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Latest revision as of 10:50, 24 September 2020
Apple Classrooms of Tomorrow Research
Report Number 8
Teacher Beliefs and Practices Part I: Patterns of Change
The Evolution of Teachers' Instructional Beliefs and Practices in High-Access-to-Technology
Classrooms First - Fourth Year Findings
Authors
David C. Dwyer, Ph.D.
Cathy Ringstaff, Ph.D.
Judith Haymore Sandholtz, Ph.D.
Apple Computer, Inc.
Apple Computer, Inc.
1 Infinite Loop
Cupertino, CA 95014
Preface
The Apple Classrooms of Tomorrow (ACOT) research project has been gathering
data since 1986 on what happens when teachers and students have constant
access to technology. Analysis of the collective data has clarified a number
of hunches about how teaching and learning change in these innovative environments,
what factors inhibit change, and what support is needed to promote and sustain
fundamental changes in education.
Part I of this research summarizes the developmental phases ACOT teachers
go through as they gradually replace their traditional beliefs and practices
with new ones. The report represents the teachers' development as five phases:
- Entry
- Adoption
- Adaptation
- Appropriation
- Invention
In this model, the teachers' traditional text-based curriculum is delivered
in a lecture-recitation-seatwork mode is first strengthened through the
use of technology and then gradually replaced by far more dynamic learning
experiences for students.
The original research report, "The Evolution of Teachers' Instructional
Beliefs and Practices in High-Access-to-Technology Classrooms," was
presented at the 1990 meeting of the American Education Research Association
and is available through the ERIC Document Reproduction Service, 3900 Wheeler
Avenue, Alexandria, VA 22304; (703) 823-0500.
Introduction
In 1985, Apple Classrooms of Tomorrow (ACOT) began as a collaboration
between Apple Computer, Inc. and several school districts around the country
in an effort to explore the impact of computer saturation on teaching and
learning in K 12 classrooms. The research focused on examining what happens
when teachers and students have constant access to technology.
Recognizing that the impact of converting traditional, computerless classroom
to high-tech exploratoriums would be unprecedented, ACOT began collecting
data to document these changes over the short and long term. Analysis of
the collective data over four years has brought in focus a richly detailed
representation of the instructional changes that occurred in ACOT classrooms,
including individual portraits of teachers who struggled with their own
belief systems as they worked within these unique environments.
ACOT teachers have been, and continue to be ardently committed to this ambitious
project whose goal is to fundamentally change teaching and learning. Yet
they carry with them a common set of beliefs about schooling, built upon
years of participating in the traditional system as former students and
now as teachers. It is this age-old view of schooling, based on the lecture,
recitation, and seatwork model of instruction, that persists despite the
best efforts of activists in the school reform and restructure movements.
Consequently, when teachers work in ACOT classrooms, they experience intense
inner conflict as they explore alternative approaches that sharply contrast
their beliefs about classroom management, curriculum, collaborative learning,
and other such issues.
This, then is the arena into which Apple Classrooms of Tomorrow has entered.
In its inception, the project's philosophy was to provide technology and
actively support teachers in the directions they chose to go. However, after
three years of observation, ACOT developed a decided bias towards a constructivist
view of learning* and began actively educating and encouraging teachers
to implement knowledge construction in their classrooms. Although the direction
of change in ACOT classrooms is promising, the pace of change is slow, for
even when innovative teachers alter their practices and beliefs, the cultural
norms continue to support lecture-based instruction, subject-centered curriculum,
and measurement-driven accountability.
This report summarizes an analysis of research findings from multiple studies
and data sources collected since the beginning of the ACOT project. The
analysis focuses on ACOT teachers' development over the four-year period.
Part I presents overall patterns of change experienced by the ACOT teacher
group and offers a five-phase model of teacher development in high-tech
classrooms oriented to fundamental change in education. Part II presents
two personal examples of the conflicts teachers experience while in the
process of change, and offers a model for administrative support at each
phase of development that can foster innovations over the long term.
* The constructivist view of learning asserts that learners
"construct" their own meaning/knowledge from the information they
acquire. This differs from the traditional view which assumes a teacher
can "deliver" knowledge to a learner.
