Leadership magazine May/June 2018 V47 No. 5 | Page 16

Break down the walls: CONNECTING WITH TECH- RESISTANT TEACHERS Access to technology does not equal equity. School leaders must attach the technology to an educator’s purpose, creating connections and building capacity to ensure every student has an up-to-date learning experience. 16 Leadership Walk into the classrooms of any school in the nation, and you will wit- ness varying levels of technology integra- tion. In one classroom, students may create stop-motion animation videos to dem- onstrate the laws of physics, then post the videos on a website to teach a partner class halfway across the world. In the classroom next door, you may dis- cover a teacher fraught with frustration as he or she once again struggles to remember the username and password to log in to his or her email. In this classroom a Chromebook cart remains locked, unopened, and collects dust in the corner of the room. Rolling out 1:1 devices to all classrooms is not enough. Access alone does not guaran- tee equal opportunity. Devices are not the answer. Innovative teachers who recognize the power of tech- nology will maximize the resources avail- able to them. One teacher may allow stu- dents to access their personal cell phones to research information on search engines and/ or YouTube, yet another collects all personal technological devices prior to the class pe- riod with a strict “No Cell Phones” policy, requiring students to rely solely on an out- dated textbook to access information. Students have a wealth of information at their fingertips. They have calculators and encyclopedias available at the touch of a but- ton via a smartphone. As educators, we have a moral obligation to guide students in using these devices safely and appropriately. The students of today may have grown up with technology in their hands from the time they were toddlers, but that does not mean they know how to curate information, analyze the credibility of sources, or provide attribution to creators of media. Educational leaders play a vital role in guaranteeing an equitable environment for each and every student, to ensure that re- gardless of the class that each child is in, he or she will receive a technology-rich learning experience that promotes responsible use. Create connections to build capacity How might we create equal opportunities for students when we face teachers who are resistant to technology integration? As lead- ers, we could opt for a top-down approach with mandates and new initiatives. This may By Katherine Goyette and Adam Juarez