SMART Board Center Stage on Back-to-School Night

Wed Sep 19, 2007 7:17AM EDT

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Since my first Back-to-School Night nine years ago at my kids' elementary school, the routine has been pretty much the same. The principal stands up before an auditorium full of parents and speaks. In the classroom, the teacher stands at the front of the class and talks about what the kids will be working on throughout the year.

This year was different. This year, it was all about the technology. The principal, reading from prepared remarks in her office conference room, was beamed into classrooms onto the school's 28 SMART Boards to tell us about all of the new SMART Boards in the K-5 school. The PTO co-presidents made their pitch for supporting the PTO the same way.

Afterward, my daughter's 5th grade teacher talked about the school-year goals with the help of a PowerPoint presentation that she tapped along with her knuckle on the large-screen electronic white board. Then she went online on the SMART Board to show us Moodle, the online site where kids can do assignments, write on blogs, and talk to each other about school work. She spent most of the night tapping around the screen to show us what the kids have been doing on the site—writing their reflections on math, writing, reading, and about books they have been reading and want to read.

The interactive white board mirrors what's on a computer in the classroom. The board is touch-sensitive and a digital projector displays what's on the computer screen on the board. You can control the computer applications by touching the board, add things using digital ink markers, then save the work done on the board for future work or for students who aren't in school that day.  

We spent the entire session in half darkness staring in awe at the SMART Board. Next year, it will no longer be a novelty, I'm sure, just another fixture in the classroom. I've seen technology take on a bigger and bigger role in my children's school day in the past decade, and now it is front and center. And the kids, who spend their time moving between all kinds of screens, love it. For now, they are paying attention.

"Let me tell you, your children are really comfortable with technology," the fifth grade teacher told us. "I've learned a lot."

By the way, she also mentioned by fifth grade, kids should have their multiplication facts down cold, and lots of the kids do not. We'll be using some low-tech index cards to practice some old-fashioned multiplication between keyboarding sessions at home this fall.

Related: Moodle Extends the Classroom Online 

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  • 1 Posted by surfwiththewaves485 on Wed Sep 19, 2007 12:30PM EDT Report Abuse

    All they are good smartboards, they are nothing special, we have used theme for years at my school and college.

  • 2 Posted by galtonjisix on Wed Sep 19, 2007 5:05PM EDT Report Abuse

    As a big fan of technology, this sounds very cool. As a long suffering property tax payer in one of the highest tax states around (NJ), in one of the wealthier towns that seems to believe that nothing is too good for our kids ... I have to say "NO THANKS!". Of course, there are obvious benefits to this tech in our schools, but do we REALLY need it? Gerard

  • 3 Posted by sherpapraxis on Thu Sep 20, 2007 7:08AM EDT Report Abuse

    Smart Boards are good for any technical learning environment, if the instructor can adapt. It's a whole different method of presenting material. I learned from one during a six month training course, and my kids in Dallas school. But, the impact on school age kids is lost in generational differences. Teachers want to teach, but the kids want to be "wow"ed. For kids, throw the boards and computers out, and stick to the white-boards. The average kid learns best through muscle-memory, not a mouse-click.

  • 4 Posted by luis_martinez03 on Sat Sep 22, 2007 7:24AM EDT Report Abuse

    SmartBoards have been around for awhile. I first used one when I was in 8th grade, which was four years ago. Back then, it was something new and amazing. Now, it's pretty common in a lot of classrooms. While some of the people in the above comments seem to think SmartBoards are not all that great, they're wrong. No, I'm not a big fan of SmartBoards but you have to admit they have several benefits over regular chalkboards. For instance, teachers can write things up ahead of time so they don't have to spend classtime actually writing the stuff out. They can also write more because the software that comes with a SmartBoard lets them creat different "pages" and they can make as many as they want whereas on a chalkboard they're bound to run out of space and so they'd have to go erase something that could've been useful for their next class and then they'd have to write it over for the next class and take up time again. SmartBoards can also be hooked up to a scanner so teachers can scan worksheets and display them on the SmartBoard and save tree's by not having to run copies of those worksheets for all the students in the class. If anything, SmartBoards are fun to use and kids, like myself, love the idea of tapping on the screen. There's just something about it. :D But, what I really want to say about that is that even if SmartBoards seem like a waste of money to you, SmartBoards can get children's attention. It's hard to teach someone if you don't have their attention so getting a child's attention, to me, is a SmartBoard's best benefit because then teachers can teach them what they need to be taught; and knowledge is priceless. You may not be a SmartBoard fan but like I said, you can't deny that they're more useful than regular chalkboards.

  • 5 Posted by laurenloogomez on Tue Oct 16, 2007 11:53PM EDT Report Abuse

    my music teacher had 1 last year. it was awesome. but now my teachers dont even have overheads :(

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