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Teacher Instructional Technology Literacy Instruction Improve Elementary Essay

¶ … teacher instructional technology literacy instruction improve elementary (K-5) student achievement reading vocabulary? Create a qualitative research scenario phenomenology approach. Using phenomenology

Does the use of instructional technology improve elementary (K-5) student reading vocabulary?

In the era of high-stakes testing, student performance on reading has become increasingly important in determining school evaluations. Reading is a fundamental skill necessary for future success in life. Students are reading in a paper-based format less frequently, at younger ages. This research study will attempt to asses the impact of using technology within the classroom to enhance vocabulary recognition. Previous research indicates that "teacher-made online learning resources provide course content anchored resources that focus on specific real world tasks in class, and a supportive authentic learning environment to learners" (Li 2011).

Using technology to teach reading has several apparent advantages. First of all, it can deploy a multimedia strategy to enhance student engagement. Students are often more 'tuned into' and 'turned on' by media with a visual, auditory, and multisensory component beyond the purely written. Students from highly technologically-connected environments have come to expect a certain level of excitement and entertainment, based upon their interactions outside of school. Technology in the classroom can help to captivate their attention. For students who come from households with low levels of technological literacy, using technology in the classroom increases their comfort level in a manner which is useful for their future schooling and performance in the workplace.

Of course, the ubiquity of technology in everyday life is one source of resistance to expanding the use of technology in the classroom. Objectors feel that students spend enough time staring at screens during their leisure time and do not need to spend additional hours in school doing so. There are even fears...

They feel it favors students who have 24/7 access to technology at home, in terms of school performance. Most standardized state tests are still given via a paper-based format so technology instruction may not be the best medium for students. And some teachers are simply wary of technology because they fear it places them at a disadvantage, if students are more fluent in the use of such technology than themselves.
However, proponents of the technology would counter this is precisely why it should be used: it scaffolds or builds upon students' current frameworks of competencies. "The Internet-based learning environment facilitates learning activities with fast, convenient and time effective features simulating the real world tasks. Transferring learning resources to Internet enhances the student engagement and arouses learning interest" (Li 2011). Also, regardless of one feels that technology is 'bad' or 'good, it is clearly here to stay, and many standardized tests (like the GRE) are given solely online, and this is likely to increase in the future. The sooner students become comfortable with technology in the classroom, and reading critically in a technological format, the better.

To study the impact of technology in enhancing reading comprehension, this study will follow a school that makes use of a phenomenological approach, assessing the impact of introducing the regular use of technology to promote improved language skills within a fifth grade classroom over the course of one year. Instead of taking a typical experimental approach, with a control group and an experimental group, each of which is exposed to the new technology in question, the phenomenological approach has the advantage of being able to assess idiosyncratic aspects of human experience. Technology and its interaction with learners, particularly young learners, is still an evolving concept and its…

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References

Introna, Lucas. (2011). Phenomenological approaches to ethics and information technology.

The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy http://plato.stanford.edu/archives/sum2011/entries/ethics-it-phenomenology

Li, S., Price, D., & Fu, Y. (2011). The impact of the teacher-made online learning resources.

The Business Review, Cambridge, 18(1), 35-40.
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