When I first saw an interactive whiteboard, I really wasn't very impressed with what I saw. I remember touring through a school in southwest Sydney about 5 years ago that had installed them in every room. As I wandered around looking at how they were being used, a few thoughts struck me...
- I couldn't see anything special about "the board". It seemed that everything I saw being done could have been done with just a projector on its own equally as effectively.
- There was nothing terribly special or even pedagogically sound about what I saw. It was mostly just online games and digital "busy work".
- I wondered if these people had given any thought to how much their ongoing costs for replacement projector bulbs would amount to!
When I was teaching in Canada, my school adopted Smartboards. I was lucky enough to be selected for the original "pioneer group" of teachers there, and we got some excellent training directly from the trainers at Smart. Over the last couple of years I've read a lot of research papers and blogposts about IWBs, listened to a lot of IWB specific podcasts, watched a lot of teachers work with them, had many, many conversations about them with all sorts of teachers. And, of course, I've co-written what has turned out to be a pretty comprehensive book on the subject.
There are still some people who have some pretty negative opinions about IWBs. They claim that interactive whiteboards are a backward step. Coming from my originally skeptical position, I totally understand the controversy surrounding IWB technology. However, I also feel like I'm reasonably well qualified to have some sort of considered opinion about them, so here's a few thoughts...
I feel like the general attitude to IWBs and the approach to using them seems to have matured somewhat over the last 12 months. In the early days of IWBs, many teachers were clearly impressed with the "wow factor" and were not giving a lot of deep consideration to the actual pedagogy for their more meaningful use or thinking about how they might become seamlessly embedded into the daily routine of teaching and learning.
These days however, I'm pleased to say that most of the conversations I hear about IWBs seem to have a much more pedagogically focused outlook. More teachers seem to be thinking intelligently about how they might be used to improve learning, or at least raise the student engagement factor in some sort of sustainable way. They want to know about how to use the technology to deepen understanding and to promote higher order thinking skills. They genuinely want to become more proficient in their use, so they can get the technicalities of using them out of the way and focus on the real issues of "how will this help me teach better, and how will this help my students learn better?"
It's becoming much harder for vendors to dazzle educators with fancy animations and meaningless drag-and-drop activities. It seems to me that the IWB-using educators I'm meeting these days are much more discriminating and thoughtful about how they use the technology. They also have a far more suspicious view of outrageous vendor claims about the instant impact an IWB will have on their classrooms. For way too long, vendors promoted IWBs as though they were some sort of magical panacea for classrooms. "Just add an IWB to your classroom and student excellence will automatically follow!" seems to be the claim.
From what I've seen lately, that claim is being increasingly seen for the lie that it is. Intelligent teachers know that while interactive whiteboards might be a powerful addition to their classroom, expecting them to be more than that is just naive. Great teaching is still the catalyst that makes powerful learning possible, but used wisely, IWBs can certainly enrich that environment.
Technorati Tags: iwb, pedagogy
Hey good post... I understand what you are getting at here and it is refreshing to hear others declare that the corporate IWB spin is nothing more than marketing aimed at a rather docile level of teacher. You point out that it is important to focus on pedagogy and quality teaching practice - no one is going to argue with you there. However, the reality is that many technologies (especially IWB's) are being used as tools to somehow disguise continued poor teaching. Teachers who think they are changing but not really making any drastic pedagogical shift!! Sure there are some awesome educators out there using IWB's but they are few and far between!! There seems to be more teachers out there using theses devices in ways that are just demonstrating poor teaching practice - this time with an expensive piece of equipment.
ReplyDeleteThe questions I still have involves the value of IWB's in classrooms across the school. Can the same brilliant practice be achieved with the same level of engagement and student learning outcomes with less expensive solutions? While my posts on IWB's seem quite cynical and more of a "bash" session - I am keen to continue questioning these technologies.
Just out of curiosity, in, say, a Year 1, 2 or 3 classroom where it's unlikely that every child is going to have fulltime access to their own laptop computer (and nor would you probably want them to at that age), what technology WOULD you suggest as the "right solution" for bringing digital media, the web, and some sort of shared focal point for teaching and learning into the classroom.
ReplyDeleteIf not an IWB, then what?
We can make a different case for the older students, where I think the nature of IWBs and the way they get used needs to be approached very differently, but in these junior years, where there is a need for a social, shared, group-based, teaching and learning space, I'm trying to think what might be a better option than a live, net-connected, tactile surface that every student can see and share?
Your thoughts?