Education
fromThe Atlantic
2 weeks agoThe Broken Promises of Ed Tech
Dylan Kane removed technology from his classroom, realizing it hindered both his and his students' learning.
"Beckham was being bossy and said that he's the leader of everyone even though he's not." "Samantha said, 'Scram!' to Maverick." "Evan has two erasers in his pencil pouch." Teacher Laurel Bates loves to hear every word her kids tell her ... as long as they do it via her tattlephone, of course. "They feel seen and I stay sane," Bates tells TODAY.com.
"It's just like a neverending game of musical chairs," Jensen says. Just when a teacher thinks they've perfected their seating chart, two neighboring students will have a fight, others won't stop talking or parents will email with their own seating preferences. "There's just so many things that you don't know on the surface that come to light really quickly once you put a kid next to another one," she says.