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Adam Krause's avatar

In terms of "efficiency," of course I know you meant it in terms of learning speed, but of your two final scenarios there is certainly an efficiency gap in that that the tech learning environment involves all the literal $ costs of the traditional school plus all the costs of the tech equipment and software. In the US we have school systems paying literally tens of thousands of dollars per student for Ed tech software every year - literally $200,000+ for a class of 20. Somehow I doubt the results are better than what could be achieved by simply hiring 2x more teachers.

Jan's avatar

Thanks for a great article. I can remember being alerted to the research which showed more variation between classes in a single school than between schools. As a local authority adviser I definitely saw that and often. Similarly I saw great practice in a school that was en route to failing its next Ofsted and overall good practice in schools where the headteacher was a poor leader and often not much cop as a teacher either. I was just starting out as a primary teacher in the early 1980s when IT was appearing in schools. We had one BBC Micro in the school. It ran on tapes and took about an hour to warm up! But IT advisers were also becoming a thing and the mantra was don't let the IT lead your teaching or dictate how you teach. There were a flurry of computer aided learning programmes (CAL) around then and they really only offered a novelty version of what was more efficiently done on paper. Especially if you only had one PC per school. I'm not sure about online professional development for teachers. My experience as a teacher, head and adviser running courses for teachers getting out of the classroom and talking with other professionals is hugely beneficial. I've had the opportunity to learn from some amazing top flight educators particularly at conferences and I don't think the impact would have been comparable on screen. Maybe that's why many of the current crop of undergraduates feel disillusioned about their HEI experience. My degree was taught mostly through tutorials and seminars. If I'd had to learn mostly through mass lectures and/ or online I don't think I'd look back with the same fondness as I do now.

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