The Study
Overview
This study focuses on ACOT teachers at five sites over a four-year period,
from 1986 to 1989. Each of the sites began with one grade level in the fall
of 1986, adding classrooms, staff, and students in subsequent years. By
1989, the project included 32 teachers and 650 students in four elementary
and one high school whose demographics range from inner-city to rural, and
low to high socioeconomic status. Together the schools represent the diverse
populations and conditions currently found in the nation's public schools.
ACOT classrooms in each of these settings offer students constant access
to interactive technologies. The elementary classes are equipped with Apple
IIe, IIGS , and Macintosh computers. The high school is an all Macintosh
installation. In addition to computers, each class is equipped with printers,
scanners, laserdisc and videotape players, modems, CD-ROM drives, and hundreds
of software titles.
The technology is used as a tool to support learning across the curriculum.
No attempt is made to replace existing instructional technologies with computers.
By design, the classrooms are true multimedia environments where students
and teachers use textbooks, workbooks, manipulatives, white boards, crayons,
glue, overhead projectors, televisions, musical instruments, etc., as well
as computers. The operating principle is to use the media that best supports
the learning goal.
Data Collection and Analysis
The research draws on a rich, multi-perspective body of data composed
of personal reports from teachers; weekly site reports; classroom observations;
interviews with students, parents, and teachers; and cross-site assessment
data provided by the districts and supplemented by additional measures.
Teacher Journals. Teachers record their personal observations of
events in the classroom and their reflections on those events on audiotape,
producing an average of two 60-minute tapes per month. The tapes are mailed
to Apple where they are transcribed and entered into a database. Instructions
about content on the tapes are purposefully left vague, leaving teachers
free to report what is most salient at the time to each of them.
Weekly Reports. The teaching staff at each site communicates
weekly on major events and developments in a written summary that is electronically
distributed among all project participants via Apple Computer's corporate
networking system. Again the content of the reports is left to the determination
of the teachers at each site. Because these reports are publicly accessible
to everyone connected with the project, they tend to be more self-conscious
than the personal, frequently introspective reports contained in the audiotape
journals. Together, these two sources of data provide interesting contrasts
on events at the sites.
Both the teacher audiotapes and the electronically communicated weekly report
are monitored by graduate students who digest the source information into
discrete "episodes," and index them according to content. The
resulting four-year database contains 13,081 episodes (7,976 audiotape episodes
and 5,105 episodes from weekly reports). The indexing system allows sorting
and rapid retrieval of descriptive, qualitative data along a number of dimensions
for the construction of narrative reports about the project. Through indexing,
sorting, and comparing episodes, important themes and events emerge.
Classroom Observations and Interviews . In 1986, ACOT began
awarding grants to researchers interested in basic assessment and instruction
issues and various problems associated with the introduction of technology
to classrooms. These projects, some ongoing for a number of years in the
ACOT sites, utilized observation and interview techniques as data gathering
procedures (e.g., Baker, Herman, & Gearhart, 1988; Damarin & Bohren,
1987; Fisher, 1988; Herman, 1988; Hiebert, 1987; Phelan, 1988, 1989; Levine,
1988; Ross, Smith, Morrison, & Erikson, 1989; Tierney, 1987, 1988).
These data and reports provide further, independent perspectives on teacher
and student experiences at the sites.
Cross-Site Assessment Data. Drs. Eva Baker, Joan Herman-Cooper,
and Maryl Gearhart of the Center for the Study of Evaluation at UCLA designed
and implemented a three-year, cross-site study of ACOT. Student demographic
and psychometric data were collected annually from participating districts,
using subsets of the Iowa Tests of Basic Skills and Iowa Tests of Educational
Development, the School Attitude Measure (SAM), and the Student Motivation
Questionnaire (SMQ). The project's interim report (Baker, Herman, &
Gearhart, 1988) provides the final source of perspective for this analysis.
