Special Online Issue
 |
Edited by Diane McGrath |
formerly Journal of Research on Computing in
Education
Volume 28 Number 5 Summer 1996
Teaching Teleapprenticeships: An Innovative Model for Technology
Integration
in Teacher Education
Catherine O. Thurston, Evangeline D. Secaras, and James A. Levin
University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign
Abstract
Teachers need to be trained to skillfully integrate
technology
into their instruction. Teaching Teleapprenticeships (TTa), an
innovative program
at the College of Education at the University of Illinois at
Urbana-Champaign,
is in its fourth year of integrating technology into the preservice
experience
of undergraduate education majors. One group targeted by the TTa
researchers
has been the Year-Long Project (YLP), which involves elementary
education majors.
Data were collected on the impact of this program on the YLP through
surveys,
interviews, video, digital images, and a number of nontraditional
measures.
Results show that technology has become more than an add-on and more
than just
part of the curriculum they are studying; it is now an integral part
of the
students' personal as well as professional lives.
Acknowledgements
This material is based upon work supported by the
National Science
Foundation under Grant No. RED-9253423. The Government has certain
rights in
this material. Any opinions, findings, and conclusions or
recommendations expressed
in the material are those of the authors and do not necessarily
reflect the
views of the National Science Foundation.
The authors would like to acknowledge their
appreciation for
the support from the following: National Science Foundation, Apple
Computer,
Microsoft Corporation, Karl Koenke, Michael Waugh and the YLP staff
and students.
To view a version of this article formatted for printing click here
for Text-only
version.
Introduction
According to Technology and Teachers: Making the Connection(Office
of Technology Assessment, 1995), teachers are often overlooked in
the rush
to get technology into the schools. "In the process of equipping new
students
to learn with technology, a valuable - perhaps the most valuable -
part of the
education equation has been virtually overlooked: the teachers....
Despite over
a decade of investment in educational hardware and software,
relatively few
of the nation's 2.8 million teachers use technology in their teaching"
(foreword-iii).
Today, although many would agree that effective technology use is a
critical
component in the training of new teachers, it is not central to the
teacher
preparation experience in many teacher preparation institutions
nationwide.
"Most new teachers graduate from teacher preparation institutions with
limited
knowledge of the ways technology can be used in their professional
practice"
(OTA, 1995, p. 165). A powerful impetus can be
progressively
built up in the nation's schools if new teachers entering the
workforce are
trained to skillfully integrate technology into their teaching.

Click here for a TTa overview
(This link no longer valid)
At the University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign, an innovative model
integrationing
technology into teacher training, Teaching Teleapprenticeships (TTa),
has evolved
during the past four years. TTa, funded by the National Science
Foundation with
additional support from Apple Computer and the Microsoft Corporation,
has involved
College of Education faculty, student teachers, supervisors, research
assistants,
and undergraduates in a new approach to technology integration. The
TTa approach
infuses technology throughout the teacher preparation experience and
takes advantage
of interdisciplinary faculty teaming. This article explores the
successes of
the TTa model as indicated by a three-year study of the students'
experiences
in the year-long project (YLP), a program designed to facilitate the
transition
from student to elementary education teacher. For these students,
technology
has become more than an add-on, more than just part of the curriculum
they are
studying. It has become an integral part of their personal and their
professional
lives as beginning teachers.
Teaching Teleapprenticeships
TTa
http://www.ed.uiuc.edu/TTA/
is a new teacher education model (Levin, Waugh, Clift
& Brown,
1994) that extends the traditional face-to-face apprenticeships
currently
used in student teaching settings by using electronic networks to
provide a
more powerful context for learning in preservice and inservice
education courses.
Through network interactions and resource sharing, this model brings
together
the university coordinators, student teacher supervisors, school
district master
teachers, instructors, preservice teachers, and the students being
taught by
the student teachers.

Click
here for more on cross-disciplinary integration.
PowerBooks equipped with 14.4Kbps internal modems, communications
software
including Eudora, Netscape and Microsoft Works have been loaned to
groups of
student teachers, faculty, and university supervisors as a means to
communicate
and exchange teaching ideas and projects as part of the TTa research.
