{"id":22094,"date":"2019-01-28T09:43:42","date_gmt":"2019-01-28T14:43:42","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/carleton.ca\/edc\/?p=22094"},"modified":"2022-01-13T14:53:31","modified_gmt":"2022-01-13T19:53:31","slug":"tools-of-the-trade-technology-and-the-classroom","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/carleton.ca\/tls\/2019\/tools-of-the-trade-technology-and-the-classroom\/","title":{"rendered":"Tools of the trade: Technology and the classroom"},"content":{"rendered":"
By Matthew Curtis, Fourth-Year Journalism, 杏吧原创 University<\/em><\/p>\n Digital tools can make you laugh, cry, wonder at the marvels of human ingenuity, and want to control alt delete their existence, but love them or hate them they\u2019re in the classroom and, in most cases, here to stay. The following 杏吧原创 instructors recently facilitated a Welcome to My Classroom session<\/a><\/u> on social media in the classroom, and we followed up with them to discuss how technology affects their teaching in the digital age.<\/p>\n [These interviews have been lightly edited and condensed for clarity]<\/em><\/p>\n Kim Hellemans – Department of Neuroscience<\/strong><\/p>\n How has the digital world impacted your teaching?<\/strong><\/p>\n Hellemans:<\/strong> The most obvious one is having a tablet or an iPad in the classroom allowing real time connectivity with information, [having] the ability to bring videos, multimedia into the classroom. Now when I teach anatomy I have [the] capability of having a digital image of the human brain that I can manipulate to teach students the different structures of the brain. That’s pretty incredible.<\/p>\n What\u2019s your policy on student electronics in the class?<\/strong><\/p>\n Hellemans:<\/strong> My policy is I don\u2019t permit cellphone usage in the classroom. My students can use their laptops, but I say to them please make sure that it\u2019s on the course materials [and] that you\u2019re not surfing the web. It\u2019s distracting to the students around you.<\/p>\n Let\u2019s say there\u2019s an overuse of cell phones, how do you stop it?<\/strong><\/p>\n Hellemans:<\/strong> So my strategy is I see someone on their phone, I walk over to them and I talk. They’re like *bwah* suddenly aware of my presence. I don’t believe in public shaming, I don\u2019t believe in going \u201cYou!\u201d *points*. There are some profs that are ok with that, they\u2019ll say \u201cYou can leave my classroom now.\u201d That’s just not my MO.<\/p>\n What’s the funniest thing that’s happened because of digital change?<\/strong><\/p>\n Hellemans:<\/strong> Oh my goodness. So I have this Poll Everywhere software. One of the features is you can change up the kind of question you ask. Typically I use a multiple-choice question, but you can have open-ended questions. So one of the questions was how do you cope with stress? So people are putting dancing or talking to a friend. And then suddenly it popped up: “Dr. Hellemans will you marry me?<\/em>”<\/p>\n And I was like uh oh, I was kind of taken aback. I said “I’m already married. Thanks though,” and then right away, “Just because there’s a goalie in the net doesn’t mean you can’t score<\/em>.” And I was like what does that mean? And then I was like oh my God! Shut \u2018er down, nope, NOPE. How do I get this thing off? *laughs*. And then that’s when I learned that if you have open-ended questions you have to have a conversation about what’s appropriate and what’s inappropriate.<\/p>\n
<\/a><\/p>\n