Ed Tech advocates say, "We should teach students how to use technology with a purpose."
Do we teach students how to use a pencil, an eraser, or paper with purpose?
No, we don't start with the device, then teach students the ways in which to use the device; we start with the purpose, that which needs to be taught, not the device. The device is actually only relevant in its ability to serve the purpose.
If the device does not serve the instructional purposes, acccording to the judgment of the teacher, it has no place in instruction.
We also don't sit around inventing ways to use a pencil or paper in the classroom. We use them when they suit our instructional purpose, which comes first.
Education has gotten this wrong quite often in the past. We exchange our instructional purpose for the technology to achieve that purpose and spend all our time on the technology.
Too often, Ed Tech confuses the technology as the objective and the purpose.
Education should never be about teaching how to use technology with a purpose; it should be teaching and instruction as the purpose, and the technology might or might not help in that.
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