
We have been living in an era where technology is everywhere. I grew up in the era of when people were just starting to get internet into their homes and everyone had maybe one computer. I didn’t have a phone until I was in high school. I didn’t get my own laptop until college. I got my first email account with my college. I didn’t ever think about how big it would get or how lucky I am to live in this time.
With technology there are definite upsides, particularly in education. Now, we can communicate with our learners. They can participate in class because they can type their notes, or listen to the reading. They can create drawings, writings, programs, codes, all online now. Students with fine motor skills issues can participate because they don’t have to be behind writing everything down. Non-verbal students can try to ask questions or write their thoughts because they don’t have to actually speak. Students can share documents online. They can better organize their work into folders that they don’t necessarily have to worry about losing. With technology, all of my learners have opportunities. There are so many apps that students can download onto Google Chrome to help them read better or understand better. These children are growing up in the Digital Era and they don’t know anything else. They have the entire world, entire libraries, entire videos at their fingertips at all times, as long as they have the connection.
Technology is important to my classroom. It encourages students not only to be connected with one other, but it also encourages an autonomy within every one of my diverse learners. It’s their own little world that they’ve created and that they can use quickly. No matter how long a student may take at completing a task, almost every single one of them is faster on a computer. There’s a sense of accomplishment that students understand when they read an assignment and take the quiz online after. They can watch a video lecture instead of having to actually go anywhere. Students click away and can learn how to code a simple program just by trying it on a different website. The learners are able to file away and organize their documents only a tablet, a phone, or a computer, and be able to access it anyway. I don’t know any student, or any one person, for that matter, who doesn’t benefit from this.
The school district I work in recently went one-to-one. There have been its downsides, like broken Chromebooks, or a lack of control now that literally everyone has internet all the time. But there have been incredible upsides. I had a student with Larsen’s syndrome. He had very limited gross and fine motor skills. His speech was a little slurred, but you could understand him. But he was very insecure about all of his abilities. The student was insecure that he had an aide follow him around everywhere. He was upset that he couldn’t participate in Physical Education all the time or that he had to go to Occupational Therapy during recess. He was well-liked and truly one of the most wonderful students I’ve ever had. I think of him from time-to-time as the years go on. The point is, he seemed to hate writing. It was like pulling teeth to get him to write one sentence, let alone a 3-paragraph essay. He didn’t love school and he would get bouts of depression from time to time. But, he got his own chromebook. I remember when he received one, he would tell me that his mother could never afford one for him. He knew he had to give it back at the end of the year, but it was his for now. That autonomy and control alone made him feel better. I had him write a short story at the beginning of the year. Of course they could use their chromebooks. Within a 15-minute writing period, that student who hated writing and barely got out a sentence with a paper and pen, wrote an entire paragraph about how he was getting his final surgery on his legs and that he wouldn’t need a walker anymore. He just wanted someone to know and to tell someone about his feelings and his fears. For the first time, I got into that student’s brain and from then on, I never thought that a student couldn’t do something.

Carly was in a similar situation. Everyone thought she wouldn’t speak or that there was nothing in her brain; lost in her own world and perpetually swimming in water, as the short documentary tells us. Carly received so much therapy but her parents never gave up because they believed in her intelligence, though she may never speak. Giving her a computer gave the world access to Carly’s feelings to better help her. She didn’t like to type at first. But by getting her to type out her needs, she received power over her environment. Carly is astonishing and so fluent with great personality. But her parents could finally understand what she’s feeling and why. This is literacy. Even though Carly cannot communicate, she is literate. Technology could allow for her to better her writing skills and communicate with others in school and meet others. Cope and Kalantzis have written that literacy is a “new economy,” which means that it’s not just reading, writing, and arithmetic. It is so many other things that affect social and economic process. If Carly can express herself to the world in a way that can be understood, she is literate. Though she cannot literally say how literate she is, technology has proved that.
In another example from a TedTalk, Ron McCallum is blind. He has used different technologies to read. Ron had wanted to read when he was a child when he would reach up to touch the pages his mom read to him. Even though his mother told him he couldn’t because he was blind, Ron has used adaptive technologies to read. Braille and tape recorders weren’t enough for him. He got a computer that he could type into and it would read to him. This allowed for him to enter the computer world. Now as far as we’ve come in terms of technology, he wants everyone, with all disabilities to be able to read and have access to the world.
Technology is important because it gives access to the world. There are its consequences, but it is so important. I was reluctant because there were so many people and students who were and continue to be irresponsible with technology in so many different ways. All students deserve access to it, as long as they are responsible with its many, many capabilities. Watching students work together remotely on a Google Doc for a class is really encouraging to me as their teacher. I can edit their work or provide comments in real time without having to print out entire projects or essays is very useful. I’ve seen technological benefits and how it continues to change since I was young.
Here is a video that Ethan Dickens did about technology in the classroom and in life. He talks about how to use it towards its benefits but how to protect young people as well. Ethan also addresses how the older generation should cater to the younger generation and how they learn immersed in technology.
Here is also the link to my Assistive Technologies Graphic Organizer.
Here is also the link to my Assistive Technologies Graphic Organizer.
References:
Videos:
- https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xMBzJleeOno
- https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gya4V_grs_o
Text:
Images:
- https://www.techiexpert.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/10/How-Technology-Impacts-Work-Culture.png- http://essayhomeworkhelp.org/articles/wp-content/uploads/2016/02/Essay-sample-on-Assistive-Technology-1.jpg
- https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/thumb/3/31/Autism_Speaks_Logo.jpg/250px-Autism_Speaks_Logo.jpg
- https://s-media-cache-ak0.pinimg.com/originals/f4/76/6a/f4766adec754e309a8fa08930ff5b977.jpg
- http://www.quotehd.com/imagequotes/authors29/diana-oblinger-quote-there-are-a-lot-of-positive-uses-to-the.jpg




