Most of the time I enjoy participating in class.
I enjoy working with classmates on class assignments.
I enjoy applying things I learned in class to real-life problems.
I like thinking about problems with no obvious "right" answer.
I like using technology to help me learn.
I like looking for answers to problems instead of my teacher giving me the answer.
I feel comfortable asking my teacher if I can complete an assignment a little bit differently.
I enjoy applying things I learned in class to real-life problems.
I like thinking about problems with no obvious "right" answer.
I like using technology to help me learn.
I like looking for answers to problems instead of my teacher giving me the answer.
I feel comfortable asking my teacher if I can complete an assignment a little bit differently.
I also asked the students several open-ended questions about the online resources they use to complete their work and how using online resources has changed the way they do their work. The students provided honest answers and I was surprised that outside of our district's web portal, the main resource they used was Google. The students use Google to not only search engine for information, but also as a way to be directed to specific web sites. This proves the necessity for information literacy to be an integrated component of content instruction.
The question that provided the most interesting information was that of, "If you could give your teachers a message about using technology in the classroom, what would it be?". Some of the responses included:
While reading the responses of this survey, what I enjoyed most was reading the honest responses from students. The evaluation piece of implementing technology in the classroom is critical, but is some times overlooked in lesson planning and implementation. If you are using technology in your classroom, how do you use student feedback to guide your re-teaching or future instruction?
The question that provided the most interesting information was that of, "If you could give your teachers a message about using technology in the classroom, what would it be?". Some of the responses included:
- "I would tell them to let us use computers and laptops more so we can study."
- "Make everything on the computer."
- "Let us use computers more to take notes rather than hand writing them."
- "This Is The Message I'd Give Them: Dear Teachers, Using netbooks in class helps us very much so I think you guys should let us use them more."
- "To put more assignments on the computer."
- "To allow us to use it to our advantage. "
- "To let us use our phones."
While reading the responses of this survey, what I enjoyed most was reading the honest responses from students. The evaluation piece of implementing technology in the classroom is critical, but is some times overlooked in lesson planning and implementation. If you are using technology in your classroom, how do you use student feedback to guide your re-teaching or future instruction?
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