Poll results from the Digital Education poll conducted by Digital Cities RI and presented at the Rhode Island Department of Education "Innovation Powered by Technology" Conference.
3. A force-multiplier transforming
Rhode Island into a global hub
for digital media
design and production.
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6. Access to education material for all but to games / social
media - should be limited based upon age / parents choices
This is the landscape in terms of how we communicate,
anything less than providing access to relevant tools and
channels would put our children at a disadvantage.
I don't think young kids need the access. They'll be inundated
soon enough. Let them be carefree through elementary school.
Computer access yes but social media not until high school.
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11. What does these results suggest to you?
What are the implications of this poll?
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Let’s hear from you first
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13. Especially with a good teacher or curriculum to guide them
It's important to not conflate "digital literacy" with "information
literacy". Exposure and creation of digital media does not teach
information literacy, any more than using, analyzing, and
creating campaign flyers helps with skill-building or ability to
identify misinformation. It's the information literacy skill of
knowing to verify that does this.
Technology is the factory or our time. Train them for what is
useful and maybe we can actually stay a world power in the
future generations.
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15. I don't think that most educators are afforded paid time to
develop new skills given the amount of testing, changing
standards, changing processes, etc. Technology mentoring will
be required for both educators and children and cannot be
simply added as another accessory duty to an educators
workload. Additional personnel will be required.
Teachers need to be ahead of the curve and use the time NOW
to learn cloud based technology in preparation for the 1:1
school environment.
Yes - I've found many teachers to be afraid of technology.
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17. Policies need to be vetted rather than instituted due to preferences.
Just as in-school library catalogs shouldn't filter out library materials.
Educators should have the ability to unblock websites, because no
filtering software is perfect.
Absolutely not. If kids want to see something, they'll see it.
There are settings on Google that are sufficient and do not require
advanced filters.
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19. Adult learners need a source of information, education and
skills. Public libraries are logical community gather places for
bridging the digital divide.
The problem is that they don't have the knowledge themselves
nor the resources to obtain outside experts.
Good idea for the libraries to stay relevant, although there's
plenty of other sources for this.
UP to Libraries. Knowledge is more than classes in how to run
a piece of software that benefits a for-profit company.
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21. K-12 should NOT be utilizing cell phones. While theoretically a
positive, this will be far more of a distraction. There are enough
issues with cell phones and social media in the schools now ...
We have to take the opportunity to teach these tools. Playing
with them won't be enough for real job opportunities.
Also, school curricula should include instruction on productive
use of these technologies, interventions for students with digital
addiction problems, and the intellectual danger of multitasking.
Usage of cellphones and social media should be banned!
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23. Not every family can be in position to do so. Not every family
has access to internet/devices or a library
Both because it is the way younger people engage with content
now, but also because they need to master these tools in a
professional context as well.
Sometimes, as appropriate. They shouldn't always use
shoeboxes, either, but sometimes shoeboxes are appropriate.
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Doesn't it already?
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25. Good grief. Standardized testing must die.
Be careful of inequity
Again, digital media helps people learn yes but often is is used
as a substitute for learning - the computer gives me the answer
rather than helps me arrive at the answer.
Disagree with Common Core in the first place
No, kids will learn this anyway, one way or another. Get
Common Core to support reading, writing, reasoning, math.
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27. Great free resources like CODE.org to help jump-start.
It should be offered and encouraged.
This type of critical thinking is crucial to our kids' development
and carries over into all subject matters. Teach programming
from elementary school onward.
Not a particular skill that we need in the present. Funding would
be outrageous to incorporate coding and software-development.
Yes!! Cannot emphasize this enough. YES! This will serve them
well for any career.
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29. As an advocate for tangible resources and a less than positive
outlook on online classes, I feel learning should be in a
classroom with a real teacher interacting with students.
They can already do this, right?
In regards to K-12 students, I do not agree. Being in school is
essential for socialization and growth purposes. Online courses
would take away that experience. If this is offered for one class
per semester or year, that's fine.
I teach for-credit online courses. They are of limited value, and
are no substitute for a classroom experience.
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31. If there are online classes for k-12 it should be led by a live
instructor in person.
It especially offers help to students with alternative learning
styles. There's lots of research on flipped classrooms -- and
online materials can be a robust way to build a flipped
classroom. Watching a lecture, with the ability to, say, pause
the lecture to take notes, is going to be much more effective for
slow note-takers than a face-to-face lecture, for example.
We don't know what online learning does for K-12.
Especially if it allows students to work ahead of the class level.
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