kitchen table math, the sequel: Speaking of technology and stagnant scores

Sunday, September 4, 2011

Speaking of technology and stagnant scores

from 1997:
In 1922 Thomas Edison predicted that "the motion picture is destined to revolutionize our educational system and ... in a few years it will supplant largely, if not entirely, the use of textbooks." Twenty-three years later, in 1945, William Levenson, the director of the Cleveland public schools' radio station, claimed that "the time may come when a portable radio receiver will be as common in the classroom as is the blackboard." Forty years after that the noted psychologist B. F. Skinner, referring to the first days of his "teaching machines," in the late 1950s and early 1960s, wrote, "I was soon saying that, with the help of teaching machines and programmed instruction, students could learn twice as much in the same time and with the same effort as in a standard classroom." Ten years after Skinner's recollections were published, President Bill Clinton campaigned for "a bridge to the twenty-first century ... where computers are as much a part of the classroom as blackboards." Clinton was not alone in his enthusiasm for a program estimated to cost somewhere between $40 billion and $100 billion over the next five years. Speaker of the House Newt Gingrich, talking about computers to the Republican National Committee early this year, said, "We could do so much to make education available twenty-four hours a day, seven days a week, that people could literally have a whole different attitude toward learning."
The Computer Delusion
by Todd Oppenheimer
J U L Y 1 9 9 7
the founder, chairman, and CEO of Netflix has a really bad idea
speaking of technology and stagnant scores
oh brave new world!
codswallop, part 2

1 comment:

Anonymous said...

"...in 1945, William Levenson, the director of the Cleveland public 'chools' radio station, claimed that "the time may come when a portable radio receiver will be as common in the classroom as is the blackboard.'"

Hey, Levenson may have nailed that one!

I bet in the 1950s when baseball season was wrapping up and school was back in session it was easy to average one portable radio receiver per classroom.

-Mark Roulo