago- gical tool. Not enough to have the technology at the teacher’s disposal. He/ she needs to

know how to use it with the students and with pedagogical purposes.

Page 9: Technologies in the 21st century – bridging the gap between students and teachers

Examples of projects to help to increase the use of technologies in

the classroom

Page 10: Technologies in the 21st century – bridging the gap between students and teachers

Flipped classroomGain Time project – gaintime.eu

Work developed with Paula Peres

Page 11: Technologies in the 21st century – bridging the gap between students and teachers

ANABELA MESQUITA 11

Source of image:http://digitalsandbox.weebly.com/flipped-classroom.html

Page 12: Technologies in the 21st century – bridging the gap between students and teachers

ANABELA MESQUITA 12

http://gaintime.eu/flipped-researchs/#tab-id-1

Complete handbook with examples of games and other educational strategies.

Page 13: Technologies in the 21st century – bridging the gap between students and teachers

ANABELA MESQUITA 13

http://gaintime.eu/flipped-researchs/#tab-id-2

Page 14: Technologies in the 21st century – bridging the gap between students and teachers

ANABELA MESQUITA 14

Page 15: Technologies in the 21st century – bridging the gap between students and teachers

ANABELA MESQUITA 15

Page 17: Technologies in the 21st century – bridging the gap between students and teachers

Elearning platform

Efinlit project – efinlit.eu

Work developed with Paula Peres

Page 19: Technologies in the 21st century – bridging the gap between students and teachers

Conclusions

The perception that students have regarding the use of the technologies bythe teachers may not be a correct one.

Teachers use technologies but mostly as repository and not with pedagogicalpurposes.

There is a strong need to identify the perspective of the teachers (next step) and in paralell to help teachers to develop the necessary skills to fully use technologies with a pedagogical purpose.

2 examples were presented – how to flip a classroom and the use of anelearning platform that could help teachers to introduce technologies in theclassroom

Page 20: Technologies in the 21st century – bridging the gap between students and teachers

Future work

Identify the perspective of teachers

Develop a plan to bridge the gap between students and

teachers – identify the needs of the teachers in terms oftechnologies and prepare an educational programme to fill in this gap.

Compare these results with other countries.

Page 21: Technologies in the 21st century – bridging the gap between students and teachers

Anabela Mesquita 21

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4dCOgV65VWU

Page 22: Technologies in the 21st century – bridging the gap between students and teachers

Thank youСпасибоKüp räxmät

Page 23: Technologies in the 21st century – bridging the gap between students and teachers

Anabela Mesquita – Polytechnic of Porto – ISCAP, Portugal

Technologies in the 21st

century – bridging the

gap between students

and [email protected]

III International

Forum

on Teacher Education

Page 24: Technologies in the 21st century – bridging the gap between students and teachers

ANABELA MESQUITA 24