Thanks, Ed- and Thanks, Margie for getting Google Groups to recognize
me! WARNING: long post (sorry) and general.
I do think that my experience trying to be allowed to respond to your
post is an example of a challenge: class time is so precious, and the
needs of my learners so pressing, that the time spent making the
technology work seamlessly (or at all) is discouraging- although
thrilling when it works. Because of this, I am very select in the
technologies I or sts propose using.
In any one class, I may have learners who are newbies and some who are
techies; that they help one another is a big bonus; that extra time
needs to be diverted towards maneuvering through the technology is a
challenge.
My writing classes are an example: revising on the computer makes for
better writing, because it's easy to do in a holistic way. I have
several learners who have never used a computer- and they are way
behind ( in terms of output) those who have had some experience. The
BIG plus to that is that by the time the semester is over, they have
learned not only how to write an essay, but how to use a word
processor with some comfort,and they are comfortable problem-solving
and finding work-arounds -- an important life skill even without
technology.
And then there is the MS Word issue: Many sts have a computer that
comes with Works, if they have a computer, and so others cannot read
their email attachments (yes- many of my sts prefer to send writing to
peers for peer reviews as an email attachment instead of using Google
Docs). I have helped all my sts to either download Open Office
(SWriter) ort to use Google Docs.
I sent this to Margie for a chuckle- certainly points to the
challenges of new technologies:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0Cd7Bsp3dDo&feature=related