
We are in the early stages of the revolution, but still we are asking ourselves, “Can technology really help students learn?” Because of the significant amount of resources we are investing in hardware and software, certainly we must believe that technology will help, and there is growing evidence that test scores and retention can improve if technology is used appropriately in the learning process. When school administrators are asked the question, they firmly believe that technology helps teachers and students succeed.
I think so too, and here’s one reason.
Every October I participate in Mayor Daley’s “Principal for a Day” program, where hundreds of Chicago business people spend a day playing principal at an inner-city school. This year, I was in a 7th grade science class helping a group of kids of varying abilities find a way to test their own hypotheses. I was working with a girl whose hypothesis was that gender made a difference in the type of fingerprints.