The Findings
In the early days of the introduction of computers to classrooms, implementers
focused on the innovation--computers and software. They gave little thought
to the elements that would most likely remain the same--instruction and
assessment. Educators and the public hoped that the introduction of technology
would bring about the same kind of successful transformation that had been
seen in science and industry, but goals and means in the education arena
were vague.
In many ways the early progress of ACOT repeated the same error. Although
the sheer number of computers in ACOT classrooms radically transformed the
physical environment, for the most part student learning tasks remained
unchanged. Gradually, however, new patterns of teaching and learning emerged
at all sites. ACOT has labeled the stages of evolution in its classrooms:
Entry, Adoption, Adaptation, Appropriation, and Invention (see diagram on
page 16). In this model, text-based curriculum delivered in a lecture-recitation-seatwork
mode is first strengthened through the use of technology and then gradually
replaced by far more dynamic learning experiences for students.
Entry
The point to acknowledge in this phase is that an instructional technology
already existed in each of the ACOT classrooms at the time the project began.
The technology was text-based and the common tools were blackboards, textbooks,
workbooks, ditto sheets, and overhead projectors. These tools were used
in combination to support lecture, recitation, and seatwork. Traditional
schooling was firmly in place. Teachers, who were beginning their tenure
with ACOT, had little or no experience with computer technology and were
in various stages of trepidation and excitement.
Prior to the beginning of the school year in 1986, classrooms were rewired
and some were air-conditioned. Blackboards were replaced with white boards
to reduce the amount of classroom dust. Student desks were rearranged into
rows or clusters or replaced with modular computer furniture. The first
weeks of the project at each site were given over to unpacking boxes, running
extension cords, inserting cards, formatting disks, checking out home systems--generally
trying to establish order in radically transformed physical environments.
Once instruction began, experienced teachers found themselves facing first-year-teacher
problems: discipline, resource management, and personal frustration. [See
ACOT Report #10 for a discussion of classroom management issues.] ACOT staff
clearly had second thoughts. For example, one teacher noted:
If I had my druthers, I don't think I would ever look at a computer again. One of my students got into the Corvus network and lost lots of information because he doesn't know what he is doing. It's a typical situation, and it's caused a major problem because now the computers are down. There are so many variables like this that we deal with on a day-to-day basis that I didn't anticipate being part of this program. I'm anxious for the weekend so I don't have to do anything with computers.
Adoption
Teachers' struggles to accommodate the new technology seemed to abate
during their first year with the project. Computer-based issues were far
from over, but the balance of their concerns began to tilt towards using
computers rather than connecting them. What the research team witnessed
during this period was the adoption of the new electronic technology to
support text-based drill-and-practice instruction. Students continued to
receive steady diets of whole-group lectures and recitation and individualized
seatwork. Although much had changed physically in the classrooms, more remained
the same.
Damarin's (1988) study of the project's first year at one of the sites not
only recognized a failure to move forward instructionally but documented
some of the constraints under which the teachers labored, such as a district
plan that reflected state-mandates and standardized testing.
The teachers had long experience and finely-tuned methods of working within these constraints and maximizing their effectiveness in that context; they had little incentive or direction for making changes which might jeopardize . . . performance on existing criteria. Although the district planners sought (and achieved) a plan which serves as a model for equitable implementation of a radically different instructional environment, they did not seek to create new approaches to instructional excellence.
During this phase, one might anticipate significant disruption of student
learning while teachers reformulated instructional management strategies
and while both teachers and students mastered the many skills and ideas
that successful computer use requires. Surprisingly, traditional measures
of achievement showed no significant decline or improvement in student performance
aggregated at the classroom level (Baker, Herman, & Gearhart, 1988),
while teachers reported individual students performed better. Self-esteem
and motivation were measured and reported to be strong at all sites (Baker,
et al). Student attendance was up and reported instances of discipline problems
in ACOT classrooms ranged from zero to few.
Adaptation
In this phase, productivity emerged as a major theme. Students produced
more, faster. In a self-paced math program, for example, sixth-grade students
completed the year's curriculum in 60% of the time normally required to
complete the course of study and test scores remained as strong as in previous
years. The extra time led to increased opportunities for teachers to engage
students in higher-order learning objectives and problem solving in math.
