Computer Access for Middle Schoolers
Middle School Science, Web 2.0, internet access April 25th, 2007I am a Fifth year teacher beginning seventh grade science for the first time next year in a new city with a new demographic. Up until now I have been working in at Chemawa Indian School teaching a range of high school science subjects to students ranging in age from 14 to 20. Chemawa is a unique school with its own special politics and considerations. For one thing teachers here get paid more than they do in the surrounding school districts, but there is almost no process for review of teacher work or mechanism for encouraging teacher improvement. What little incentive there is has been historically mis-used. The school is also not (or has not been until recently) regulated by state NCLB standards. All of this leads to a lot of teacher apathy and a lack of significant improvement. The students board at the school which should result in more time for education but does not seem to.
This summer I will be moving to Phoenix Arizona and have tentatively signed with Alhambra Elementary School District at Montebello School. This as far as I can tell is an inner city urban K8 school with and 80% Hispanic population. Gangs and drug dealing are an issue here. Students predominantly live in homes that do not have computer Internet access for middle school aged students. I am currently brainstorming ways to bring them into the global web 2.0 conversation. Here are some of the ideas that I have so far:
- Opening up my classroom after school for computer use (contingent on permission from my administrator and equipment access).
- Using a SMART board (I have been assured that I will have one), microphone and web-cam to make podcasts/youtube videos of classroom discussions and projects and posting them on the web.
- Organizing and educating students to use computers at the local library.
So far I’m thinking that I will be using all of these possible solutions and a few more I haven’t thought of yet. Any suggestions about what you have done to alleviate this problem or comments would be appreciated. ![]()
May 4th, 2007 at 8:03 pm
You have some good ideas to get started. here is my experience just in case it is of help. With your administrators permission try to include the parents in your computer education. I work in a school with 63%at or below the poverty level but most of them have some kind of internet access. We have worked to educate the parents on its importance and we also work with Open source software to overcome cost factors. We also have found some older computers we could donate to families who might otherwise not have them.
May 7th, 2007 at 12:35 pm
Barbara,
Thanks for the ideas. I will definitely look into how much access my students may have from home. My new administrator was vague about that when asked but that may just mean he hasn’t asked or underestimates the level of access his students may actually have