Wednesday, February 29, 2012

Interactivity #3

  • The group process required by this interactivity. Was it authentic collaborative?
I have my doubts that this was authentically collaborative. Communicating via e-mail and the chat window in Google Docs was not the most efficient or authentic way to do this -- nothing beats face-to-face interaction yet. I found it extremely frustrating to set up a document that everyone could edit. We had to create three different documents before one worked out for us. Also, the concept of "cultural transformation" was deleted after I submitted it. I felt this was important to highlight.
  • What about the final inventory that emerged? Do you have any thoughts on these technologies as a collective for your particular content area?
A lot of these resources are the same old garbage, different package. There's nothing transformative in ordering music scores online or using notation software. I feel education has barely skimmed the surface on how technology could impact learning. As music educators, we have roughly a 20% participation rate by secondary school. That leaves an 80% of the school that will have no music experiences in secondary school -- this is simply unacceptable. The definition of insanity, put by Einstein, is "doing the same thing and expecting different results".

If you really want to transform education with technology, you need to stop thinking inside the band/chorus/orchestra paradigm. There's nothing inherently wrong with these programs, but they simply do not reach the majority of students. It is my belief that every student, as part of being an educated citizen in a democracy, needs to participate in music. And bypassing, or ignoring the student's prior experiences, culture, and interests outside of school is not the way to do it.

The best technologies on this spreadsheet were the ones which enable students to immediately create music, regardless of their music literacy. Students don't always (and I'm being nice here) want to study how to read music or practice an instrument for five hours a day before any "real" music making can begin. They just want to do. And they learn by doing.

And what these mobile apps like iMaschine, Reactable, Garageband for iPad, etc. have in common is that at least they give the opportunity for students to do more than simply perform and listen -- they can improvise, compose, and conduct in small ensembles. These skills are ignored by the majority of band programs, and it's educational malpractice and unrealistic in today's society (How many people are going to join a professional orchestra after school? Also, who says that being a highly qualified music ed teacher has anything to do with the ability to perform music? It's rubbish.)


  • How might this technology inventory serve your purposes (if at all) in CURR 314 and READ 411 this semester?
I've already taken these classes -- I have not used these technologies for either classes specifically.

I believe the iBook author (textbooks) and kindle would make a huge impact on READ 411.

On a broader level, my READ 411 teacher was very focused on making all course materials and content relatable and meaningful to all students. I believe technology holds some of the keys to accomplishing this. That is, only if educators are willing to look ahead and take some risks with these devices and programs -- many schools are still banning the use of cell phones (sexting seems to be a big deal in the media right now), but they are truly an invaluable resource.

We need to think about the role of education in the 21st century in general -- schools are no longer designed to fit the needs of our students. They are outdated, largely prison-like, and built from this factory line, industrial era mentality.

So what I'm getting at is, our technology in general is only a fraction of transforming education. What needs to happen first is a fundamental change in how educators perceive and use technology. Without a change in our attitude and willingness to adapt these things, they will remain a novelty item.

Wednesday, February 15, 2012

Interactivity #2


The phonograph forever changed music from a service industry to a commodity based one.

Wednesday, February 1, 2012

Will Apple's iBooks author revolutionize textbooks and education?

Apple's new iBooks Author has the potential to change education. It allows the user to drag and drop entire PDF or word documents into a program. It then auto-formats the text to fit the page. The user can then customize the font, layout, add videos, create study guides, notes, and formative assessment like mock-exams and practice questions. It's super interactive and seems stupidly easy to use.

But while students would love to carry a shiny iPad instead of a heavy backpack, schools don't seem likely to catch on to this craze for some time to come. I'd argue that a single classroom of iPads would fair well in price against the costs of paper and printing for a semester. In college, a $500 iPad is cheaper than a semester of books, given the books sell back for nothing.

Apple has priced some of the textbooks as low as $15. That's insanely low for a textbook these days. Unfortunately, one cannot read the textbook without an iPad or iPhone.

One more drawback with iBooks is that textbooks have been given a 2gb limit. This leaves larger anthologies, and media-heavy resources will be left behind or missing lots of content.

Overall, I am looking forward to seeing if Apple will advance the textbook industry into the 21st century. I am also curious to see if the ease of publishing directly to iBooks will democratize the publishing and writing culture.