In high school science, for instance, the instructor and his supervisor
both reported that students were learning much faster, more accurately,
and with greater understanding.
Writing was another area that drew frequent comment from the sites in the
Adaptation phase. A fourth-grade teacher wrote that students increasingly
used word processing to prepare their assignments and that many could type
faster than they could write. A special education teacher reported that
her students were writing with greater fluency due to keyboarding skills,
and that they composed their stories directly on the computer rather than
writing them by hand first.
A six-month study of the writing of ACOT third graders (Hiebert, 1987) concluded
that students maintained a high level of enthusiasm for writing, computers
made the compositions much more presentable which further encouraged learning,
and students wrote more and better as a result of high accessibility to
computers. (See ACOT Report # 2 for more information on this writing study.)
Increased productivity in writing led to a bounty of text that allowed teachers
to work with even young students on narrative skills. Willingly, students
reworked their papers, a rare occurrence in paper and pencil classrooms.
The same outpouring of text overwhelmed ACOT's teachers and led to the need
for new strategies for instruction, feedback, and evaluation.
Change in the quality of student engagement in classroom tasks was another
notable factor during the Adaptation phase. For example, one teacher reported:
We are finding that the students are coming in to use the computers during lunch and staying late to complete their HyperCard assignments for social studies on the countries they are researching. This degree of commitment and engagement is really unusual in a group of quite ordinary kids.
Appropriation
Movement to this next phase occurred for the first cadre of ACOT teachers
in the second year of the project across all sites. Change hinged on each
teacher's personal mastery of the technology. Appropriation is the point
at which an individual comes to understand technology and use it effortlessly
as a tool to accomplish real work.
The Appropriation stage has been seen in very few classrooms outside the
project because very few teachers or students have enough access to technology
to reach a point where computers become natural tools with which to work
(Becker, 1987; Office of Technology Assessment, 1989).
As teachers independently reached this stage, their roles began to shift
noticeably and new instructional patterns emerged. Team teaching, interdisciplinary
project-based instruction, and individually-paced instruction became more
and more common at all of the sites. To accommodate more ambitious class
projects, teachers successfully changed at least one stalwart foundation
of the traditional school day--the master schedule. An example was a city
study that culminated in the construction of a scale model of an urban business
district. The final construction sat on a 10 x 20 foot base and incorporated
four-foot tall models of buildings and robotic elements run by 12 or more
Macintosh computers. The lead teacher in this project orchestrated the collaboration
of teachers in all disciplines such that separate class periods and separate
subjects were blended into a full working day.
At both ACOT's elementary and secondary schools, this type of teamed, project-based
learning opened opportunities for teachers to step back and observe their
students. What they saw was their students' highly evolved skill with the
technology, students' ability to learn on their own, and students' movement
away from competitive work patterns toward collaborative ones. From the
sites:
It's amazing to me how much these kids are learning. . . . Kids are doing things that are not assigned. The excitement is that they are motivated, seeing the power of the things which they are learning how to use, creating for themselves solutions to problems for other things. That is the goal of the educator. That the student be motivated to solve problems important to him, not to go after points. You never see this in regular classes.
The applications teacher asked the students to design a calculator using
HyperCard. It was just so gratifying to see that as soon as one student
finished they would go look at another student's, saying, "How did
you get it to do that?" Sharing strategies: "Didn't you do the
extra credit?" "You know how to do square root? Let me show you."
It was just that sort of give and take, that sort of excitement, contagious
enthusiasm, high level of engagement that makes me feel that this really
is a good model for the classroom of the future.
The district technology supervisor at one of the schools, observing the
extent of peer interaction in the ACOT classroom, noted that by allowing
students to teach each other, teachers' roles were changing as well; they
were becoming facilitators rather than dispensers of knowledge.
The extent to which teachers not only became comfortable with student experts
in their classes but actually began to depend on their students was evident
through reports of students taking responsibility for developing curriculum
and for teaching. At the high school site students even participated in
the summer technology training institute as teaching assistants.
