Mr. Hall believes this chapter is the most important part of
this book. I would say the chapter was
an interesting read. The section, I
believe, that stood out to me is the section describing the three dominant
teaching delivery practices. The
traditional teaching is where the teacher is solely in charge – totalitarianism. Certainly, this type of teaching has its
place – in history. I believe since this
was the way I was taught might be the reason I just passed my way through the
early years of my education. Looking at
my time at UTSA (not giving its full name to protect identity) it seems the
courses where creativity and critical thinking were present my grades soared. On the other hand, the courses where the
instructor was traditional I simply slide by to pass.
The next type is the innovative teaching style. The teacher is still mainly in charge but is
willing to engage in bringing new strategies and methodologies to the
students. This type is essentially a
dictatorship. Students are given little
opportunity to explore technology except through research and multimedia
presentations for the most part. It
would seem most teacher fall into this style of teaching.
“Train up a child in the way he should go:
and when he is old, he will not depart from it.” (Proverbs
22:6). Training does not mean control
the spirit. Should not the same apply to
learning in our classrooms?
Picciano’s chapter six to most might seem boring and it is. We must realize technology is a part of the
educational journey. Whether the
discussion is how or when to incorporate technology each teacher must explore
the possibilities to ensure each students has an opportunity to learn. Technology in reality makes the teacher’s job
easier. Technology opens up doors to the
future – so why would anyone want to withhold the future from the students?