Translational Technology Use & Student Achievement
Editor’s Note: This is Part Three of a Three-Part Series (Read Part 1 | Part 2 | Part 3)
by Dr. Sonny Magana
It’s important to refrain from assigning any sort of implicit blame for the current state of technology in our schools. Attributing blame, in this context, serves no productive purpose and may only serve to diminish the best intentions of pioneering educators and leaders. It is much more effective to first accept the fact that technology tools have generally not lived up to the promise of automatically transforming teaching and learning.
Next, we need to collectively wrap our heads around the indisputable fact that educational technology tools have no inherent transformative value in and of themselves. Just because a digital tool may be “cool,” doesn’t mean that it will automatically have a desirable impact on student achievement. Digital tools are inert. They offer no value by themselves, which is why we should take a “value-neutral” perspective regarding educational technology tools. Only then can we more fully appreciate the nuanced direction provided by new, compounding research evidence, which strongly suggests that the value of educational technology tools is made manifest not because they are used, but rather in the way they are used and by whom (Haystead & Marzano 2009; 2010; Haystead & Magana, 2013; Magana, 2016; 2017; Magana & Marzano, 2014; 2015).
Arguably, identifying and codifying a compendium of high-impact strategies with technologies could be considered a wicked problem because it is quite complicated, multi-faceted, intractable, and as of yet, unresolved (Rittel & Webber, 1973). It is also a wicked problem that has mattered to me for over 35 years. In my recent book, Disruptive Classroom Technologies, I introduce the T3 Framework for Innovation in Education. The T3 Framework categorizes technology’s impact on learning into three domains: Translational, Transformational, and Transcendent. The T3 Framework is an actionable model for learning organizations to shift from low-impact technology use toward systemic technology uses that have an observed effect size of 1.6—or the equivalent of four or more additional years of learning in a single year (Magana, 2017; Magana & Marzano, 2014).
Translational technology use, in the context of teaching and learning, can be explained as digitizing the prevalent “tell and practice” model of instruction. In this model, teachers tell students what knowledge is important to acquire, and then students dutifully practice, rehearse, and memorize the information that they are told. Digitizing this model may increase instructional task efficiency, but it has not led to any significant improvements in student achievement. To summarize, the research evidence is abundantly clear: digitizing the “tell and practice” model of education should not in any way be construed as innovative because it has not lead to desirable student learning outcomes (Hattie, in Magana, 2017).
References
- Hattie, J. (2008). Visible learning: A synthesis of over 800 meta-analyses relating to achievement. New York, NY: Routledge.
- Hattie, J. (2017). In (Magana, 2017), Disruptive classroom technologies: A framework for innovation in education (pp. i). Thousand Oaks, CA: Corwin Press.
- Haystead, M., & Magana, S. (2013). Using technology to enhance the art and science of teaching framework: A descriptive case study. Centennial, CO: Marzano Research.
- Haystead, M., & Marzano, R. J. (2009). Evaluation study on the effect of Promethean ActivClassroom on student achievement. Centennial, CO: Marzano Research.
- Haystead, M., & Marzano, R. J. (2010). A second year evaluation study of Promethean ActivClassroom. Centennial, CO: Marzano Research.
- Magana, S. (2016). Enhancing the art and science of teaching with technology: A model for improving learning for all students. Unpublished doctoral dissertation, Seattle University, Seattle, Washington.
- Magana, S. (2017). Disruptive classroom technologies: A framework for innovation in education. Thousand Oaks, CA: Corwin Press.
- Magana, S., & Marzano, R. J. (2014). Enhancing the art and science of teaching with technology. Bloomington, IN: Solution Tree.
- Rittel, H., & Webber, M. (1973). Dilemmas in a general theory of planning. Policy Sciences, 4, 155– 169.