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Web Links for TeachersThought for the 21st Century: "Teach a girl to fish, and you will transform civilization." James Grant, former Executive Director of UNICEF, called the education of girls and women a "Trojan Horse" in the worldwide struggle for human rights and development. Educated women, for example, marry later, postpone childbirth, better nurture children, contribute to economic progress, and participate more actively in the social and political life of their communities. This Web site is dedicated to victims of ethnic and gender marginalization and abuse worldwide. Act globally: www.equalitynow.org; www.womenforwomen.org; www.htcfl.org (Healing the Children) The World Wide Web is a part of the Internet.
It consists of "pages" containing text, images,
diagrams, video and audio coded in "hypertext transport
protocol" (http), and "linked" together (accessed
by clicking on highlighted text or icons). Educational Uses of Computers Computers are tools to access, store, manipulate, and present information. At best, they can enhance motivation to learn and provide instruction. Computers enable children to locate text and visuals related to their classroom curriculum, and to produce reports that can easily be edited and updated. Even reluctant readers and writers typically are thrilled to engage in computer-based literacy and research activities, especially in close collaboration with peers. Use of computers can help compensate for disabilities, and can accommodate various learning styles. Thus, computers have a core role in education today. While there are critics of computer use in the early grades, these relate primarily to excesses of the sort that pertain as well to TV viewing. What is often overlooked is that the "digital divide" between girls and boys, and the rich and poor, begins in childhood, where there are wide discrepancies in access, and subsequent discrepancies in attitudes and skills. Unfortunately, research has revealed that even those teachers who display competence in the use of computers for their own purposes, tend not to effectively design classroom computer activities that reinforce their curriculums. Key elements in helping them do so include: administrative support, technical assistance, financial incentives, and one-on-one sustained guidance in the utilization of computers to enhance their curriculums. Even as teachers become skilled in the selection and utilization of computer software, they need to remain focused on their essential roles in orchestrating a variety of media and activities to ensure high achievement by all their students. Information literacy generally, and skill in using computer applications in particular, are developed primarily by the systematic and persistent efforts of good teachers, not computers. See Hackbarth, S. L. (2001). Changes in primary students' computer literacy as a function of classroom use and gender, Tech Trends, 46(4), 19-27. Subsequent research at a more racially diverse midtown Manhattan school has documented gender and racial gaps, especially among students lacking Internet access. Gains in computer literacy at an uptown school have been double those at a midtown school where only the "gifted" classes have weekly computer lab sessions. In-service training at both schools is devoted to print literacy and mathematices to ensure high scores on state-mandated exams. Only computer specialists attend computer workshops offered by the District; classroom teachers are otherwise occupied ("balanced literacy" [mostly fiction], spelling, TERC math).Thus, classroom computers are devalued and little used. Nevertheless, groups of fourth and fifth grade girls who independently formed email networks outscored all others on a measure of computer literacy. Current efforts to nurture such networks in the upper grades have been relatively hampered at the midtown school due to focus on gifted at all grade levels, k-5 (both the lab teacher and the library media specialist are assigned lower grade kids at the expense of "non-gifted" upper grade classes), and to less computer access at home and school (75% home Internet access midtown vs. 95% uptown; 2 classroom computers midtown vs. 3 uptown; mostly gifted classes k-5 have computer lab midtown vs. all grades 3-5 have weekly computer lab uptown). It's a Tale of Two Cities! On this Web page are presented links to other sites that can be of help to teachers as they engage in the classroom-based action research process (a form of "educational technology") of helping students become ethical high achievers and lifelong learners. Steven Hackbarth, Ph.D., www.educational-technology.com Resources for 21st century
professional educators Teachers Network: professional development courses, peer collaboration.
Curriculum guides by subject: Links to online references: dictionaries, encyclopedias, maps, almanacs, biographies, booklists, libraries. LibrarySpot A global network dedicated
to exploring youth-centered learning on the Internet.
www.kinderstart.com: Focus on the early years (for
parents and teachers) Google (Wired magazine award for "Most Intelligent Agent") HotBot, Edupuppy.com, Eduhound.com, Eduhound.com/espanol Go (highly rated, after Google)
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