Portable Magic

"Books make people quiet, yet they are so loud.” – Nnedi Okorafor

Category: Reflection Post

My GAI Worldview

Module 4.1

The methdology of Oddone et al. (2023) uses the CATWOE framework with particular emphasis on the concept of worldview. Oddone et al. explore the impact that worldview has on teacher librarians’ desire to engage with new technologies. Consider your own worldview and write a blog post reflecting on your perceptions of GAI and education. You may also like to conduct your own CATWOE analysis of your school to determine support for GAI within the school’s environment. Share your blog post via the Discussion Forum 4.1 activity.

Oddone and Gagen-Spriggs identify the two extremes of a teacher librarian’s response to generative AI (GAI): the one who sees the potential and embraces it, teaching students how to navigate it ethically and finding ways to incorporate it into teaching practices; and the one who avoids it and supports a ban (I’m paraphrasing and oversimplifying, of course!).

I fell naturally into the second camp – I say ‘naturally’ because it happened without any effort, it just aligned with my thinking on learning and the problematic nature of the world wide web etc. And my ongoing disappointment that no one teaches kids how to look up stuff in books anymore (it’s just so, so sad that that skill has vanished). I tend to see the problems, and I’m risk-averse by nature.

However, I’m also aware that technology isn’t going away, that I too use it and enjoy it (and I don’t like being a hypocrite), and that you can’t prevent students from using it – any of it. As with wanting to teach them how to research using books (not that I have an opportunity to do so), ETL523 has shown me that this is an important teaching area. So my worldview has shifted, cautiously so. It really does need to be taught, and teachers have a tendency to simply start using a technology (the internet/Google as a case in point) to replace an older technology (reference/non-fiction books) without actually teaching the ethics of it. And I think, in the context of my won school, that the TL is really the only person who is in the position to do anything about it. I can see the possibilities, and I might even be able to get the support of senior staff to offer sessions during Home Group. But I’m not sure there’s much enthusiasm for it, and I don’t know that I have the skills to make it fun/engaging/interesting.

But I do think an ethical approach to using GAI needs to be explicitly taught, so that our students have the skills to make better choices.

References

Oddone, K., Garrison, K., & Gagen-Spriggs, K. (2023) Navigating Generative AI: The teacher librarian’s role in cultivating ethical and critical practices. Journal of the Australian Library and Information Associationhttps://doi-org/10.1080/24750158.2023.2289093

Education 4.0?

Informal thoughts on Tomasz Huk’s article.

It is a good time to reflect on the rapid changes in technology and its impact on education. I consider myself to be Gen Y (scraping through by old parameters) which is now called ‘Millenial’ and the goal posts have changed, pushing me back into Gen X, which I don’t identify with (but I don’t identify with Millenial either – sounds too young for my 44-year-old bones!). As someone who was a child in the 80s, a tween-and-teenager in the 90s, and a uni student at the turn of the century, I’ve experienced education pre-technology and post-. I grew up with it slowly inching its way further into the classroom by small degrees, and it was always just an appliance. A computer was like a microwave – not in functionality, but in how people interacted with it: it was designed for a purpose, you used it for that purpose, and otherwise you left it alone. It didn’t do much else.

And then I was in a weird tech cocoon for three years, living in Japan where I had a ‘fancy’ flip phone – in colour! – but used technology only to email home occasionally. I was still watching films on VHS. I felt sheltered, isolated, from changes and advancements in digital technology, and I still feel those gaps today. Like waking from a coma to find several years had gone by and things don’t quite make sense.

But working as a teacher now, it’s clear just how much has changed. Technology is still a tool, but it’s used in a different way – and for many of our students, they are incapable of ‘leaving it alone’. Integrating digital technology into the classroom means you can do all sorts of fun little things, or get them to work in more interactive ways, but it can’t replace the core essence of what teachers do. In that sense, it’s still just a tool. What’s really good about it is as an aide for students (and staff) who have things like dyslexia, ADHD, dysphraxia etc.

There is a persistent idea, which is present in the article, that teachers merely ‘facilitate’ learning, and ‘monitor’ it, but don’t actually teach (or rather, that this is an ideal model). It makes me laugh. Such ideas are always presented by people who don’t actually teach. Huk talks about an interview with a principal during COVID about the benefits of online learning – having experienced it myself, I and my colleagues know it isn’t as effective. Our students struggled, with motivation but also in understanding. As a teacher, my job is to translate content, break it down, explain it, present it, discuss it etc. This theory reminds me of SOLE, and of Gonski 2.0 – the idea that anyone can teach themselves anything. There are very few people who can do that, and usually only in one or two select areas (with a great deal of persistence!). But what they can’t really teach themselves is critical thinking, and so we now have the reality of millions of people ‘teaching themselves’ (“doing their own research” without the skills) about things and creating a whole whack of misinformation online.

It’s okay to see teachers as ‘gatekeepers’ of knowledge. Things have changed, and teachers aren’t autocratic dictators prepping students to work in the factory – which brings me to Industry/Education 4.0. Australia’s universities have already shifted from education to training, prioritising courses that skill students for a specific job, and not ones that teach them to think or encourage ideas. This is of great concern, and also marks a shift away from ‘experts’ in their field (e.g. scientists, medical researchers and academics) to individuals with an online platform and a camera.

The Internet of Things (IoT) is a frightening, invasive and unethical dystopian vision!

“computer applications used at schools could allow for automatic substitution
for absent teachers and planning of education for each student.” (p. 44) Again, COVID taught us that you can’t replace real teachers.

 

References

Huk, T. (2021). From education 1.0 to education 4.0 – Challenges for the contemporary school. New Educational Review, 66(4), 36-46. https://doi.org/10.15804/tner.21.66.4.03

Powered by WordPress & Theme by Anders Norén

Step 1 of 2
Please sign in first
You are on your way to create a site.
Skip to toolbar