5 Education Tech
Trends For 2015
Education is being flipped on its head by technology.
Teachers see the promise -- and the pitfalls.
This is an exciting time to be in education technology. The
global spend on edtech in classrooms is on the rise, fueling a market that is
projected to reach $19 billion by 2018, according to a market study released by Futuresource
Consulting earlier this year. As blended learning environments
evolve, administrators and teachers continue to celebrate the promise of
digital learning and experience the pitfalls of underwhelming edtech tools.
Below are five edtech trends and opportunities for developers of these tools to
consider.
Technology for flipped-learning
The rationale behind the flipped class -- a form of blended
learning in which students learn content online by watching video lectures,
usually at home, and homework is done in class with teachers and students
discussing and solving questions -- is to engage learners in and out of the
classroom. The dynamic nature of this approach enables teachers to create
effective and fun asynchronous and synchronous learning experiences.
Experts agree that passive learning with video doesn't boost
student achievement. As flipped learning becomes more prevalent, the
distribution tools and video streaming that are central to this approach must
be optimized for interactivity. The stakes are higher than ever, with
next-generation, cloud-based solutions displacing older learning management
systems (LMS). Features such as powerful analytics that measure student
responses and mobile learning capabilities will become the hallmarks of the
best flipped classrooms.
[Check out 8 STEM Websites To Excite Kids About Tech.]
Device agnostic learning
While videos and websites are basically ubiquitous across all
devices, many apps are native, even exclusive, to one device or mobile
operating system. The pain points caused by multiple standards, multiple screen
sizes, and multiple operating systems are not sustainable.
Teachers and students shouldn't bear the burden of device
management. Their priorities should be centered on learning. The most
innovative edtech creators realize that the future is to develop device
agnostic services. As more and more teachers integrate mobile learning,
this flexibility will be a requirement.
(Source: Wesley Fryer)
Assistive technologies in the classroom
Perhaps one of the greatest challenges for designers of software
systems and technology products is to deliver a uniform experience to a large
and diverse human population. Creators of ed tech stand to benefit from ensuring
that their products and services are designed to allow differently-abled
students the same access to learning.
US federal accessibility standards pertaining to information
technology, known as Section 508, should be a core design and
development requirement, rather than an afterthought. A burgeoning industry continues
to go beyond these baseline compliance standards, leading development of
assistive technologies.
Earlier this month, world-renowned physicist Stephen Hawking
made headlines with his commentary about the role of assistive technologies
that support him. The same Fortune article cited
a Gartner report issued in late 2013, estimating that
approximately 15% of the world's population could benefit directly from
assistive technologies -- and the rest of us will also feel a positive impact
from the innovation behind them. It's clear that assistive technologies,
ranging from simple to complex, are playing an increasingly vital role in
reducing barriers to learning for students with a variety of special needs and
challenges.
Mobile learning
Mobile learning apps were everywhere in 2014. This next year, we
expect more mobile learning platforms and apps to be available on iOS and
Android, along with heightened expectations related to enhanced learning
experiences and outcomes. At its best, mobile learning technology can drive
collaboration and engage different types of individual learners and various
groups of interconnected learners.
My company, WizIQ, is heavily focused on how such technologies
enable sturdier scaffolding for student learning and broaden the virtual
classroom experience. Features such as live participation, location-aware
notification delivery, and ubiquitous access are paving the way for
context-aware adaptive and personalized mobile learning systems --
functionality that has the potential to fuel lifelong learning in an
unprecedented way.
Personalized blended learning
Customization is king and the array of ed tech tools that can
meet the needs of students in a personalized, meaningful, and timely manner
based on best practices stand to rule. But first, a word of advice to all
creators of ed tech tools: Technology isn't the driver. Your strong belief in
your innovation is secondary to the needs of students, teachers, and
administrators.
Recognize that teachers are tasked with implementing, and often
times, identifying, the best mix of digital learning tools for each student.
Different approaches to learning, such as project-based learning, maker
education, game-based learning, and more, will continue to be explored as part
of personalized blended learning models. Accordingly, such innovations will
push ed tech vendors to deliver more than technology or content -- but will
require them to demonstrate how their product or service improves learning
outcomes.
source: http://www.informationweek.com/government/open-government/5-education-tech-trends-for-2015/a/d-id/1318396
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