Edutimes Newspaper Edutimes Online Newspaper Issue No 1 (revised 6) | Page 6

FEATURES EDUTIMES HOW ‘BBC’ TEACHERS CAN USE EDTECH IN LESSON PREPS applied to classrooms. The first is power point pre- sentations. A lesson can quickly be transformed from boring to interesting with a power point pre- sentation of content. Using a projector to create a screen in your classroom, you can present content to learners and motivate them to learn more. Imag- ine learners watching a video on the inner workings of the human body or watching a film on the Second World War! Imagine the excitement on their faces, as the screen lights up to reveal the day’s lesson! This can be your classroom and learners will love you and your subject. The revised curriculum stresses making teaching and learning learner-centred and outcome based. Tradi- tional group work “take it from a teacher” teaches very little most of the time. Most teachers hate us- ing the approach because of pressure to finish the schemes and syllabus. With a projector, more con- tent can be covered in a short period of time and pupils will actually learn. It even erases the archaic idea of writing notes on the board. The effects of chalk use of the health of teachers and the envi- ronment, needs no emphasis, thus migrating to the digital era is a sustainable choice for 2019. Teaching aids like drawings, maps, pictures or graphs can now be pre- sented to learners in lifelike form and it will be easy for learners to understand and remember them. Watching a video helps learners to digest content at their own pace and enables them to think critically. A teacher explaining a lesson to learners on a tablet By Mutale Mazimba Kaunda A s teachers, being asked to use a computer to prepare minutes, a lesson plan, analysis or even a test, fills us with fear and trepidation. While some teachers are very comfort- able around modern technology and have the latest smart phones, iPads and laptops, others have an aversion to anything that does not involve a pen and a paper. Such teachers usually re- fer to themselves as Born Before Com- puters (BBC). But there is no need to be apprehensive about using educational technology (Edtech) to make lessons more interesting and more retainable to learners. The world is now digital and fast becoming highly technological, hence, even teachers must move with the times. Using Edtech can have a real impact on how we teach and how pupils learn. EdTech allows teachers to include technology in teaching and learning in a way that makes the teach- ing and learning processes more exciting, innovative and diverse, to break the monotony of traditional teaching and learning methods. Learning can be en- hanced by using appropriate technological process- es such as e-learning, mobile learning and comput- er-based learning. Usually, it is very difficult to come up with fun and interesting ways of presenting con- tent to learners, year after year. Lessons are boring not only for teachers but also for learners. As 6 a result, attendance of classes in some schools is dropping at alarming rates. Veteran teachers are demotivated and struggle to wake up in the morning to teach the same topic they have been teaching for the last 10 years. New teach- ers tremble at the thought of taking a new class be- cause they are not yet familiar with the content. What if I forget some facts? What if I miss a step in the procedure? What if they don’t listen to me? Teachers suffer from different fears related to con- tent presentation, while learners dread attending classes they consider boring. Edtech can be used to get around these hurdles. The wider benefits of Ed- tech can be enjoyed across disciplines outside tra- ditional subjects like Computer studies and Infor- mation and Communications Technology (ICT). You can use Edtech in all subjects including Art, History, Geography or Science. It can also be incorporated from pre-school to secondary school. If you are a BBC teacher, don’t worry. You can be- come conversant with modern devices by simply asking the teacher of Computer studies to introduce you to the world of the internet. You need not learn about al gorithms or the cy- ber world but you can learn simple skills on how to search for information, how to type, send mail, copy and paste and in sert pictures or diagrams. If there is no computer studies at your school, you can seek the same services from a friendly internet café. If there is nothing in your locality, then invest in a smart phone. Today, tech nology is so advanced that a mobile phone with internet access can per- form most functions a computer can.You can also invest in a laptop or iPad. Once you have secured the tech devices, you can begin the journey to great lessons. There are many ways in which technology can be Researchers have shown that videos are more ef- fective in teaching complex processes in science and biology or bulky and factual subjects like History. According to the University of Queensland Institute for teaching and Learning innovation, using digi- tal content increases learner motivation, produces higher marks, promotes peer learning and allows for deeper and autonomous learning. Watching is more effective in helping learners to remember key facts and figures. Research by Forrester shows that visual images are processed 60, 000 times faster that written words. Forrester found that remember- ing one minute of a video is equal to remembering 1.8 million written words. What Forrester’s research shows is that videos and visual aids are better learn- ing methods than traditional learning. Of course, using Edtech requires some investment on the part of both the teacher and the school. Many schools have invested in computers and pro- jectors but others are still lagging. Some teachers who have these devices do not use them to enhance the teaching and learning process Yes, it is scary to abandon the pen and paper and the lesson notes you have memorised for the last 10 years, but if examination results are anything to go by, we need to do something differently because clearly, our children are not learning. The way young people consume information is con- stantly changing and teachers have to keep up. Learners have been exposed to tech devices from a young age and take any digital content as gospel truth. To reach the learners, teachers will have to bridge the technological gap between them and the learners. One of the ways of determining the learning out- come is through assessment. When we assess and find undesirable outcomes, it means we need to re-evaluate our pedagogical approaches, among other things. Maybe parroting content worked 10 years ago but it is clearly not working now. So, let us roll up our sleeves and try presenting content using power point. I will be very interested to hear your testimonies, so let me know how this method works for you this term.