After
reading Prensky’s article ‘Digital Natives, Digital Immigrants’ I started to
think about the importance of using technology in our classrooms. Nowadays,
it’s not only a tool to motivate our students or keep them engaged; technology
has changed our learner’s thinking processes and we can’t ignore this, teaching
“slowly, step-by-step, one thing at a time, individually”.
Even though
there are some teachers who deny the importance of technology and spend their
time criticizing the way in which the new generations have changed, I think
most of the Digital Immigrant teachers accept the technological development and
try to learn about it in order to improve their lessons.
Now yes, I
will share some effects of technology on classrooms:
- It has changed students and teachers’ roles: When students use technology they are “actively making choices about how to generate, obtain, manipulate, or display information.” Some of them can even become coaches, helping their classmates to use technology. The teacher becomes a facilitator or monitor and is no longer the controller of everything.
- It develops student’s motivation and self-esteem: We all know how students enjoy using technology, how they prefer doing the same activity in a computer rather than with pen and paper. “Compared to conventional classrooms with their stress on verbal knowledge and multiple-choice test performance, technology provides a very different set of challenges and different ways in which students can demonstrate what they understand”. At the same time, technology empowers students. They have the immediate results of their performance and they can see how much they are progressing. The simple fact of learning to manipulate a new technological device will foster their autonomy and give them the feeling that ‘they CAN do it’.
- It increases cooperative work: As I mentioned, some students become tutors and they help each other to successfully complete the task that is proposed. What’s more, “students often look over each other’s' shoulders, commenting on each other’s' work, offering assistance, and discussing what they are doing”.
- It expands the audience: Student’s work is no longer aimed to the teacher or to other peers. Through Skype, for example, they can communicate with native speakers, and through social networks or blogs, their works can be shared to the entire world.

If you want
to know more about the effects of technology on classrooms read "Effects of
Technology on Classrooms and Students." by the U.S. Department of
Education.
I really liked your post, Sol. And I'd like to say I, too, consider myself a 'Digital native'. I can see all those changes Prensky enumerates in hs article in myself... and I hate it when some of our teachers tell us not to be afraid of technoloy... I mean, come on! We use technology 24/7, we learn by doing and can do many things with technological devices at the same time.
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