

Education
Technology

Education technology consists of a wide range of hardware,
software, and technical equipment used in schools to promote learning.
Computers, CD-ROMs, the Internet, e-mail, television monitors, video equipment,
and satellite systems for distance learning are some of the education
technologies that schools are using.
Means, Blando, Olson, Middleton, Morocco,
Remz, and Zorfass (1993)
suggest grouping education technologies according to their instructional use:
"Although technology applications are frequently
characterized in terms of their most obvious hardware feature (e.g., a VCR or a
computer), from the standpoint of education, it is the nature of the
instruction delivered that is important rather than the equipment delivering
it." (p. 11)
They categorize education technology into four basic uses:
tutorial, exploratory, application, and communication:
- Tutorial:
"Tutorial uses are those in which the technology does the teaching,
typically in a lecture-like or workbook-like format in which the system
controls what material will be presented to the student" (p. 11).
Tutorial use includes expository learning, demonstration, and practice.
Examples are drill-and-practice software, tutoring systems, instructional
television, computer-assisted instruction, and intelligent
computer-assisted instruction.
- Exploratory: "Exploratory
uses of technology are those in which the student is free to roam around
the information displayed or presented in the medium. Exploration
applications may promote discovery or guided discovery approaches to
helping students learn information, knowledge, facts, concepts, or
procedures" (p. 11). Examples are CD-ROM encyclopedias, microworlds, hypermedia stacks, network search tools,
and microcomputer-based laboratories.
- Application: Application
uses "help students in the educational process by providing them with
tools to facilitate writing tasks, analysis of data, and other uses"
(p. 11). Examples are word processing and spreadsheet software, database
management programs, graphic software, desktop publishing systems,
hypermedia, network search tools, and videotape recording and editing
equipment.
- Communication:
"Communication uses are those that allow students and teachers to
send and receive messages and information to one another through networks
or other technologies" (p. 11). Examples are interactive distance
learning through satellite systems, computer and modem, cable links, and
e-mail.
For further information, refer to Educational
Technologies in Using Technology to Support Education Reform (Means,
Blando, Olson, Middleton, Morocco, Remz, & Zorfass, 1993)
References
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