Teaching and Learning: Reflecting on the New Paradigm

Teaching and Learning with Technology: Promises and Pitfalls

Frank Gillespie, Coordinator for Instructional Support, Office of Instructional Development, The University of Georgia


The Promises: Teaching and learning with computer technology has a history of about 35-40 years. Since about 1960 digital computers have been used to support teaching and learning in several ways; initially as a content to be taught, and as a means to enhance learning, followed by use as a support tool, and finally, as a vehicle for multimedia delivery, and an asynchronous communication link between faculty and students.

About twenty years ago serious promises began to be made that computer technology would soon greatly influence teaching and learning by supplanting the source and information transfer functions of teachers; freeing them to devote more time to the personal concerns of students and providing time for diagnosing learning problems, developing appropriate learning strategies, and monitoring the effects of instruction. Students would benefit by being actively involved in the learning process, receive immediate reinforcement about performance, and be able to proceed at their own pace.

The actual impact of computer technology on instruction has not been that great. Until just very recently the computer has been used mainly as an aid to faculty productivity and to support or enhance normal teaching activities. There have been very few examples where computers have really changed how we teach or what is actually taught.

The promises of twenty years ago have not been realized, but progress has been made in the development of new digital tools to support learning.

Changes and trends in digital learning: During the past twenty years there has been a shift in digital forms of learning:

  • small steps 
  • structure, direction 
  • instructor control 
  • errorless performance 
  • linear
  • local
  • teach procedures 
  • transfer skills of expert to novice
  • "everything" learning
  • large jumps 
  • exploration 
  • learner choices 
  • learn from errors 
  • branching
  • global
  • teach problem solving 
  • empower the learner 
  • "just in time" learning
  • Changes in approaches to teaching and learning: Coinciding with a shift in digital forms of learning has been a shift in how we look at teaching and learning in higher education. The use of new technologies is seen by some as a major factor contributing to a shift away from traditional or conventional approaches to instruction and toward new or reform approaches to teaching and learning.

    The New Paradigm

  • teacher directed
  • didactic teaching 
  • short blocks of instruction on single subject 
  • passive or one-way modes of instruction
  • individual, competitive work 
  • teacher as knowledge dispenser 
  • ability grouping 
  • assessment of knowledge, specific skills
  • learner centered
  • student exploration 
  • extended blocks of multidisciplinary instruction
  • active and interactive modes of instruction 
  • collaborative, cooperative work 
  • teacher as a facilitator or guide 
  • heterogeneous grouping
  • performance based assessment
  • An examination of some of the current trends in higher education indicates that technology is playing a significant role in the development of some new models of teaching and learning. Some of these new models are directed to improving learning by reducing time, labor, or costs. Others provide new or more convenient ways to deliver instruction or increase or improve educational access. Still others are directed to exploring the potential that technology has for improving the quality of teaching and learning.

    How can technology influence the quality of learning?

    1. Students can take a more active role in the learning process.
    2. Teachers can present course content in a variety of formats.
    3. Students and teachers can employ techniques that recognize a variety of learning styles.
    4. A broader array of resources can be brought to the classroom and the students.
    5. Opportunities for interactions between teachers and students and among students can be increased.
    6. The productivity of those who support the learning environment can be increased.

    Some reasons for integrating technology with teaching and learning (Crossroads Project)

    1. engage students as active learners,
    2. encourage students to be producers, not just consumers of information,
    3. enable novice learners to be engaged in the same kinds of activities as "experts"
    4. expand the time and space boundaries of the classroom
    5. stimulate reflection and critical thinking;
    6. improve access to human resources, research materials
    7. facilitate collaborative and cooperative learning
    8. provide for more student to teacher and student to student contact

    The most popular instructional technology applications used in higher educational today are:

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    The Pitfalls: The following assumptions are frequently made when applying a technology solution to a teaching and learning issue:


    The Challenge: There are many challenges to the application of technology to teaching and learning, but the biggest challenge is probably about how we identify issues of common concern. As a beginning we may want to consider the following questions:

    1. What teaching and learning issues or goals do we want to address?(TGI)
    2. How can technology help? (Seven Principles)
    3. What forces are encouraging the use of technology here?
    4. What forces are obstructing the use of technology here? (Gilbert on Obstacles)
    5. What can we all do to support the wise use of information technology?

