Classroom Teacher

Classroom Education Technology: Blackboards, Projectors, SMART Boards

Even though it’s summer vacation in Ontario, we’re still thinking about ways to integrate technology into the classroom.

In fact, we’re considering investing in a SMART board, so we spent some time reflecting on the pros and cons of some of the educational technologies to help us teach in the classroom. From low-tech to high-tech, chalk and markers to digital ink, there are many different options:

The Basics: Chalkboards, Flipcharts, Whiteboards, and Overhead Projectors

They’re the staple in any classroom: throw up a lesson on the blackboard, do some shared writing on a flipchart, use a white board to deal with the chalk dust problem, and slap on a photocopied handout onto the overhead. Using these four basic food groups, you can deal with everything from learning to read to solving algebraic equations.

Pros

Cons

Using a Digital (LCD / Data) Projector in the Classroom

A few years ago, we bought a digital (data) projector for our classroom. Sure, our school had a projector on a media cart, but to be perfectly honest, it was inconvienient to have to share it with the entire school. (And murder if you had to “wheel” the cart up a flight of stairs.)

We’ve adopted a balanced literacy approach to explicitly teach decoding and comprehension strategies, and we wanted to use the computer projector pretty much 24/7. So we splurged a thousand bucks and bought our own.

We set up our data projector permanently on a tall filing cabinet. We use the entire side of the classroom wall to project a giant image of the teacher’s PC. Pretty much every day, we would use the data projector during our modeled and shared reading lessons, as well as during modeled and shared writing. It was hooked up to the internet, so we could use it for our media literacy lessons as well.

Pros

Cons

Using a digital, interactive whiteboard (SMART Board) in the classroom

This summer, we’re thinking about upgrading our computer projector by adding a SMART Board to it. Essentially, a SMART board turns your data projector image into an interactive whiteboard that you can write on.

The SMART Board itself is a touch-sensitive giant screen that is connected to your computer. You use your digital projector to display your computer screen onto the SMART board and the software allows you to touch and interact with your computer.

Pros

Cons

Trying to Write Using a Digital Projector (Digital Ink)

It’s ironic. The hardest thing to do with a computer is the easiest thing to do without a computer: write with a pen.

The greatest drawback with using a data projector is the fact that you can’t easily mark up a text with handwriting. With an overhead projector, you just buy an overhead marker and off you go with pretty colours. Whether you’re editing a piece of writing, making jot notes in the margins, or drawing a diagram or formula, as teachers we can’t get away from writing.

Writing on your Word documents or web pages is called digital ink and most software applications that come with a digital pen also allow you to save your handwritten notes or to convert your handwriting into text.

i-Pen

We tried using a digital pen (i-pen) that we bought off of e-bay to write on our Word documents. It came with software which let you mark up webpages and documents that you could even save and print (just like with an overhead marker).

It would have been perfect, but the handwriting quality wasn’t very good. At the start, our hand-writing looked like Grade 1 printing. Towards the end, after a lot of practice, it looked like Grade 3 printing. Overall, the i-pen was a neat interface to do art or graphic design, but it wasn’t precise enough to use for handwriting in the classroom.

SMART Board

This past school year, we were lucky enough to be at a school that had a SMART Board in the computer lab. Great technology, but it was a little disappointing to find out that even with a SMART Board, we still had poor penmanship.

Digital Pens

There are, of course other options to be able to write on your computer and data projector. Whether you’re looking at a Tablet PC or thinking about buying a SMART Sympodium touch-screen for your computer monitor (I’m a sucker for marketing), the bottom line is how easy is it to use, how legible is your handwriting, and how expensive is the technology.

Pros

Cons

Bottom Line

A few years ago, when we decided to buy a data projector for our own use in the classroom, it was a huge investment and a big risk, but it radically changed the way that we taught. We still use the blackboard, the flipchart paper, the overhead projector, but the data projector has become a staple in our classroom.

So, it only makes sense that we continue to raise the bar as we investigate how to bring digital ink into the classroom.

Does anyone teach with digital ink? Anyone have any experience using a digital pen to write on their computers?

Exit mobile version