Teachers at my kid's school. I'm not going to post their names here. They aren't against Lexia, but they also don't think 1:1 devices are needed. They'd be happy to share, especially if that left budget for other things. |
Citation: Because I say so. Umkay. |
Well, just because you're not interested in hearing it or think tech use is an issue doesn't mean everyone else other than APE also thinks that or doesn't think the conversation is worth continuing. You're not interested, don't participate. |
+1 |
Agreed. |
DP. The issue is that this discussion is worthless and actually detracts from real issues and solutions. |
No different than your citation to the teacher who likes Lexia. Umkay back at you. It would be very uncool to post teacher names. |
My kid’s reading tutor said Lexia is a great supplement. And I’ve seen it cover topics that my kid didn’t really have down. |
The whole educational world is talking about screen addiction and the appropriate use of screens in education. The whole conversation is actually extremely on point. There was a great NYT article--I'll have to see if I can find it again. |
Post her name or it doesn't count.
Just making a point. Everyone is anonymous and no one can provide cites. |
Op of kid who showed us her art project: It might be ridiculous to you, but I appreciate that my kid learned an actual skill that can be useful later in life and actually enjoyed doing it. That project was beautiful and creative. Not everyone, including teachers are against 1:1 in K-2. Stop framing it that way. |
Here's the article: https://www.nytimes.com/2024/04/24/opinion/ed-tech-classroom.html?campaign_id=39&emc=edit_ty_20240425&instance_id=121493&nl=opinion-today®i_id=160586321&segment_id=164759&te=1&user_id=0fbc4abbdd9792fb09a66d0a531bdf88 |
Here's another: https://www.nytimes.com/2024/03/27/opinion/schools-technology.html |
Even if you think a digital art project is developmentally appropriate for K-2, that's not a reason to pay for 1:1 devices. That project could get moved to later grades or the art teacher could use a class set. It's just a red herring in an actual conversation. |
| Use of educational apps is just another trendy educational folly. Sure, teachers like the apps, just like they loved the Lucy Caulkins curriculum. |