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Wednesday, August 02, 2017

How to navigate the new device-agnostic classroom | eSchool News

"How can schools ensure that they are creating effective, purposeful learning environments in a device-agnostic classroom? It helps to begin by asking 3 questions" continues eSchool News.

Photo: eSchool News

Technology in the classroom is nothing new; most of today’s educators have embraced the ability to draw upon an increasingly diverse array of digital tools and programs to enrich their lessons.

With the advent of more device-agnostic digital classrooms, many tech-savvy teachers and schools are taking a step back and reevaluating how best to use technology to support their goals. In the new device-agnostic classroom, educators are taking the opportunity to ensure they are focused on purposeful applications first, with a secondary emphasis on the device itself.

So how can schools ensure that they are creating effective, purposeful learning environments in a device-agnostic classroom? Ultimately, it helps to begin by asking three questions:
  • Why am I exploring a digital learning ecosystem for my students?
  • How can I ensure my digital learning ecosystem will support my students?
  • What platforms and applications need to be in place to accomplish our goals?
For many successful districts, questions like these have become guiding principles, helping to frame the conversation around the “why” when architecting, choosing and implementing digital platforms and the devices that support them.

“Why am I exploring a digital learning ecosystem for my students?”
As with any complex undertaking, it helps to first take a step back, evaluate motivations from stakeholders and set flexible goals, which will continue to evolve over time. It’s important to identify your goals by asking: What, ultimately, are you hoping to achieve? Increased student engagement? A more seamless classroom flow and better time management for teachers? Easier access to performance data across multiple learning solutions? The ability to facilitate differentiation? Increased student agency and achievement?

Once these questions have been asked and high-level goals are identified and established, it’s easier to work toward them and identify the right digital platforms and applications that can help you meet those goals.

When considering these questions, it’s also critical to think about interoperability and how different digital systems can be fully integrated and work together, even if they are built by different companies.

When school districts build interoperable, device-agnostic learning ecosystems, they offer students access to a wider range of digital learning tools and curricula, as well as provide more effective ways for schools to manage their digital programs. Ultimately, these systems help students take ownership of their own learning, inside the classroom and out.

No matter what their device or internet speed, students can readily engage with their lessons, review their progress in real-time and draw upon a wide variety of supportive materials to help keep them on track. Teachers, meanwhile, can track student progress in a meaningful way and introduce any outside learning materials that they deem relevant, from supplemental readings and activities to wikis, OER (Open Educational Resources) and videos.

Still, the ability to deliver all of these capabilities depends on the specifics of the implementation – which brings us to “how.”
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Source: eSchool News