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Liebe LeserInnen,

mit diesem Newsletter möchten wir uns mit einem dringenden Anliegen an Sie wenden: Wie Sie bereits per Sondernewsletter im Herbst erfahren haben, überarbeitet die KMK in den kommenden Wochen ihre Strategie zur Bildung in der digitalen Welt. In diesem Zusammenhang gab es ein Empfehlungspapier der Ständigen Wissenschaftlichen Kommission (SWK) der KMK, welches wir von UBTB mit großer Sorge zur Kenntnis genommen haben, weil es die tatsächliche Vielfältigkeit von Forschung zur Digitalisierung von Bildung systematisch vernachlässigt und die Diskussion teilweise um Jahrzehnte zurückwirft. Wir hatten ebenfalls angekündigt, dass wir uns dem Thema weiter widmen wollen.

Tatsächlich ist in den letzten Wochen in Kooperation mit weiteren Initiativen und KollegInnen ein Positionspapier zur SWK-Stellungnahme entstanden, welches Sie ab sofort unter folgendem Link per Unterschrift unterstützen können.

Da sich die KMK bereits nächste Woche trifft, drängt die Zeit, möglichst viele Unterschriften zu sammeln, die wir an die Politik übergeben können. Entsprechend möchten wir Sie mit diesem Newsletter herzlich einladen, das Positionspapier zu unterstützen, sofern Sie mit den inhaltlichen Argumenten übereinstimmen. Leiten Sie die Aktion bitte auch an weitere interessierte Personen weiter. Jede Stimme zählt!

Herzlichen Dank,

Ihr UBTB-Team

Aktuelles bei UBTB

Gerne teilnehmen & weiterleiten: Umfrage für Lehrende mit Interesse an Digital-/Datenthemen

Wir laden Sie herzlich zu einer Online-Umfrage zum Thema Bildung über digitale Technologien und Daten ein. Die Umfrage richtet sich an Lehrende aus allen Fachrichtungen und Bildungseinrichtungen, die Interesse daran haben, über Themen um digitale Technologien, Datensicherheit, (Big) Data und/oder Datafizierung zu lehren/unterrichten. Die Umfrage wird von UBTB-Mitglied Ina Sander als Teil ihrer Promotionsforschung durchgeführt und dauert ca. 15-20 Minuten:
https://www.soscisurvey.de/educator-survey/

Sehr gerne dürfen Sie den Link zur Umfrage auch mit weiteren Lehrenden außerhalb dieser Liste teilen. 'Lehrende‘ ist weit gefasst und kann den schulischen, universitären und außerschulischen Bereich beinhalten.

UBTB auf der Dialogkonferenz

Am 5. November 2021 fand die diesjährige Dialogkonferenz statt, veranstaltet von DiAL:OGe, einer Initiative an der Ruhr Universität Bochum, welche sich dem Thema "Digitalisierung in der Ausbildung von Lehramtsstudierenden: Orientierung und Gestaltung" widmet. Dieses Jahr stand das Thema „Vermessene Bildung“ im Zentrum. UBTB war mit einer Keynote von Ina Sander zum wechselseitigen Verhältnis von Bildung und Datafizierung sowie einem Beitrag von Annina Förschler und Sigrid Hartong zum Leseförderprogramm "Antolin" vertreten. Beide Beiträge werden zeitnah auf der UBTB-Homepage zum Nachschauen zur Verfügung stehen.

Ressourcen & Empfehlungen
Whitepaper zu Datenkompetenz
Projekte und Konzepte zu Data Literacy
Zum Whitepaper

Unser monatlicher Lesetipp ist dieses Mal ein jüngst erschienenes Whitepaper zum Thema Datenkompetenz, herausgegeben von André Renz, Bennet Etsiwah sowie Ana Teresa Burgueño Hopf vom Weizenbaum-Institut in Berlin. Das Papier ist hier  downloadbar. Es bringt eine Vielzahl von Einblicken und Perspektiven zum Thema zusammen. UBTB ist mit einem kleinen Beitrag zu Critical Data Literacy in der Bildung vertreten.

Veranstaltungen

Nächste Runde UBTB-Seminare am Landesinstitut für Lehrerbildung und Schulentwicklung (LI) in Hamburg

Nachdem wir im letzten Jahr mit unterschiedlichen Seminarformaten für Hamburger Lehrkräfte beim LI eingestiegen sind, freuen wir uns, auch im 2. Schulhalbjahr vier Angebote machen zu können:

"Bildschirmmedien und Kindergesundheit: Differenzierungsebenen, Forschungsstand, Präventionsansätze" (15.3.22, Paula Bleckmann);
"Abwägen zwischen Analog und Digital: Welche Fragen sollte ich als Lehrkraft stellen?" (22.3.22, Paula Bleckmann, Sieglinde Jornitz und Sigrid Hartong);
"Digitale Lernplattformen im Fachunterricht: Welche Auswertungsmöglichkeiten bieten sie (nicht)?" (29.3.22, Sieglinde Jornitz und Ben Mayer) sowie
„Data Literacy: Was soll das sein und wie kann ich sie als Lehrkraft fördern?" (14.6.22; Sigrid Hartong und Ina Sander).

Weitere Informationen finden Sie unter https://tis.li-hamburg.de/home.

Gast-Kommentar von Jesper Balslev

Jesper Balslev, research consultant and ph.d., Copenhagen School of Design and Technology

Is the current use of ICT in education in Denmark warranted by Corona-evaluations?

