According to Wiktionary, the word moratorium (in its second published definition) means:
A suspension of an ongoing activity.
We have been purchasing paper-based textbooks in the United States for well over 100 years, as best I can ascertain. From McGuffy Readers published in the late 1800s to today's colorful textbooks costing (in some cases) as much as $100 each, schools and school administrators have extensive experiences purchasing and managing the use of textbooks in our Schools.
Rather than continue to perpetuate this age-old pattern of purchasing behavior in our schools, it's time to declare a moratorium on textbook purchases.
The day of the paper-based textbook is over. The era of digital curriculum has dawned, and it is fiscally irresponsible for school district leaders to continue to purchase paper-based curriculum materials in light of the digital curriculum resources now available and continuing to become available via electronic means. Digital, web-based curriculum materials are vastly superior to static, analog/paper based curriculum materials for many reasons. Among these are digital curriculum's:
- potential to be more up to date and current
- potential to meet varied learning styles and needs (based on preferences, abilities and disabilities)
- capacity for interactivity, promoting engaged learning
- potential to support differentiation and self-directed learning
- capacity to support multiple assessment methods, including ongoing assessment
The future of learning in what we continue to term "Schools" today is 1:1 learning. I am happy to be quoted saying that, you can write down this date.... Come back to me in ten or twenty years and let's compare notes and see what happens/has happened in our "Schools." To maintain the past course of purchasing static, paper-based curriculum materials for students and teachers in our schools is to deny learners the digitally-based learning experiences they need and require for lifelong success in the 21st century information landscape, economy and society.
Why has the OLPC project not seized the imaginations and transformed the budgets of school districts across the United States? I do not have a complete answer, but I strongly suspect a big part of the reason is a LACK of understanding, a LACK of vision, and a LACK of guts on the part of many school leaders to chart an innovative course of educational change for all the students and educational stakeholders in their communities.
Most likely, as a reader of this blog, you were educated like me in the twentieth century. The foundation of the information and knowledge to which we had access in the last century in our schools was the textbook, along with the knowledge and ideas of our teachers. Today in the twenty-first century, digitally empowered learners (not crippled by the digital divide) have amazing access to a world of content which continues to grow by leaps and bounds every day. In addition to ACCESSING that world of content, these digitally empowered learners also have the capacity to CREATE and AUTHOR content as they contribute to the global database of ideas and media.
Please note I am NOT advocating an end to the purchase of tradebooks and other library books. In fact, I endorse the conclusions of Dr. Stephen Krashen in his wonderful book "The Power of Reading: Insights from the Research" -- we need to give students in our schools MORE access to MORE diverse texts, to encourage as much READING as we can. When students are working online, however, they also end up READING and WRITING a great deal more than they tend to do in "traditional school." That is the focus of my dissertation, which I'm hoping to finish this academic year. We DO need robust, wonderful libraries in our communities and in our schools, but we do NOT need to purchase any more textbooks. Instead, we need to provide laptops for all the learners in our schools along with digital curriculum materials they can access at school, from home, or anywhere else they can get online. Free digital curriculum materials are now available which would boggle the mind of anyone living in the 19th or 18th centuries. Those free curriculum sources are not sufficient for learning, however. In my view, there are still valid needs for commercial curriculum tools, but the proliferation of free curriculum materials will continue to challenge commercial providers to further differentiate their "value add" in the marketplace of content and digital assessment tools available online.
One to one learning will not solve all the challenges which face us in education, or which face us more generally in our societies. One to one learning initiatives WILL, however, provide students with the digital learning tools they need to obtain and secure for themselves a relevant education in the twenty-first century. The E-Rate program in the United States has wired 99% of our our schools and libraries, and that is a great step forward. Most of the teachers I work with in Oklahoma schools have a computer on their desk in their classroom. That is a good step forward. But it is not enough.
Education cannot and will not change in the basic, fundamental ways we need and should want it to change in the twenty-first century as long as textbooks, paper, and pencils continue to be the predominant technologies for student expression and individualized access to content. Teachers can write an assignment on a chalkboard, write it on an overhead projector, or flash it up on a sexy electronic whiteboard, but unless EACH LEARNER in each classroom is empowered with their OWN digital device to not only CONSUME but also CREATE and SHARE their ideas with the world over the web, the predominant learning tasks in our classrooms are unlikely to change much.
We need a moratorium on textbook purchasing in this nation, and we need to utilize those funds instead to purchase laptop computers and digital curriculum materials for students and teachers.
