I think that a rookie teacher could benefit greatly from this education-related community. It is a place for asking questions and receiving answers. It is a place for receiving questions and giving answers. It is a place for reading and writing. It is a source of stability, support and wisdom. I'm Andrew and I approve this blog.
Sunday, April 27, 2008
Online Teacher Blog
I joined the online teacher-blog community teacherlingo.com, which contains a wide breadth and deep breadth of education-related blogs written by all manner of teachers.
Tuesday, April 22, 2008
Article Assessment #4
For my fourth article assessment I read "Assistive Technologies for Reading" by Ted S. Hasselbring and Margaret E. Bausch, which was about the beneficial role played on education by assistive technology- defined as essentially anything that helps a person with a disability function.
As a student-teacher now for eight months, I am well aware of the adverse effects a learning disability can have on a student's academic performance. Although assistive technology is here to help, most schools have failed to (sufficiently) adopt it- a major reason for which is lack of room in the budget. The government could- and should- remedy this by raising taxes and/or cutting spending on other things. I strongly believe that every learning-disabled student in this country should enjoy the benefits of assistive technology.
One piece of assistive technology that I believe has enormous potential for benefitting all students- disabled or not- is the text-reading device. Sadly but truly, many students don't read because they aren't good at it and/or because they hate its proactive nature. I believe that using text-reading devices can result in better and more reading for two big reasons: they can make text more clear and, for better or worse, can make reading a more passive- and thus for many a more enjoyable and frequent- experience.
Assistive technologies can facilitate learning. Thus, more schools and students should use them.
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