Teachers divided over the merits of Facebook and
Youtube in the classroom
- Tech-savvy parents are the biggest
advocates of Web 2.0 in schools and
colleges
- Almost half of children vote Wikipedia
top tool for education
4th September 2008. Teachers are
split over the merits of Web 2.0 tools in the classroom, according
to research conducted for ntl:Telewest Business. Half of teachers
questioned believe that Web 2.0 applications, such as Facebook,
MySpace, YouTube and Wikipedia are valuable educational tools, yet
the rest felt they are a distraction with no real academic
benefit.
This confusion over the advantages of Web
2.0 tools in the classroom can be linked to teachers being in the
dark when it comes to next generation applications. A fifth of all
teachers polled felt that when it came to Web 2.0 tools, they
lacked the knowledge or training to integrate them into their
lessons. Another key barrier to their adoption in the classroom
proved to be security concerns. Almost a quarter of teachers worry
about the amount of personal information that students disclose
online and their behaviour when using social networking sites.
Tech-savvy parents are the biggest
advocates of Web 2.0 technologies, with two thirds of parents
feeling that the tools were useful for engaging and teaching
children as they encouraged creativity and helped students to
develop their communications skills.
Dave Alderson, Public Sector Specialist,
ntl:Telewest Business, said: “Web 2.0 has really crept up on the
school system as social networking sites, blogs and YouTube have
become a global phenomenon in a relatively short space of time.
Many of today’s pupils live and breathe this technology, using
applications such as instant messaging, Facebook, MySpace and
Wikipedia every day to create content, communicate and collaborate
with people worldwide. Whilst security is a valid concern, there
are measures that can be put in place to address this.”
“Schools and colleges need to ask themselves
if they are living up to the expectations of the digital
generation. The interactive and collaborative nature of Web 2.0
tools is ideal for engaging children in the classroom and nurtures
the skills and enthusiasm they have developed at home.”
According to the study, next generation
applications are now an integral part of children’s personal
lives:
- 54 per cent of 13 to 18 year-olds use YouTube in their spare
time
- Half use social networking sites
- 47 per cent use Wikipedia
When children were asked what Web 2.0 tools
would be useful at school:
- 44 per cent stated Wikipedia
- 35 per cent chose instant messaging
- 34 per cent said YouTube
However, less than a fifth of teachers used
Wikipedia as a resource in classrooms and only five per cent used
YouTube. Even general internet information sites only scored 14 per
cent of teachers’ votes, despite the fact that almost a third felt
the internet had added the most value to education.
Mr Alderson added: “Our study reveals that
there is a Web 2.0 chasm between the tools that children would like
to see in the classroom and what teachers are actually using. The
key to using these tools effectively though, is having the right
infrastructure to deliver them. Schools and colleges need to have a
robust Next Generation Network (NGN) in place that can provide
sufficient bandwidth and resilience to support media-rich
applications and offer the necessary foundation for a
collaborative, digital environment.
“Some schools and colleges are in the early
stages of adoption and it is only a matter of time before Web 2.0
takes on a more extensive role in the classroom. Whether using
YouTube to view the latest videos from around the world in
geography, or visiting Facebook sites to collaborate with other
students, schools need a provider that can help them plan, design,
and implement the technology required to deliver to the digital
generation, the interactive education they demand.”
ntl:Telewest Business is a major next
generation telecoms supplier to the education sector, working with
leading institutions such as Hillingdon Grid for Learning,
Cambridgeshire County Council and Hertfordshire Grid for Learning.
By combining its NGN capability with a customer-centric mindset,
ntl:Telewest Business designs and implements networks to meet each
customers individual requirements.
Notes to the
editor:
LM Research interviewed 1,500
teachers, parents and students nationwide. The teachers were based
at secondary schools, sixth form colleges and Further Education
colleges. The parents questioned had children aged 13 to 18 years
old and the children surveyed were aged 13 to 18 years old.
About ntl:Telewest
Business
ntl:Telewest Business has the most advanced of
the UK’s two national
networks. Its vast nation-wide Next
Generation Network provides businesses,
public sector organisations and
service providers across the UK with a
complete portfolio of advanced data,
internet and voice services. The
£13billion network is flexible,
scaleable and is already built out to more than
38,000 street cabinets across the
UK.As part of a commitment to deliver superior customer service,
ntl:Telewest Business sales and support teams are located in close
proximity to its customers in over 40 centres across the UK.
ntl:Telewest Business is trusted to provide critical communications
to high profile
customers including Yorkshire Water
and EasyJet.
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ntl:Telewest Business
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