(Full disclosure, I have the meat claws....and yes, when I use them I feel like Wolverine.)
But let's put a pin in Alton Brown's (very accurate) opinion for a minute and look at one of Sir Ken Robinson's TED talks called, "Bring on the Learning Revolution!". I promise there is a connection, just bear with me.
In it, right around the seven minute mark, he begins a train of thought about our enthrallment with ideas that we take for granted. As an example he compares the amount of people over 25 who wear a watch to the amount under 25. Many people over 25 don't wear a watch because they have to, more so because they always have. They take it for granted that they need to wear a watch and while he didn't post this thought, I'd be willing to bet if you challenged them not to, they would be resistant. Those under 25 view a watch, rightfully so, as a single task device and shun it for other tools that can get the job done and more.
I think we have become so enthralled with the idea that edtech is all about the latest and greatest, that we feel like if we're not using the newest cutting edge tool, no matter how inefficient, then we are falling behind. We are taking for granted the rapid pace of educational technology and not stopping to think about what we're really doing. Are we pausing to ask ourselves whether that tool is really going to help our students or is worth the time investment to learn it? Usually not.
This is where Alton Brown's theories come in. He questions the need for those prolific single task kitchen devices and actively promotes casting them aside for more versatile and efficient tools. Educational technology faces the same problem. I could spend the rest of my career trying to learn every unitasker edtech tool out there and it's unlikely I would ever catch up as more come out every day.
And I know for a fact that I am not alone in feeling this way. I have had numerous teachers lament that there is so much out there, they get overwhelmed just thinking about where to start when it comes to integrating technology.
A part of me wonders if in our effort to showcase all these amazing tools and provide our students with 14 different ways to demonstrate their learning, we are actually shooting ourselves in the foot. By allowing ourselves to compete with the Jones and get distracted by whatever shiny tool comes along, are we sending a message to the edtech neophytes that there's no point in trying because they'll never get the hang of it? When we are frustrated by the teacher who won't even consider abandoning their textbooks, have we created that problem ourselves?
This is why I am so obsessive about the Google Suite as the core to any technology integration plan. The variety of tasks teachers and students can accomplish using just the 4 or 5 core Google apps is inconceivable. And once they learn the functionality of those tools (which let's face it, can happen in first grade at the latest), the instruction can focus on the task and the learning instead of trouble shooting a tool.
I think it's time for those of us in the edtech world to become a little more like Alton Brown. Let's start sending the message that it's not about the latest and greatest. It's not about that shiny single task tool. Leverage the tools we already know to take student learning to a deeper level.
We need to cast aside those strawberry slicers. Throw away our zoodle makers. (Though you can pry my meat claws out of my cold dead Wolverine hands.) Let's just invest in a really great set of knives and cookware and learn how to use those effectively. Let our creativity shine! Because let's face it, can you really call yourself a chef if you need a Rollie to cook your eggs?
I think we have become so enthralled with the idea that edtech is all about the latest and greatest, that we feel like if we're not using the newest cutting edge tool, no matter how inefficient, then we are falling behind. We are taking for granted the rapid pace of educational technology and not stopping to think about what we're really doing. Are we pausing to ask ourselves whether that tool is really going to help our students or is worth the time investment to learn it? Usually not.
This is where Alton Brown's theories come in. He questions the need for those prolific single task kitchen devices and actively promotes casting them aside for more versatile and efficient tools. Educational technology faces the same problem. I could spend the rest of my career trying to learn every unitasker edtech tool out there and it's unlikely I would ever catch up as more come out every day.
A part of me wonders if in our effort to showcase all these amazing tools and provide our students with 14 different ways to demonstrate their learning, we are actually shooting ourselves in the foot. By allowing ourselves to compete with the Jones and get distracted by whatever shiny tool comes along, are we sending a message to the edtech neophytes that there's no point in trying because they'll never get the hang of it? When we are frustrated by the teacher who won't even consider abandoning their textbooks, have we created that problem ourselves?
This is why I am so obsessive about the Google Suite as the core to any technology integration plan. The variety of tasks teachers and students can accomplish using just the 4 or 5 core Google apps is inconceivable. And once they learn the functionality of those tools (which let's face it, can happen in first grade at the latest), the instruction can focus on the task and the learning instead of trouble shooting a tool.
I think it's time for those of us in the edtech world to become a little more like Alton Brown. Let's start sending the message that it's not about the latest and greatest. It's not about that shiny single task tool. Leverage the tools we already know to take student learning to a deeper level.
We need to cast aside those strawberry slicers. Throw away our zoodle makers. (Though you can pry my meat claws out of my cold dead Wolverine hands.) Let's just invest in a really great set of knives and cookware and learn how to use those effectively. Let our creativity shine! Because let's face it, can you really call yourself a chef if you need a Rollie to cook your eggs?