The mistake made in 2000s was a school leadership-driven imposition of technology on teachers.
The mistake was requiring teachers to “demonstrate that they were teaching with technology” in the doctrinally-dictated manner prescribed by EdTech and their so-called experts.
Technology should never have been imposed upon teachers.
It should have never appeared any where in standards for teacher evaluations.
School administrators should have never engaged in so-called policing operations called “classroom walk-throughs” in order to ensure compliance with so-called “teaching with technology.”
This is because technology is simply a tool. The teacher and students should be in charge of whether or not that tool is used.
Technology use by teachers or students should never be a standard or an outcome; it simply should be there if the teacher chooses to use it, and if it is needed.
By imposing technology on teachers and students, perhaps that is why we are now in the era of screen-bans. This is because the emphasis in the 2000s was not teaching and learning or even curriculum, even though the EdTech boosters said it was. It was technology.
The emphasis in the 2000s by Edtech and over-enthusiastic school leaders was THE TECHNOLOGY. It was placed central to learning, and now we know that was the mistake. That’s why there are pressures to take away the tech toys.
Now, AI boosters and educators trying to make a living and careers on a new technology are making the EXACT SAME MISTAKE.
They are putting their shiny new toy, articifical intelligence, ahead of students, ahead of teachers, ahead of curriculum.
These individuals are dumping curriculum and sacrificing everything just to get this new technology an exalted place in the educational institutions.
The end result will be that in 10 to 20 years, we once again will have sacrificed everything in education to exalt another technololgy.
The sensible thing for school leaders at this point is not to jump on the AI bandwagon fad with both feet. The sensible thing is demand all these individuals to back off.
There is no place in teaching standards, learning standards, or any educational standards for anything AI. Teaching AI is shortsighted and plain educational malpractice.
It is just a tool, that’s it. If it has a legitimate use in education, educators will use it.
If we impose AI on educators, on students, and on curriculum, it will simply be a checkbox, a hoop to jump through, and any use of the technology will be inauthentic and bizarre.
For school leaders, there’s no need to elevate a technology to a place beyond an item in the teaching and learning tool list.
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