{"id":1616,"date":"2002-01-01T01:00:00","date_gmt":"2002-01-01T01:00:00","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/localhost:8888\/cite\/2016\/02\/09\/article1-html-20\/"},"modified":"2018-09-30T20:52:19","modified_gmt":"2018-09-30T20:52:19","slug":"phases-of-collaborative-success-a-response-to-shoffner-dias-and-thomas","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/citejournal.org\/volume-2\/issue-1-02\/general\/phases-of-collaborative-success-a-response-to-shoffner-dias-and-thomas","title":{"rendered":"Commentary: Phases of Collaborative Success: A Response to Shoffner, Dias, and Thomas"},"content":{"rendered":"

Shoffner, Dias, and Thomas (2001) described a model for support of collaborative planning between the teacher education program and the instructional technology program at Georgia State University (GSU). Collaboration between instructional technology and teacher education programs can be a multiphased process. The successes cited by Shoffner, Dias, and Thomas are likely to benefit programs in a similar early phase of collaboration. In this article the author proposes that there are three phases of collaboration. These phases can be difficult to traverse, both because of differing accreditation standards and processes for teacher certification in other states, and because of differing cultures and circumstances within other teacher preparation programs.<\/p>\n

The Culture of Collaboration<\/p>\n

Although teacher educators usually have expertise in one particular content area, instructional technologists rarely do. Instructional technology professionals have a deep knowledge of one content area and are not typically well-versed in all areas. This makes collaboration between instructional technologists and teacher educators crucial. I, for example, am an instructional technologist with a background in mathematics, including experience as a high school mathematics teacher, but I am less knowledgeable about the humanities. This does not preclude me from collaborating with humanities educators, but it does require me to depend more upon their content expertise.<\/p>\n

The culture of methods instructors in teacher education programs also differs from the culture of instructional technologists. Methods instructors are likely to believe that technology integration is different in each content area. For example, the most common use of technology in middle and secondary mathematics classes, as well as in many science classes, is the graphing calculator. Dion, Harvey, Jackson, Klag, Lie, and Wright (2000) reported that graphing calculators are an integral part of 42% of algebra II classrooms and 70% of precalculus\/trigonometry classrooms. Today the graphing calculator is found in almost all high school algebra classes and above, and is even finding its way into middle school mathematics classrooms.<\/p>\n

However, the instructional technology community is often unaware of the pervasive use of the graphing calculator as an educational technology. For example, the extensive 1998 CRITO Teaching, Learning, and Computing survey (http:\/\/www.crito.uci.edu\/tlc\/html\/tlc_home.html<\/a>; Becker, 2000) did not consider graphing calculators as an educational technology. In the results of this survey, mathematics teachers were ranked near the bottom of secondary teachers (only one in nine teachers) in using computers frequently in the classroom, while secondary English teachers were ranked among the highest (nearly one in four teachers). The implication that English teachers use technology more than mathematics teachers is clearly affected by the failure to include the dominant educational technology employed in mathematics teaching. The reason that this technology has been incorporated into mathematics teaching is also notable. It is one of the few educational technologies designed from the ground up around a particular content area curriculum.<\/p>\n

The difference in cultures produces differing definitions of educational technology. On the face of it, a graphing calculator performs much the same function as a spreadsheet. However, a spreadsheet is a business technology adapted for mathematics teaching, while the graphing calculator was explicitly designed for the mathematics curriculum. Consequently, mathematics teachers prefer the graphing calculator to generic spreadsheets. Access is another important issue. The amount of time per week the average student has access to a school computer can be measured in minutes, but because each student has a graphing calculator, mathematics teachers can employ it in almost every class.<\/p>\n

However, the majority of instructional technology programs supporting teacher education programs prepare teachers to use spreadsheets rather than graphing calculators. Mathematics teachers need exposure to graphing
\ncalculators rather than spreadsheets, while future English teachers benefit little from lessons on either spreadsheets or graphing calculators. Therefore, the generic technology courses frequently offered miss the mark on both counts. That is not to say an initial orientation to generic technologies is not worthwhile\u0097just that all too often this is an ending point rather than a beginning point.<\/p>\n

How likely are middle and secondary English teachers to use spreadsheets in their instruction? Why are secondary mathematics teachers often required to learn how to use Hyperstudio\u0099? Examples of technology misfits from other content areas abound as well, indicating that many teacher education programs, and the instructional technology departments supporting these programs, provide educational technology courses that are too narrow in their definition of educational technology (e.g., computers only), and too broad in preparing preservice teachers to use this technology in their teaching.<\/p>\n

At San Diego State University (SDSU; http:\/\/edweb.sdsu.edu\/<\/a>) each year approximately 900 students enroll in 30 sections of EDTEC 470 Technology for Teachers (http:\/\/edweb.sdsu.edu\/Courses\/EDTEC470\/<\/a>). This presents a challenge both in terms of consistency across sections and individualizing specific sections to address particular content needs. Beginning in Fall 2002, several content-specific sections will be offered, including ones for math\/science education, secondary humanities education, and elementary education.<\/p>\n

Effective collaboration between instructional technology departments and teacher education programs can allow preservice teachers to experience technology that is less generic and more content specific. This approach works well, especially when content area methods faculty have contributed to the design of content-specific educational technology courses (Francis-Pelton, Farragher, & Riecken, 2000). Due to the ever-changing landscape of technologies, instructional technology faculty will continue to be needed, for they offer expertise on continually emerging technologies that are transforming both universities and K-12 schools. By establishing partnerships in the development and teaching of these courses, co-ownership can develop.<\/p>\n

Shoffner, Dias, and Thomas proposed that instructional technology faculty should assume the responsibility of being “advocates for technology” (Duffield, 1997). Instead, instructional technology faculty should help teaching methods faculty consider how technology can enable them and their students to “extend learning beyond what could be done without technology”
\n(Mason, Berson, Diem, Hicks, Lee, & Dralle, 2000). The key difference is that technology should be in the background rather than the foreground. Moreover, individual content area standards should be the driving force rather than technology standards.<\/p>\n

Phases of Collaboration<\/p>\n

Both the National Council for the Accreditation of Teacher Education (NCATE, 1997) and the International Society for Technology in Education (ISTE, 1999) reported that schools of education are not adequately preparing their preservice teacher education students to effectively integrate technology in their future classrooms. The editors of Electronic Learning magazine stated similarly, “Technology does not permeate a student’s typical preservice education experience, and that is a major impediment to technology use once they become teachers” (Schools of education: Four exemplary programs, 1991, p. 21).<\/p>\n

The following are recommendations to address these concerns of preparing preservice teachers to integrate technology into their teaching:<\/p>\n