Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Kids are not on grade level anymore so Ed tech is the solution. Kids can do the exact work on their grade level. If not the teacher would be making 10 different worksheet packets, and then parents would be complaining about that. I do agree that worksheets and paper and pencil are way bette.
Kids aren’t on grade level anymore because teachers aren’t teaching. They are nearly EdTech supervisors now. There is no direct instruction, no books, no writing
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Kids are not on grade level anymore so Ed tech is the solution. Kids can do the exact work on their grade level. If not the teacher would be making 10 different worksheet packets, and then parents would be complaining about that. I do agree that worksheets and paper and pencil are way bette.
Kids aren’t on grade level anymore because teachers aren’t teaching. They are nearly EdTech supervisors now. There is no direct instruction, no books, no writing
Anonymous wrote:Kids are not on grade level anymore so Ed tech is the solution. Kids can do the exact work on their grade level. If not the teacher would be making 10 different worksheet packets, and then parents would be complaining about that. I do agree that worksheets and paper and pencil are way bette.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Kids are not on grade level anymore so Ed tech is the solution. Kids can do the exact work on their grade level. If not the teacher would be making 10 different worksheet packets, and then parents would be complaining about that. I do agree that worksheets and paper and pencil are way bette.
GMAFB. Edtech isn't helping. Look at the outcomes. More and more kids are graduating without basic literacy or math skills.
This is an addiction. Everyone is addicted - kids, parents, and yes, school systems.
I hope every single person who is profiting from the enshittification of education rots in hell.
Anonymous wrote:Kids are not on grade level anymore so Ed tech is the solution. Kids can do the exact work on their grade level. If not the teacher would be making 10 different worksheet packets, and then parents would be complaining about that. I do agree that worksheets and paper and pencil are way bette.
Anonymous wrote:I have been increasingly frustrated by the use of Chromebooks in my dc's elementary school and have gone to the principal, vice principal, and the district but the responses are always frustrating. I think the amount of money they've poured into EdTech has them less willing to talk but when I look at the budget, the spend buckets are so high level. Has anyone successfully come at this from a money angle? Was your district transparent in what they are spending? I am following up with a request for information from the district on what comprises those numbers and spend by vendor but I wanted to get some ideas here before I construct the email.
Anonymous wrote:Decisions like this are usually made at the school district level, so complaining to your principal will have little effect-- it's out of their hands.
Do teachers find them more useful? If so, good luck going against the wishes of the teacher's union. Time to move to private if you feel so strongly about it.