Making the Most of Early Education Technology
Cutting edge technological innovation isn鈥檛 typically the first thing that comes to mind when we think about early education. Many of the things we associate with young children鈥檚 learning鈥攃aring adult-child interactions, alphabet blocks, the caterpillar-in-the-jar鈥攁re decidedly low-tech. For better or for worse, early education seems like one area unlikely to be revolutionized by the kind of technology-driven productivity increases that are transforming modern life.
But things aren鈥檛 always as they seem鈥攁nd that鈥檚 certainly true of technology and early education. A new generation of technology-driven innovations in professional development, assessment, and curriculum and instructional materials have real potential to improve the quality of early education teaching and learning.
Consider the example of , which offers a research-based, forty-week early literacy intervention for kindergarten and first graders. The curriculum, along with a rich variety of supplemental resources and activities, is available for free on the internet. The recently approved for use in its public school classrooms. By using this free 鈥渙pen source鈥 curriculum instead of a costly commercial textbook, school districts can free up funding for other activities that improve the quality of early education, such as professional development or more customized supports for struggling students. Teachers add their own ideas and activities to the site鈥檚 resource bank, disseminating effective practices to a broader audience and building a professional community of early educators online. Moreover, the internet allows to offer resources ordinary textbooks can鈥檛鈥攆or instance, videos that allow teachers to watch and learn from effective teachers implementing literacy activities.
Online video sharing has tremendous potential to improve professional development for early educators. , created by researchers at the
[slideshow] Teachers can also use technology to help customize instruction in the classroom. Teachers in , use handheld computers to monitor students鈥 achievement on a real-time basis, map students鈥 abilities back onto aligned state literacy standards, and plan instruction to meet students鈥 needs. A growing number of school districts nationally use similar handheld devices to administer of young children鈥檚 learning鈥攁 task that this technology makes far less burdensome and time-consuming for teachers.
Technology holds particular promise for early education because it enhances teachers鈥 ability to customize instruction to individual students鈥 development. Young children鈥檚 development is highly variable, and while early educators must work to bring all children to the same high standards by the end of third grade, doing so effectively requires customizing instruction and support to each child鈥檚 unique developmental progress. Technology, such as
Technology is no replacement for the core of quality early education鈥攙erbally rich, emotionally supportive interactions between children and adults. But technology can help improve teachers鈥 ability to create those types of interactions, and it can help them better align them with standards and customize them to children鈥檚 needs. That鈥檚 quite an accomplishment.