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Many old boring looking books. Who wants to study history like this? |
Today in American secondary schools, teachers are facing a dilemma of students not caring and not being interested in school. Students would much rather watch Netflix, be on social media, listen to music, or be playing video games. The previous activities listed all have one thing in common: technology. Teachers who were born well before these students are now experiencing a technological divide. Their experience with technology is different, how they use technology is different, and their overall opinions about technology are different. This is an obvious problem for the teacher and the student. This is a problem that needs a solution and needs a solution quickly because students' educations are being affected by it. This problem especially affects history teachers because many students think history is boring. This blog will explain that history is being taught incorrectly. History is being taught by teachers that have their students take notes for an hour from a large powerpoint. After fifteen days of doing this, they take a multiple choice test with two short answers and then its on to the next unit.
The reason that I chose this is because I am frustrated with old school educators refusing to adapt to the current times. I am incredibly passionate about history and education. I am one of those students who could sit in a history lecture for an hour and a half and love it. However, I am a realist and realize that most people are not like this. So, I want to create and share ideas about how history teachers can better use technology to teach history. I remember in high school my US History teacher would just lecture for fifty minutes from a powerpoint with bullet points every single day from August to May. I loved the class and thought it was incredibly interesting. How many other students are going to love it like I did though? I would assume not many, so we need to create other mediums of teaching to make sure students are more interested and actually learning the material. The time of your old teacher droning on about George Washington for fifty minutes is gone, and the time of technology integration to teach the past is here.
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