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Let’s take trip back to a classroom in the past. Twenty-five
years ago when I started teaching, we were using chalk and
chalkboards in the classroom, mimeograph machines to make copies,
and filmstrip, slide and overhead projectors as multimedia for
students. Remember the chalk dust and the aroma of the mimeograph
copies? That has all changed.
Now let’s return to the present. Today our students and teachers
use new technology called “interactive whiteboards.” It’s a
new and emerging tool, a large, touch-sensitive display connected to
a computer and projector. It acts as a large computer screen that
students and teachers simply touch to operate. Using a finger or a
pen as a mouse, teachers and students can access and control any
computer application, file or media platform, including the
Internet, CD-ROMs and DVDs. They can also write over applications in
digital ink and then save their work. This technology engages
students with different learning styles by providing a wide range of
digital materials and common focus for the whole class. Brand names
for these interactive whiteboards include Smartboards and Promethean
Boards.
The teacher can manipulate text and objects and capture an image
from the Internet and incorporate it into the lesson. Or do an
interactive frog dissection. Or record an interactive lesson as a
media file and post it on the Web for students to see and download.
The teacher can write right on a digital video, or capture a portion
of a video and incorporate it into a presentation. Students can
create presentations using text, video, and slide shows and present
them to the class.
Interactive whiteboards are powerful tools in the classroom.
Researchers at Manchester Metropolitan University in the United
Kingdom analyzed data from a 2003-04 project and found that students
in grades three to six made additional gains of two-and-a-half to
five months over the two-year period. Between 2002 and 2005,
Southern Mississippi University equipped 40 classrooms with
interactive whiteboards. They found grades improved an average of
five points, while reporting more than 95 percent of the
participants in the survey were “satisfied” or “very satisfied” with
their experiences in those classrooms.
Interactive whiteboards also make life at school better for both
teachers and students. They allow teachers to plan and organize
comprehensive lessons more effectively. Teachers believe that
student engagement and participation increases with the use of this
technology.
In our district, teachers are taking their classes to libraries
or rooms that have interactive whiteboards just to teach one lesson.
We have several teachers writing grants to get this technology into
their classrooms. Our PTCs have purchased a number of them for us.
Teachers are sharing lessons with other teachers in their building
and across the district. The demand has been so great that the
technology department has created an online forum for staff to share
lessons and ideas.
This is a powerful tool, and schools in our district are
committing funds to purchase interactive whiteboards and training
teachers to use them. Teaching methods will continue to change as
more and more of these interactive boards become available to our
staff and students.
Preston Johnson is the principal at East Elementary School,
in the Fairfield School District. He can be reached at
johnson_p@fairfieldcityschools.com
Published in the Fairfield Echo, Feb. 28, 2008 |