Saturday, July 13, 2013

Education Authorities need to increase their advocacy efforts...




Children today are born into a world of technology. They learn quickly and adapt to new technologies as it is an integral part of their lives. There is still this assumption that learners can use technology effectively simply because they are surrounded by it and because they are quite skilled at consuming social media content. The technology which has become the norm today was not a part of the teacher’s learning and they lived in a world with very little use of technology. We tend to overlook the usefulness of our students being surrounded by technology.  It is something that should be “exploited” rather than regarded as an obstacle to teaching and learning. It is important for teachers to become competent in their use of new technologies, which their students can be facilitators of, and technology will start to transform learning when learners use it to become 21st Century learners.
When authorities responsible for education budget have superficial understanding of the importance of technology in education budgets are not allocated appropriately. Budget allocation for school technology should be given the same priority as other resources. Education leaders and authorities need to increase their advocacy efforts. They should take a much more serious stance about the use of technology as a teaching and learning tool. It is a matter of understanding the role that technology can play in education.
The focus should not be on performance and pupil results only, and education authorities need to be able to see beyond the classroom. The school curriculum should not and does not limit our student’s achievements to performance and results.
School leaders, education authorities and people responsible for the budget allocation for technology in schools/classrooms should be sensitized in teaching with technology because it will improve their understanding of how technology can be integrated with teaching & learning effectively.

Tuesday, June 11, 2013

IT was not the career I had in mind...


If I had to choose a different job I would definitely choose something to do with technology, but if I was asked that question fifteen years ago my response would probably have been different.  I had my first job interview when I was 21, the second and probably the last one when I was 23.  I’ve changed jobs more than a couple of times in the last twenty years from media to education and I believe now I’m quite settled in technology.  Being the first female to head the IT Services Section at the Ministry of Education I feel privileged, more honoured, because it was not the career I had in mind.

When I graduated with a degree in education, all I wanted was to be in a classroom with my students.   When I look back at the time when I was a teacher, what we had to work with compared to what we have now, what we can use in the classroom, I’d say teaching has come a long way.  I still enjoy teaching, although I’m more involved with professional development and teacher training there’s a part of me that still wants to be in the classroom.  My greatest joy now I would say is seeing the satisfaction of a teacher who has tried a new technique with her class and has succeeded in motivating her students.  I am happier when I know that the students have enjoyed the lesson, because they have learned twice as much as my students did 15 years ago.

When I started my teaching career there wasn’t much technology used in lessons or lesson preparation. In 2000 when I moved to my first secondary school as an English teacher, the IT departments in schools were being set up and I remember at that time the person in charge of the department at my school was planning to move.  I was offered the opportunity to head the department.  With little knowledge of computing anyone in my shoes back then would have refused.  For some reason I was intrigued by technology and I suppose that’s what drove me to where I am today.

The opportunity to completely change career direction came when I was offered a transfer to the IT Section at the Ministry of Education.  It meant I wouldn’t be involved in teaching and it was an office job.  The offer was tempting because there were prospects and opportunities which at that time a teaching career was not offering.  I have been fortunate that I’ve had a great team of technicians to work with. The fact that I am the only woman in the IT Section does sometimes make my work difficult but I enjoy the challenge.  I look at everything with a positive attitude in my work and I enjoy learning.   
As a teacher this I believe is the best quality one can have.