Many (most?) states now administer yearly assessments online. If students haven't used online testing tools before, this can be a daunting task. Having computer devices as optional education tools is a massive difference from requiring students to use them for graded assessments. This can be intimidating for both students
and teachers.
The good news: It doesn't take as much time and practice as you might think to prepare. What it does require is a techie mindset, the acceptance that technology is part of the daily landscape, that it be integrated into assignments, practice, modeling, homework, assessments, projects, portfolios, grading rubrics, expectations.
There are ways to get students in shape that won't take much out of your already-packed day.
“The
future of education will be shaped by technology and educators who use technology effectively will stand out from the crowd.” – Dr. Anil Singhal
Here are strategies that will make your teaching life easier, bump up your effectiveness with students, save time complying with state standards, and prepare students effectively. As you're in grade-level teams, planning lessons for next year, include these. They will add spice to classes, build flexible learning
paths, and contribute to sustainable, transformative learning. Once you start using tech in the classroom as a tool (not a separate activity), you will find students self-selecting it when given a choice, coming up with their own ways to make tech today's adaptive answer:
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