We also need to change our bell schedules, stop paying for student seat time, and make some other fundamental changes in our educational system... but for now, I'll just focus on textbook purchases. One thing at a time. If you are in or connected to the textbook publishing industry or the educational testing industry today, it's unlikely your industry has ever had it so good. OF COURSE you want NCLB to be renewed, because reauthorization of that destructive legislation would continue to perpetuate the educational purchasing patterns of the past which continue to enrich your industry while they cripple a generation of students in our public schools.
It's time to stop buying textbooks in our schools, and instead pursue a more informed and fiscally responsible agenda to provide digital curriculum materials and tools for all the learners. When we do that, we'll be empowering a new generation of leaders to invent the future.
Your tale offers hope, Mrs. V! I'm glad your district administrators are recognizing the potential value of instructional materials OTHER than textbooks! Let's hope parents will see this benefit as well and be supportive.
ReplyDeleteWes,
ReplyDeleteAmen!
As an assistive technology specialist, I see the unintended consequences of textbook use. Textbooks are static, inflexible tools that create obstacles to learning for students with physical and learning disabilities or student with vision impairments.
When we use digital content, we can manipulate the text as needed - attach a voice to it, enlarge the print, color code it, etc. This is part of universal design for learning and allows for differentiation in ways that textbooks do not.
And where is the research that proves the superiority of textbook use over other instructional methods? Does any exist? I think not!
I think textbooks DO have a place as one element in a well developed curriculum. It is inexcusable to use a text AS the curriculum, though. In a given year, I use the textbooks in my classroom a dozen times or less. The other important consideration is the quality of the text. Anyone who teaches Social Studies should read "Lies My Teacher Told Me" by James W. Loewen before using classroom texts.
ReplyDeleteI met a very scary person at a conference a year or so ago. She is charge of making spot inspections on teachers throughout her district to make sure that all teachers are on the same page of the textbook on the same day to "ensure a consistant education to all the students". I still shudder.
Wes,
ReplyDeletewith the rapid growth of open source materials out there, I truly believe that your proposal is how the world should gradually be moving!
I am a Spanish teacher in England, who is genuinely commited to not using textbooks. The look on a pupil's face when you say to them to open to a certain page destroys any hope of either longterm learning or, that mecca of our current educational systems (especially for languages!) MOTIVATION!!
Keep up the good work, and fingers crossed that the conversion rates for currently scared teachers gets even better!
Chris
Our state already adopts digital curriculum, software, and textbooks on-line. The State Textbook Committee Instructional Materials Committee reviews the content, and is more than willing to approve digital curriculum. However, by the time we purchase enough laptops or desktops for each student to use, the technology is already outdated. Our schools, and our teachers are just not ready yet. Until every child has access to a computer, both at home and at school, it is impossible to create a completely digital learning environment.
ReplyDeleteI've taught math for 9 years in the inner city (7 in Los Angeles, CA, and now 2 in Des Moines, IA) In L A I had a text, Des Moines I don't. A text book actually gave me the freedom to utilize other modes of dispersing the curriculum. It was the back bone or platform I could jump off of to be creative. It enabled structure for kids that didn't have a whole lot of continuity in there life. If we truly are trying to meet the need of all students we shouldn't rule out any tool, especially a tool like a text book.
ReplyDeleteI have been a teacher for 17 years and a librarian for 5 of those years. I have never relied on textbooks, just because when textbooks were available to me they were so dated that they were obsolete. I have always believed that given a well written curriculum a teacher should be able to teach a subject without relying on a textbook. I could never understand it when a teacher would fuss about not having a copy of a test/answer key/worksheet, etc. to go along with a certain chapter in the text. So I can see you point here… to an extent.
ReplyDeleteMy only concern with going with a digital curriculum is the fact that, based on my experience, my middle school students actually read less when using digital resources. They skim materials and scroll a lot and click a lot, but I don’t see them actually reading what is presented. I can recall many times when I would make my students read out loud from the computer screen so that they could comprehend what was written. The other behavior they exhibit is printing what they find so that they can read it in paper form. I believe that reading digital text is a skill set that is not being taught to our students. (I have a very low tolerance for reading digital text myself. I can read the first few paragraphs, and then get very distracted. Oddly the resources I have found online about reading digital text have been huge pdf files which I don’t have the patience to read.)
So while I agree that there are tons of fantastic resources available digitally we need to do a couple of things before a change like this can be effective. First, schools need to make sure that they have a well written curriculum (which, believe me, is not the case everywhere.) Second we need to teach teachers develop lessons without the reliance on textbooks (which also, sadly, is not the case everywhere.) Third we need to teach students strategies for reading and comprehending digital text.
On a side note…I was glad that you said, “I am NOT advocating an end to the purchase of tradebooks and other library books,” and of course very pleased with, “We DO need robust, wonderful libraries in our communities and in our schools.”
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