For the last six years I have studied policy papers on the value, effects, and/or the potentials of digital learning technologies in education. It is a fascinating field to study. Especially one enigma has emerged: how self-conscious is “political” or “institutional” thinking really? Is there somewhere in the political sphere (at global levels, at EU-levels, or at national levels) a unifying consciousness (or just an intelligent database) that synthesizes the evaluations, the whitepapers, the strategies, the visions, and the reports for the benefit of future writers and researchers - or are the systems populated with groundhog-day writers, who start praising the potentials anew, every day?

Corona
Reports show that companies behind products like Microsoft Teams and Zoom have experienced remarkable growth rates the last couple of years. This, of course, is caused by the choice of schools and educational institutions to use their platforms to compensate for the inability to teach physically during lock-down periods.

Corona lockdown has been a gift for the learning sciences, in the sense that it created an ideal test situation over a longer period. On the same day, in Denmark, practically the whole nations’ pupils and students, from first grade to university students, were subjected to a similar educational situation: taught virtually through Microsoft Teams or Zoom platforms. This, one might think, ought to provide a convincing empirical base, to answer a range of questions, that were more difficult to answer before, when the use of digital platforms was more sporadic, differed from school to school and from municipality to municipality.

In the following I will try to find out whether political investments in ICT are warranted by evaluations, in the wake of Corona, i.e., thirteen published evaluation reports  published between April 2020 and February 2021.

Some of them are published by higher education (HE) institutions, others by different consortia of HE-institutions, some by unions, some by government-funded think tanks, and finally by government funded evaluation institutes and educational boards (“styrelser”). Some have commissioned the services of consultancies, some are “home-crafted”; methodologically most of the reports use survey methods.

Let us go through some of the most startling findings, starting with the negative findings:

  • Motivation: in a survey sent out to 12.000 pupils, two thirds indicated that remote teaching is less motivating than normal. In another study, 40% of the students expressed that they had difficulties in maintaining concentration and motivation in virtual environments.
  • Teaching: The danish consultant house Rambøll concluded that teachers found it difficult to gauge the students’ reactions in virtual environments, making it hard to practice adaptive teaching. A study published by the danish institute of evaluation made the startling observation that only 4% of pupils preferred online teaching. An evaluation commissioned by a consortium of 9 HE-institutions, concluded that most students found that their experience of online-teaching was negative. 56% of teachers made the assessment that the use of virtual tools “under normal circumstances” would create lesser learning. 7/10 experienced less joy when using virtual platforms.
  • Socially: The same study concluded that there is a loss of sense of belonging and loss of collective engagement. Another study concluded that pupils are “pressured on their social well-being” – 92% of the pupils missed their friends, 70% missed the teaching, and 60% missed their teachers. Nearly half of the students felt lonely in pure, virtual environments. 

On the positive side:

  • A segment of pupils appreciated the fact that classes started on time, and that were not disturbed by their classmates.
  • All institutions succeeded in maintaining educational offerings, despite physical lock-down.
  • Flexibility and less time used on transport together with more efficient meetings has been cited as a positive effect.
  • The students mentioned flexibility and videos that can be revisited, as a positive aspect.
  • 70% of the pupils found that the teachers did well under Corona, and a corresponding share of parents agreed with their children: The teachers handled the situation with great skills and enthusiasm.

Prior to Corona, larger synthesizing meta-analyses concluded that

  • “The results […] show no appreciable improvements in student achievement in reading, mathematics or science in the countries that had invested heavily in ICT for education”. (OECD, 2015)
  • ”The implications from these findings suggest that we should not expect large positive (or negative) impacts from ICT investments in schools or computers at home.” (Bulman & Fairlie, 2016)
  • “However, 60 years of evaluation data show no major quantum leap in the impact of technology on learner outcomes. Most of the current technological interventions in schooling remain average or below in their ability to enhance student learning—when the technology is used in schools and classrooms.” (Hamilton & Hattie, 2020)

Conclusion:

The corona-evaluations do not alter that image: it is difficult to claim that digital tools have caused improvements in student achievement, we cannot expect positive or negative impacts from ICT investments, it is safer to expect that technological interventions remain average or below in their ability to enhance student learning.

Evaluations show that notions of “digital generations” that are especially motivated by technology is impossible to corroborate. It is a myth that we should now safely bury, once and for all. It is also difficult to corroborate that technology facilitates adaptive teaching, or that technology is intrinsically motivating.

On the other hand, findings seem to stress that (perceptions of) successful learning presupposes physical meetings, collective teaching, and many social aspects of education. Schools have been, and should remain social institutions.

Furthermore, we should resist the temptation to think that different evaluations, made by different actors, in different settings and that measure on different parameters are commensurable.

  • Synthesizing research requires coordination between actors, and problems must be addressed one a time. The evaluation practice in Denmark, consists of a flurry of actors measuring each their point of interest, rarely building on the efforts of others.
  • It is difficult to gauge the effectiveness of Edtech if it co-exists with commercial offerings (Facebook, Instagram, Youtube etc.) in the same interface as learning platforms and learning materials.
  • We need analogue control groups. The danish evaluations should be compared with schools that have used, or experimented with, analogue, remote teaching methods. This would create a clearer picture of the value of digital learning environments.
  • The potential of digital non-use should be explored to address the many sources of frustration. Potential to improve remote education by implementing non-use of commercial platforms, or to decrease the scope, the scale or the intensity of digital platforms needs to be investigated.
  • Finally: There is no sense in evaluating if consequences are not drawn! Results seem to show that digital learning environments consistently have failed to meet a lot of the hype from vendors throughout the decades. This should lead to a more systematically skeptical practice, vis-à-vis the adoption of Edtech, and risks should be shared between vendors and educational institutions.

Jesper Balslev

UNBLACK THE BOX ist eine im Jahr 2019 gegründete Netzwerkinitiative zum Thema Critical Data Literacy. Unser Impressum und unsere Datenschutzerklärung finden sich auf unserer Website.
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