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Improving Education With Technology

Why Two Former Skeptics Have Joined the Revolution
By William J. Bennett & David Gelernter — March 14, 2001 5 min read
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Like many others who have devoted their professional lives to education, we are longtime skeptics about computers in schools. Too often, new technology has been used to kill time instead of teach better. Too often, educational software has promoted glitz, glamour, and graphics instead of serious learning. Too often, the Internet has promoted the “surfing culture” where users click their way across an ocean of information, feeling overwhelmed by the vastness of it all and never dipping below the surface.

Why, then, are we helping build K12, an online school? ( “Former Education Secretary Starts Online-Learning Venture,” Jan. 10, 2001.) Because the technology is hugely promising and powerful all the same. It has been misused, yes, but much of the technology is brand-new. The recent report issued by Congress’ bipartisan Web- Based Education Commission, led by former Sen. Bob Kerrey of Nebraska, argued that educational technology has not yet moved from “promise to practice.” The report concluded nevertheless that “the power of the Internet to transform the educational experience is awe-inspiring.” We agree.

Instead of drawing attention to itself, the well-wrought educational computer should fade into the background. It should attract no more notice than a clean window through which one looks. In the learning technology that we are involved in developing, the computer will become a two-person midget sub, allowing adult and child (seated side by side) to move forward at their own pace and go virtually anywhere—through teeming coral reefs and crowded seas and into the heart of our intellectual and civic heritage, without worrying about logistics or bookkeeping. Adult and child will decide together how fast to move along—when to speed forward, when to go back and repeat, and when to dive even deeper.

The Internet-connected computer can supply structure and a sense of forward motion through a school day, term, or year to a child who is working at home with parents or under a charter school’s auspices. It can allow parents or teachers to lay out a child’s education (one course or many) with as much expert guidance as they like. It can allow them to visualize a whole year in advance, and then show them at every stage how well each child is doing, and exactly how far each one has come.

It can put children in touch with each other and with the world. It can put parents in touch with other parents, with excellent teachers, and with tutors and other consultants. It can create the feel of an actual school with its own school community. It can help motivate, stimulate, entertain, and keep children informed about the world. In sum, it can help deliver a world-class education to virtually any child or adult almost anyplace in the world.

No online school will succeed unless the teaching material it offers is good enough to stand on its own, without computers or technology to jazz it up. After all, the proper role of the computer is not to replace but to facilitate a rigorous education. The online school that keeps its students glued to a machine all day is destined to fail. Indeed, at any successful online school, book reading will be the heart of education. (We have no objection to delivering books electronically, but old-fashioned books on paper are so much better designed and easier to use that we are in no hurry to toss them out.) Our students will become fluent keyboardists, but they will learn to be fluent at writing and figuring on paper, too.

So what exactly does the computer do? It lays down a path that adult and child can follow confidently step by step, without fiddling with road maps. The path adapts to the student automatically. An online class shouldn’t be a do-it- yourself grab bag; the computer provides structure and creates a coherent package out of the material all children should learn, undiluted by fad or fashion. We compare a computer to a vehicle on purpose: When you are driving or sailing or flying, it’s the view outside that counts, not the dashboard. In education, it’s the content that counts, not the computer.

But software can take children places they could never go otherwise, and show them fascinating new things. We wouldn’t be in this business if we weren’t excited about the possibilities. Software can turn the computer screen into a transparent porthole with a 3-D scene on the other side. After you have read chapter 5 of your American-history book, the next step in your history path might show you a 3-D terrain map of Lexington and Concord, or the Panama Canal. But whenever we present this information, our goal is to get students to spend longer on a topic and dive deeper, not to have them skim like skipped stones from one fancy picture to the next.

In any successful online school, each step the child takes will be added automatically to a comprehensive “log.” The log records a child’s whole education—each lesson and worksheet, each book report and exam. You can look up anything for reference or review. You can show any piece to a consulting teacher for advice. You can show highlights to a college admissions officer, prospective employer, or anyone else who needs to know what the child has actually done. A child’s education becomes a tangible thing. For schools (online or off) to be accountable, parents must be able to see, step by step, exactly what education their children are getting.

Ideally, America’s schools in 2001 would be so good we wouldn’t want to change a thing. Ideally, every child would sit in a friendly classroom and learn from a wise and knowing teacher with access to a rich curriculum and good books. Of course, such classrooms and teachers still exist. They should be applauded, rewarded, and replicated. But education in America is off course, and we need to use every tool that exists to improve things. Under the circumstances, it would be negligent not to use computers in attacking the problem. Computers are neither good nor bad in themselves. If we use them well, that makes them good.

Online schools will soon be available and affordable to every family in America. The charter school movement is growing. Many public schools are working hard, too. They all need the best tools we can give them— tools to be used in the smartest ways and for the highest purposes. Education is our most important job as a nation, and there is no excuse for fobbing it off with mere state-of-the-art technology. We need to move the state of the art forward, starting right now.

A version of this article appeared in the March 14, 2001 edition of Education Week as Improving Education With Technology

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