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DigiKnow? Digital Knowledge for the Classroom

That's Not a Drinking Fountain
or
How to Survive in a One Computer Classroom

by Whit Anderson

Bottleneck
Some teachers with only one computer in their classroom line up their students to use that computer like it was a drinking fountain. While it is important that all students get access to a computer, the drinking fountain approach is rarely the best model to adopt.

Classroom time is too valuable to have a line of students waiting around for a turn to use the computer. In addition to being inefficient, that kind of a bottleneck in the classroom is just begging for behavior problems.

If you don't have as many computers as you would like in your classroom you aren't alone. Few schools have the resources to provide a computer for each student, and many classrooms feel lucky to have one computer for all the students to share. Teachers have developed a number of strategies to make the best possible use of scarce computer resources.

Stations
One strategy that many teachers use is to create multiple activities with stations. Students are given a problem to solve where the computer is only one of the available tools. While the Internet and CD-ROMs are great research tools, they probably aren't the only source of information that students should be using. In the station model, students, working in small groups have a limited amount of time at a number of stations to gather information and to construct knowledge from it.

One scenario for this approach might be fifth grade students looking for information about prehistoric animals that lived in their state. Each group can choose to find information about one particular animal and to prepare a brief report about their animal for the rest of the class. At one station students might find information by examining dinosaur textbooks obtained from the library. At another station the teacher might have a set of encyclopedias available. A third station might be material from the teacher's clip file such as articles about paleontological digs in the area. The fourth station might be a computer with CD-ROMs or bookmarks to Web sites with information about prehistoric animals. The students might rotate from one station to another in small groups at fifteen or twenty minute intervals. At each station the groups would work together to gather information and develop notes about what they were learning.

Print
Another way to make efficient use of limited computer resources is to encourage students to print the resources they find. Students gathering information should skim pages and headers to find likely sources of information and then print those pages to be read later. Most people prefer reading a printed page rather than reading lengthy text from the monitor. While students are going though material they printed, extracting and pondering the information they found, other students can be using the computer to find and print pages with the information they need.

This may occasionally lead to printing some pages that are not what the students were looking for. They may be able to share those pages with other students who were looking for that information. In any case, paper and toner are inexpensive compared to the cost of providing computers to students. A teacher who can get more use from limited computer resources at the cost of paper and toner has done well by both students and district.

You may also decide to print some pages ahead of time for your students. One of the advantages of the Internet is that it often has very specialized and very up-to-date information. If you can print that information for your students they can all have access to that information without each student needing time at the computer to read the information.

Projector or Large Monitor
A strategy similar to printing out pages ahead of time is to use a projector or large monitor to present some material from the computer to the entire class. A disadvantage of this approach is that students may not be as actively engaged in gathering and evaluating information. An advantage of this method is that you can control the pace and the content.

This might be particularly effective as a introduction/preview of Web pages. Students get an overview of what is available and later are able to make better use of limited time at the computer to find the information they need.

Plan Ahead
The idea of using a projector or large monitor for a preview is closely related to the idea of planning ahead. If computer time is limited, make sure that students are ready before they start to use the computer. Many online resources provide students with access to online experts who will communicate with students via e-mail. Before students come to the computer they should have carefully defined what it is they want to know from the online expert.

A hard copy organizer can help students plan ahead for the information they want to find. Rather than simply browsing for whatever information comes their way, students who have planned ahead can focus on getting the information they need. If they have a more specific idea of what they are looking for they can make better use of keywords on search engines, and more quickly evaluate whether a Web page is a likely source of information they need.

If your students are looking for information on the Internet be sure that they know how to use a search engine. With students new to the Internet to it might be a good idea to pick one search engine and teach them how to use that search engine. There are a number of good search engines available, but many of them work in slightly different ways. Picking one search engine lets students master the "ins and outs" of that search engine quickly so that they can focus on finding information and not struggle with the mechanisms of a variety of search engines.

You may want to bookmark Web sites that you would like all the students to see. Encourage students to make their own bookmarks and to share with others good Web sites that they find.

Beg, Borrow, and Trade
If you have one computer in your classroom, it's likely that other classrooms also have a computer. Are any of those computers available at the time that your students need access? If your school allows moving computers between classrooms you might be able to work out a "deal" with another teacher to borrow their computer and lend them yours at another time. Or perhaps one of your students could work quietly on a computer in another teacher's classroom if the other class was not using the computer.

Some schools have placed all computers on rolling carts so they can be assembled into small or large groups as necessary. Others use laptop computers which are more easily moved.

If other classroom computers aren't a possibility you might be able to have a small group of students work at a computer in the library or resource center. In any case, students working in another room will need supervision and preparation. It is especially important that students in these situations organize their learning tasks ahead of time so that they stay focused on what they need to learn.

Match Task and Resource
If you have only one computer, think of it as a resource for gathering information and don't plan to have each students create a multimedia presentation. If you have more than one computer try to match student tasks to the computer that they use. An older, low end computer may be fine for writing reports, leaving a more capable machine free for Internet access or multimedia projects.

Word processing can be done with AlphaSmarts, Dreamwriters, etc. Students can input text on these machines which can later be uploaded into a computer with a word processor to fine tune a report or presentation.

Alternate Access Times
Are there alternate times that students can get access to the computer? If you are in the classroom before or after school, during lunch, or when the room is not scheduled with students, there might be some students in the class who could make use of the computer at that time. You may find that given the chance, and the opportunity to use the computer, many of your students will use some of their free time to seek out information, write reports or prepare presentations.

While using alternate access times, be careful that the computer doesn't become a reward for fast students who finish other classroom work early. It isn't just the fastest and the brightest who need access to the computer.


 

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