69传媒

Special Report
Classroom Technology Q&A

How to Make Tech Use in 69传媒 Easier on Teachers

By Arianna Prothero 鈥 March 08, 2022 5 min read
Illustration of Q and A speech bubbles.
  • Save to favorites
  • Print
Email Copy URL

The pandemic greatly accelerated the use of technology in classrooms. But two years in, with nearly all students now learning in person, how can education technology leaders maintain鈥攁nd even advance鈥teachers鈥 newfound skills while being sensitive to the fact that educators may be burnt out on technology?

One way is by providing ongoing support and resources to teachers without burdening them with additional obligations, said Heather Esposito, a teacher technology coach for the Cherry Hill school district in New Jersey. She has done this by providing ed-tech professional development that counts toward teachers鈥 required PD hours or by dropping into teachers鈥 professional learning community sessions to offer support and strategies on improving their teaching skills.

鈥淚鈥檓 trying to make it a natural fit, so it doesn鈥檛 feel like an add-on,鈥 she said.

Collaboration among teachers actually increased during the pandemic, Esposito said, as teachers started leveraging technology to share lessons, ideas, resources, and best practices, and she doesn鈥檛 want to lose the ground educators in her district gained during the height of the pandemic. Esposito shared with Education Week her strategies for building on teachers鈥 emerging tech skills and combating tech fatigue. This interview has been edited for length and clarity.

Heather Esposito

Education Week: How are schools in your district taking advantage of teachers鈥 newfound technology skills?

Esposito: At the onset of the pandemic, we invested a lot of time and energy into professional development and sharing best practices.

Today, we are still incorporating both in-person and online professional-development opportunities so that teachers can continue to enhance instruction with technology. My role in that has been a lot of supporting teachers. All of this stuff you created last year, how do you now utilize it in a different setting to make an impact?

Are you seeing any tech burnout in your teachers, and what are you doing to address it?

Absolutely.

One of the biggest things I was committed to at the beginning of the year is to help teachers feel like, yes, you amassed this incredible amount of lessons and slideshows and all this stuff, but it鈥檚 never tech for just tech鈥檚 sake. Use it when you remember a success you had with it last year, try it again. Or let me help you reimagine it in a different way.

Even though teachers say there are hundreds of different platforms they should be using, I say don鈥檛. Take a couple that work for your skill set, that lend themselves to your content area or grade.

Teachers have also noticed, especially in the middle and secondary grades, that a lot of the platforms and things they tried last year are actually taking some of the burden off of themselves because they are student-facilitated, student-driven work.

For instance, if a teacher created a HyperDoc or a Google site with embedded tasks or strategies, that鈥檚 something the kids are working on at their own pace. And now, a teacher doesn鈥檛 have to wait for a project to be turned in at the end; the teacher can pace him or herself by leaving feedback during the process.

I鈥檓 helping teachers find some of the ways that technology can help make their lives easier. Like a flipped learning model within the school day鈥攖he teacher in that case becomes the facilitator of learning. It鈥檚 not just that the technology is there but how you can weave the technology within your class day that can free you up to give you the chance to conference with kids or to walk around the room more because you鈥檙e not feeling like you have to stand at the front of the room so much.

I always say less is more. Even though teachers say there are hundreds of different platforms they should be using, I say don鈥檛. Take a couple that work for your skill set, that lend themselves to your content area or grade. That has alleviated some of the fatigue, knowing that [they] don鈥檛 have to use everything. You have a toolbox and you pick what works for you.

How about students or even parents? Are they tired of all the technology use?

We try to encourage teachers to blend the old with the new. Not everything should be on a computer. The computer doesn鈥檛 have to go home every day. Let it stay at school.

As far as the parents, I think the parents have in general come to see things are a lot easier when you can access your kids鈥 grades online, when you can communicate for a quick meeting with a teacher via Google Meet rather than scheduling an in-person parent conference. I think we are all in a state of transition where everyone is trying to feel out a good balance.

How concerned are you that tech burnout is going to undermine the gains in education technology that were made during the pandemic and this massive experiment in virtual learning?

I鈥檓 not concerned. So, there is this continuum, I think it鈥檚 called the diffusion of innovation theory. Everyone falls on the continuum. There are people like me who jump off the boat without a life jacket when it comes to technology and innovation and trying new things. Then there are people who will dip their toe in the water and then jump in. And then there are people who are on the island, in their life jackets, saying I am never, ever going to leave. The people who say they are never, ever going to leave, they are going to experience the fatigue and not come out of it.

