What Does It Look Like? Part II: Rubrics for Restructuring
Friday, July 13, 2007 at 09:19AM
Doug Johnson in Technology Connection article

What Does It Look Like? Part II: Rubrics for Restructuring
Technology Connection, an 1998
(Continuation of “The CODE 77 Rubrics”)

Is technology being used in your school to accomplish anything that would be impossible without using technology? Other professions have used technology to make possible:

Yet education is primarily using technology only to reinforce traditional educational practices.

Most teacher training classes are designed to give teachers a familiarity with the computer skills that help them improve their professional productivity: basic computer operation, word processing, telecommunication, record keeping, etc.. (See “The CODE 77 Rubrics” in last month’s issue.) But if technology is realize its powerful potential for improving education, it must be used for more than just automating the traditional methods and practices of teaching.

The rubrics below are designed to help teachers move to a second (and final?) level of professional computer use. Rather than the computer simply being a tool which allows a common task to be done more efficiently, these skills fundamentally change how instruction is delivered, how student performance is measured, and how teachers view themselves as professionals. The technology is used to actually restructure the educational process to allow it to do things it has never been able to do before. These include using technology to assure:

 

These advanced rubrics are designed for the same purposes as the beginning CODE 77 rubrics: to help schools measure the effectiveness of their teacher training efforts, and to help guide teachers on their own learning paths.

Most recent version of Rubrics for Restructuring is here

Article originally appeared on Doug Johnson Website (http://www.doug-johnson.com/).
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