Adoption: The Ok
Stage…I will book my airline tickets, but that’s IT.
Adaption: The "My
friend showed me this really cool presentation software. I’ll give it a shot"
Stage... If I can’t get this to work, I
can always go back to the overhead!
Ahhh....Those were the days!
It was back in 1982 when I remember seeing the neighbor’s Apple
PC for the first time. They were the
first people I knew to have a computer in their house. I remember thinking, “what are they going to
do with that?” I knew, from the school
librarian, that you could play some games on them and that you could do word
processing. (In order to do anything, even
run a game on a floppy, you had to be able to type some DOS. If you messed anything up, it was a mess to
fix!) Computers back then were not
nearly as intuitive as they are now and I think that stays with some people who
did not grow up “digital natives”.
The 21st Century
Thankfully, I believe that we are getting farther and
farther away from the worries that came with those first PC’s and everyone
(even my 79 year old mom) is getting more comfortable with technology. It is really true that this is mostly due to
technology getting more comfortable for us.
All you have to do is spend 5 minutes on an iPad and you have probably
figured out how to play a game or look at pictures or find The Weather
Channel. Of course, there are some
people, (like my dad who still has to call me when he presses the wrong button
on the cable remote) for which, technology will remain a mystery, but those
people are becoming few and far between.
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Paving the Way
In my role as a school librarian, I expect to meet some
resistance with regards to my colleagues when it comes to technology. It only makes sense. Just because I think something is terrific
and will make the math teachers job easier doesn’t eliminate that learning
curve for them. I have heard many of my
peers and professors say that when it comes to advocating for technology with
teachers, less is more and that you have to just keep at it till you get some
collaboration. Many times, they say, you
find a new teacher who is on board with you and then others may follow. I am looking forward to that first tech
collaboration and being able to help out a colleague.
Be Brave
For a lot of people who want to embrace technology, like
myself, I think the best thing is to just “be brave”. Don’t worry about messing things up. Sometimes it is best to just jump in there
and play around with whatever you are interested in doing. Long gone are the days of DOS and worrying
that if you type the wrong command you will never get your computer back. You really can’t “break” modern technology,
so just sticking with it can get you where you want to go and can actually be
fun if you are in the right mindset. I
think this is where I am. I might add a
stage after adaption, like, experimentation:
the stage where you actually are figuring it all out on your own and
having some fun with it!
Dawn, I hope my school librarian will be a open-minded and helpful as you will be! I think collaboration is a huge key in facing a new technology, or new anything for that matter. Mary
ReplyDeleteGreat comment, Mary. I love the idea of an "experimentation" stage! Also liked how you said it's almost hard *not* to become tech-savvy when the technology is becoming much easier to use. Great post.
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