Invite teachers into the conversation. Do focus groups, follow up on surveys. That is going to boost morale, it鈥檚 going to make everyone aware of where issues might be, so that you can correct them.

But the majority of folks are in a good place on the continuum where the fatigue will pass, they will find their rhythm. They鈥檙e going to be fine. So, I鈥檓 not worried about what this is going to do to the ed-tech world.

What do you think is the biggest impediment in Cherry Hill to using tech in teaching?

Time. The worst thing you can say to a teacher right now is to focus on self-care, because that requires time, and teachers want things taken off their plate, not put on their plate. Sometimes, when you think about tech, you think about it as something else on my plate.

That鈥檚 why I try to frame it as let鈥檚 find ways to make this seamless so it鈥檚 not feeling like something extra. The most challenging thing is the lack of time or the perceived lack of time.

What else should district leaders, principals, and teachers know about how to improve the use of technology in schools?

They should continually tap into student voice, teacher voice, and surveys. We do a thing called Thought Exchange. It鈥檚 a survey with open-ended pieces and it鈥檚 anonymous. We have done those at various points of the year because if you don鈥檛 ask, you don鈥檛 know, and if you don鈥檛 know, you鈥檙e going to make assumptions. Invite teachers into the conversation. Do focus groups, follow up on surveys. That is going to boost morale, it鈥檚 going to make everyone aware of where issues might be, so that you can correct them.

Events

School & District Management Webinar Crafting Outcomes-Based Contracts That Work for Everyone
Discover the power of outcomes-based contracts and how they can drive student achievement.
This content is provided by our sponsor. It is not written by and does not necessarily reflect the views of Education Week's editorial staff.
Sponsor
School & District Management Webinar
Harnessing AI to Address Chronic Absenteeism in 69传媒
Learn how AI can help your district improve student attendance and boost academic outcomes.
Content provided by 
School & District Management Webinar EdMarketer Quick Hit: What鈥檚 Trending among K-12 Leaders?
What issues are keeping K-12 leaders up at night? Join us for EdMarketer Quick Hit: What鈥檚 Trending among K-12 Leaders?

EdWeek Top School Jobs

Teacher Jobs
Search over ten thousand teaching jobs nationwide 鈥 elementary, middle, high school and more.
Principal Jobs
Find hundreds of jobs for principals, assistant principals, and other school leadership roles.
Administrator Jobs
Over a thousand district-level jobs: superintendents, directors, more.
Support Staff Jobs
Search thousands of jobs, from paraprofessionals to counselors and more.

Read Next

Classroom Technology Opinion Has Technology Been Bad for 69传媒 and Learning?
Education technology is supposed to build knowledge. We need to wrestle with the possibility that it might not.
7 min read
The United States Capitol building as a bookcase filled with red, white, and blue policy books in a Washington DC landscape.
Luca D'Urbino for Education Week
Classroom Technology Opinion Why School Cellphone Bans Are a Bad Idea
We cannot ignore the powerful relationship between students and their phones鈥攁nd what they mean for equity in our most challenged schools.
Brandon Cardet-Hernandez
4 min read
Trendy halftone collage. Hand holding and using cell phone.
Natalya Kosarevich/iStock
Classroom Technology From Our Research Center How Strict Are School Cellphone Policies?
New survey data show that schools are trying a variety of approaches to curb students鈥 cellphone use.
2 min read
Young student using on smartphone in classroom
Leonardo Patrizi/iStock/Getty
Classroom Technology From Our Research Center How 69传媒 Are Dodging Cellphone Restrictions
69传媒鈥 efforts to restrict cellphone use have set up a battle of wits between teachers and students.
1 min read
A ninth grader places her cellphone in to a phone holder as she enters class at Delta High School, Friday, Feb. 23, 2024, in Delta, Utah. At the rural Utah school, there is a strict policy requiring students to check their phones at the door when entering every class. Each classroom has a cellphone storage unit that looks like an over-the-door shoe bag with three dozen smartphone-sized slots.
A 9th grader places her cellphone into a holder as she enters class at Delta High School in Delta, Utah, in February. The rural school has a strict policy requiring students to check their phones at the door when entering every class.
Rick Bowmer/AP