    A systems approach is required. We must examine our teaching, research and service missions and determine what we need or want to accomplish. Only then should we begin to identify strategies where technology has the potential to help us achieve our goals. We must experiment together with and assess the effects of these strategies. The results of our explorations ultimately should be used to select, design, implement and support technology strategies that can influence how our students learn and how we teach.

    In the meantime, until we learn how to work together, we can learn how to use information technology tools in our everyday work. We can cooperate with each other in learning about and using technology. We can show others how we use information technology in our teaching and learning. We can provide many examples and models. We can recognize, reward, and support adopters of technology. We can encourage access to technology for everyone that wants it. We can examine the effects of technology on the teaching and learning of others and develop realistic plans for incorporating technology into our own teaching and learning.

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    What do we hope to gain with the transformation taking place in education?

    What are the positive aspects of applying Web technologies to teaching and learning? (UGA)

    1. better access to information and knowledge, current or updated information, abundance of reference materials, easy access to historical documents, spend more time learning, less time searching, speed
    2. ease of communication, student interaction, interactivity, on-line discussions, and forums
    3. flexibility , more choices, options, can do lots of things, expand possibilities, points of view, more diversity
    4. increased student role in learning , student independence, motivation for students, perceived by students to be up to the minute, pursuit of interests
    5. glitz, excitement, intimidating, capability for visual , sound and other media, done by professionals
    6. increased feasibility of distance learning, can reach out to anyone, anytime
    7. overcome classroom inhibitions, no peer pressure

    What are the negative aspects of applying Web technologies to teaching and learning? (UGA)

    1. less control of information, little control over what students learn, lose focus on issues being discussed
    2. less quality, control, increased access to "wacko" documents
    3. lose interaction with students, physical, personal interaction, face time, human interaction, personal relationship with students, loss of emotion and feeling
    4. security, security issues
    5. loss of social development, know about real life work ethic, meeting time constraints, loss of standards
    6. costs, greater hardware, software needs
    7. loss of anonymity
    8. less time for development and maintenance

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    Obstacles to improving teaching and learning with information technology (Steven W. Gilbert, Making the most of a slow revolution, Change, March/April, 1996)

    1. limited access to equipment,. software and support
    2. fragmented institutional planning
    3. fragmented support services
    4. poor communication about decisions and allocations
    5. anyone, anywhere anytime
    6. understanding the difficulty of adoption
    7. lack of information about good practice
    8. obtaining legal use
    9. faculty rewards
    10. expectations are too high
    11. feeling of being behind

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    WWW - The WWW, or The World Wide Web, or just The Web, is the latest way to access The Internet, a vast world-wide network of computer and communication resources with perhaps as many as 100 million users.


    Instructional Computing (1960-now)

    In the early 1960s information technology and the computer provided a new content to be taught. Units within courses and entire courses relating to the following topics were developed. Many examples of computing or instructional computing courses continue to be offered today.

    Computer Assisted Learning (1966-now) In the mid to late 1960s the capabilities of the digital computer were employed to develop applications to support the teaching of computer related topics and other types of content. Applications of the following types were and continue to be developed.

    Productivity tools (1977-now) The success of the personal microcomputer encouraged the development of a variety of tools to enhance personal productivity. The following types of applications had their beginning in the mid 1970s and continue to be used and refined today:

    Delivery of multi-media instruction (1985 - now ) Increased performance of personal computers during the mid 1980s encouraged the production of multi-media educational programs. These packages were often CD-ROM based and had the following characteristics.

    Today there are probably over 5000 titles that are examples of these types of programs.

    Provide for communication between faculty and student (1990 - now ) Establishment of local and wide area networks and improved access to computers and communication resources during the early 1990s encouraged the development of a variety of new teaching and learning activities:


    The Future: The technology revolution in education will continue to be about access to information but also about ways of sharing information. Instructional technology in the next decade will support both synchronous and asynchronous interaction between the learner and the sources of knowledge and information. Incorporating digital text, audio, graphics, animation, and full-motion video into lecture, laboratory, self-study, and interpersonal and inter-group communication activities will be the norm. Real-time, simultaneous two-way video, multimedia presentations, personal support systems, and "education on demand" will be delivered to students where they live, work, or study. Communications and connectivity will increase between the student and the teacher, other students, the office, the dorm room, the classroom, the library, the campus, and the world.

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