
Something great is happening out there. Start-up companies allow geniuses to incubate and hatch their ideas, and this innovation breaks new ground in how technology improves our lives.
One place this impact has been seen the most is in the way we learn today. Technology’s impact on education is unprecedented. The classroom is not a teacher-centered auditorium anymore; it’s an interactive hub of tech-based learning that’s informed by collaboration, fun, and technological skills.
But are we missing the point with our focus on tech-ed solutions? Is it right to have kids learn to touch type and code before they learn to write in cursive and spell?
Education can benefit from new technologies; a sick student staying at home can watch the lesson real-time or later on in a video so that they won’t miss important new information or skills taught that day. To consider technology as something that only sabotages learning, or shift educational priorities in the wrong direction, is to fail to see its potential to drive learning and knowledge forward.
Refocusing on fundamental language skills
While technology makes many time-consuming or tedious processes easier (think of how faster touch typing is in contrast to cursive writing), linguistic skills such as spelling and proper grammar usage need to be mastered. Yes, spellcheckers will often help you identify otherwise overlooked misspellings, but is that an excuse for not being a competent speller in the first place?
Ultimately, it might be true that technology is becoming more and more reliable in correcting our mistakes or bringing them to our attention. But this doesn’t imply we should do without basic literacy skills. Technology is a secondary reality. Literacy is primary. Students need to grasp basic grammar rules before learning how to use a computer.
Using technology to drive literacy to the next level
However, instead of considering technology to be linguistic literacy’s enemy, we could instead use technology to promote literacy. Spelling software, online vocabulary games, and tech-based learning more generally, are all by definition more engaging and creative for young learners – something that educators can take advantage of.
Teachers shouldn’t rely on flashcards to teach vocabulary when they can arrange an online vocabulary quiz or spelling bee where every student gets to practice their spelling and vocabulary skills in a collaborative, fun-driven way. Once we learn to use the tools technology provides, the next generation of students and inventors will show us even broader educational horizons.
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