An independent observer studying one of the elementary sites (Phelan, 1989),
also commented on changes in communication patterns and the extent of collaborative
work among even the very young students.
Lines of communication ran between children and computers and between children
rather than between the children and the teacher. The work mode orientation
was frequently cooperative rather than individualistic. Interestingly, the
teacher expressed delight at the amount of cooperative learning that took
place:
I could never have anticipated that much cooperative learning going on. Some of it's screwing around, but a lot of it is helping each other. I just think it's wonderful. I mean, it drives me crazy when I'm trying to work with a reading group and they're back here chatting away and I do my share of, 'You will say nothing else.' But I'm really pleased.
Again, the critical event that triggered this most dramatic change at the sites is the personal appropriation of the technology tools by individual students and teachers. As noted, the first cadre of ACOT teachers and students acquired this level of competence after more than a year with the project. Importantly, the second cadre of teachers accelerated through the evolution in a matter of several months. Explanation lies in their ready access to teachers and students--local experts--who had already appropriated the technology. Perhaps most important in this phase was an increasing tendency of ACOT's teachers to reflect on teaching, to question old patterns, to speculate about the causes behind changes they were seeing in their students. At the beginning of her third year with the project, one of the project's high school English teachers recorded the following:
Being on hall duty this year, I have a chance to hear how, in class after class, the teachers' voices drone on and on and on. There is very little chance for the student to become an active participant. In today's schools there is little chance for the individual teacher to actually change the curriculum, but we can make the way we deliver the curriculum very different. And that's where the technology comes into play: to make it more interactive, to encourage collaborative learning, to encourage exploration. The technology can adjust to fit the curriculum, I think, whatever it is.
Invention
The final stage in this model of instructional evolution is really a
placeholder for further development by ACOT teachers and for the new learning
environments that they will create. Entry, Adoption, Adaptation, and Appropriation
can be viewed as stages that build a readiness for purposeful change.
In the earliest stages, ACOT teachers demonstrated little penchant for significant
change and in fact, were using their technological resources to replicate
traditional instructional and learning activities. During Appropriation,
however, they seemed to gain a great deal of perspective on just how profoundly
they could change the experience of learning for their students. When they
reached this phase, teacher quotes communicated a working comfort with beliefs
about teaching and learning that were not common among the staff at the
project's outset. For the most part, ACOT teachers have become more disposed
to view learning as an active, creative, and socially interactive process
than they were when they entered the program. Knowledge tends to be viewed
more as something children must construct and less like something that can
be transferred. The nature of these teachers' classrooms, the permissions
they have granted their students, and their own instructional behaviors
demonstrate that shift in action.
ACOT teachers are ready to implement more fundamental changes in teaching
and learning. They are ready to invent interdisciplinary learning activities
that engage students in gathering information, analyzing and synthesizing
it, and ultimately building new knowledge on top of what they already know.
Conclusion
Teachers are, by the nature of their work, pragmatists. They must survive
the day; they must be ready for the next. Confronted by large numbers of
computers or not, they arrive at their classrooms the very first day of
their careers with a deeply-rooted belief about schooling that will help
them weather the storm of demands they face.
The idea that deeply held beliefs can stand in the way of change is certainly
not new. This research contributes to the evidence that teachers' beliefs
about instruction and schools is an important factor that underlies the
institution's resistance to change and argues that this fact must inform
planning and implementation of significant change efforts. This issue gains
bold relief in a program where teachers are personally dedicated to the
investigation of the potential of modern technology but are held in check
by the principals of 19th century instruction.
Implementing change in education must include changing teachers' practices
and beliefs. This does not mean abandoning beliefs but gradually replacing
them with more relevant beliefs shaped by experiences in an altered context.
And it is this altered context that may make the difference. When teachers
work with colleagues and administrators who actively support fundamental
change, there is far greater opportunity for successful growth of new beliefs
and practices.
Part II of this research presents the personal development of two ACOT teachers
as they confront their traditional beliefs and practices in a radically
altered classroom environment. The critically different outcomes of the
two teachers' experiences demonstrate the need for support from both colleagues
and administrators that is appropriate at each of the five phases.
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