Technology in Higher Education
Why use Technology in a College Classroom?
Author Linda B. Nilson does not posit that technology suits all student needs nor does she assert that technology is helpful to all types of students. But in a survey involving 882 college students (from Texas, North Carolina, and New York State), 99% had a cell phone, 90% owned a laptop computer, and 83% owned an MP3 player (Baker, et al., 2012). Given the overwhelming number of students in this survey (41.2% were female and 58.8% were male) who use technology regularly, it can be assumed that for the most part students would be comfortable with the use of technology in a college classroom (Baker, 2012).
Nilson does explain that technology enhances students' productivity and also allows them to work at the pace they are most comfortable with. Increasingly instructors show a willingness to provide students with computer-based tutorials, and many instructors understand that by offering students technology literacy, they broaden students' employee opportunities once they graduate (Nilson, 2010). Thesis: while it is not the duty of college instructors to be up to speed on the most advanced technologies, it is vitally important that students acquire technological savvy and competencies as part of their major field of study.
Teaching 21st Century College Students to Teach Technologies
Meanwhile, college instructors should be aware that what students learn about technology through higher education impacts what they will take with them, especially if they plan to go into teaching. That is because young people in elementary, middle and high school environments must be given an opportunity to develop a core of foundational skills in information and communication technologies, it is vital that colleges and universities teach future teachers these same skills. Author Victor Wang asserts that today's children are being exposed to a tremendous amount of technology outside the classroom, and hence, when they enter a typical middle school or high school classroom they are literally walking back in time (Wang, 2014). Writing in the Handbook of Research on Education, Wang explains that there are technological advances in today's middle school and high school classrooms, but just because technologies are on hand that doesn't assure that students are leaving...
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