Transcending the status quo – how do we get there?
Editor’s Note: This is part four of a five-part series.
Life is a complicated affair. So many complex phenomena interact with our planning for a better future that we sometimes have to stop and ask ourselves, “What is the context in which we are currently swimming?” Framing complex phenomena into sensible and understandable contexts help us to make meaning from the complex interactions we’re experiencing. In short, frameworks help us make sense of the medium we’re swimming in.
Teaching and learning are even more complicated affairs because of the profound challenges associated with the nature of knowledge and understanding. Add technology tools to the mix, and several factors increase the complexity of teaching and learning. So do frameworks help us contextualize these complexities so that our students gain the most benefit from technology use in education? It depends upon the framework you’re using.
Existing Frameworks
Two dominant frameworks are used to guide technology integration in educational settings: TPACK, and SAMR. TPACK (which stands for Technological, Pedagogical, and Content Knowledge) was developed in the late 1990s and helped to bring the importance of teachers’ technological knowledge as equal to pedagogical and content knowledge. The trouble is, TPACK doesn’t explicitly show us how to achieve that technological knowledge, so there’s a goal but no pathway forward.
Like TPACK, the SAMR model offers goals but no route toward attaining its goals. SAMR (Substitution, Augmentation, Modification, and Redefinition) identifies four interactions between tools and tasks, which is fine. Still, educators have spent an inordinate amount of time trying unsuccessfully to come up with a common definition of “augmentation,” “modification,” and “redefinition” in the context of teaching and learning. If you can’t define it, you can’t measure it; if you can’t, you can’t measure it. Frustratingly, these models have not helped develop the collective efficacy needed to move whole learning systems forward.
What’s been missing in the surfeit of inspirational messaging imploring educators to embrace innovation is an answer to an essential question: ‘How do we get there?’
The T3 Framework
The first step towards building the collective efficacy of any organization is to embrace a common language for innovation and growth. My newest book, Disruptive Classroom Technologies: A Framework for Innovation in Education, aims to provide learning systems with a common and actionable language for implementing and measuring the impact of innovative teaching and learning practices with readily available technologies.
In the book, I introduce my new T3 Framework for innovation in education. The T3 Framework provides a much-needed pathway grounded in sound research and theory and promotes educational uses of technology that unleash students’ limitless learning potential. The T3 Framework increments the use of technology in the realm of teaching and learning into three hierarchical domains: Translational, Transformational, and Transcendent. A brief overview of each domain is warranted.
Translational technology reflects the most common ways digital tools are used in schools. Translating tasks from an analog to a digital form adds some value in increasing efficiency, accuracy, and time savings. These translated tasks include automating administrative and teaching duties such as communicating, budgeting, grading, attendance taking, and testing, as well as consuming digital content from online sources or other electronic media. This is a necessary first stage, but school systems often make the mistake of stopping there.
Transformational technology uses, on the other hand, enact significant changes in the learning tasks and substantive changes in the students performing those tasks. This domain includes strategies for students to embrace a “mastery mindset” through developing mastery goals and then mindfully monitoring the impact of their effort and progress towards those goals. Moreover, providing students multiple opportunities to use digital tools to represent what they know and can do and make their thinking explicit so they can contribute to others’ learning is illustrative of transformational technology uses.
The teaching and learning strategies articulated in the Transformational and Transcendent domains in the T3 Framework are correlated with an effect size of d = 1.6, which is the equivalent of a 16 on a scale of 1 to 10 (Haystead & Marzano, 2009; 2010, Magana & Marzano, 2014). You may recall that the average effect of computers and technology in education for the past 50 years rates a 3 on that scale; read more here.
We can’t continue relying on popular opinion to identify ways that technology accelerates student achievement. We’ve tried that for decades, and what we have to show for it is digitally rich but innovatively poor classrooms.
I’ll explore this idea further in the final installment of this article series by providing a brief overview on implementing and evaluating the impact of technology on student achievement using the T3 Framework.
- Campus Technology – 35 Percent of Faculty Feel They Need More IT Support
- U.S. News & World Report – Schools Shouldn’t Approach Technology Like Businesses Once Did
- eSchool News – The best BYOD tech tools for the Common Core classroom