The project
staff, including faculty from several departments in the College of
Education
and a number of research assistants, have worked cooperatively with
college
preservice faculty to integrate technology through a number of the
pre-service
courses. A number of sections of the undergraduate classes have been
involved
in TTa, including the Introduction to Biology class (Levin,
Levin & Boehmer, 1994), the YLP for elementary education students,
math
methods, science methods, English methods, and others. Rather than
teach education
majors one specific undergraduate course in technology, the model has
been to
infuse technology throughout a number of preservice classes, using
technology
both as a means of instruction and as a tool for teaching.
Year-Long Project (YLP)
The undergraduate elementary education students participating in the
YLP have
been involved in the TTa project for the last three years. This year,
49 students
in the YLP share 25 PowerBooks in teams of two. The course instructor,
a faculty
member in the Department of Curriculum and Instruction, cooperatively
plans
the technology strand with the TTa project staff. This team provides
instruction
on technology, conducts hands-on workshops, documents the class's work
with
the technology, and staffs an office for full-time technical
assistance.
Much of the students' work is assigned and completed electronically.
The students
and the faculty participate in a number of mail reflector lists on the
College
of Education's Learning Resource
Server (LRS),
a server designed to house and support instructional materials. All of
the students
are expected to use technology throughout the YLP experience, and they
are encouraged
to use their PowerBooks in their assigned schools as well.
Technology instruction includes use of e-mail and Eudora, use of the
World
Wide Web, integration of multimedia into the curriculum, use of such
teaching
tools as a database and a spreadsheet, use of "wizards" to create
presentations
and newsletters, use of digitization tools such as scanners and
digital cameras,
use of presentation hardware such as an LCD panel and presenter box,
and creation
of personal homepages on the Web (http://www.ed.uiuc.edu/ylp95-96/
or http://www.ed.uiuc.edu/ylp94-95/).
Students are required to develop a mini unit for their classes. They must use
Internet resources in creating this unit. The best units from the 1994-1995
YLP class are posted on the Web, and the class of 1995-96 has been interested
in following the number of "hits" the preceding year's class has been getting
on the Web. For example, in November, 1995, the miniunits were accessed 1,301
times by people around the world. Seven countries outside of the United States
and at least fifteen states within the U.S. were represented. Interestingly,
less than 10% of the hits came from the University of Illinois.
Students have been enthusiastic about this new approach to
technology. Most
are reluctant to part with their PowerBooks when they leave the
program. Analysis
of e-mail exchanges, access to the LRS, interviews, video, digitized
images,
biannual survey data, and some additional nontraditional measures have
helped
TTa researchers document the success of their model by tracking the
integration
of technology into the professional and private lives of the YLP
students.
Indicators of Integration
TTa researchers have been collecting responses to student surveys at
the end
of each semester. The students have answered questions concerning
problems they've
had, successes they've experienced, and other concerns as well as the
extent
to which they have used the Web and e-mail (http://www.ed.uiuc.edu/ylp95-96/).
During the fall 1995 semester, 47 of the 49 students in the YLP
responded to
the survey. Of these 47, 85% indicated they found e-mail was either
"helpful"
or "very helpful" in the completion of classwork and assignments, and
54% reported
finding the Web either "helpful" or "very helpful" in completing
coursework.
At the end of the spring 1995 semester, the 45 members of the YLP
program for
1994-95 were surveyed as they were preparing to graduate and look for
their
first teaching positions. One question asked how many were planning to
use technology
in their teaching the next year; 85% responded positively. Of all of
the uses
of technology listed, most indicated that they were likely to use
Internet tools.
They also said that they hoped to use multimedia applications and
tools such
as an electronic gradebook and a database to facilitate their
teaching.
The TTa researchers use the semester survey data to guide adaptations
and variations
in the course structure from one year to the next. Based on the
1994-1995 responses,
for example, the TTa group preassessed the 1995-1996 YLP students'
incoming
technology skills and made some attempt at grouping them according to
computer
skill level. This was done so that students with computer expertise
could learn
more advanced network applications while novice users were introduced
to the
Internet at a comfortable pace. In addition, based on student surveys,
more
hands-on opportunities were incorporated into the course structure.
The 1994
surveys queried students about their use of Gopher. By the 1995
surveys, the
course had eliminated instruction in Gopher and jumped to questions
about student
use of the Web.
An interesting indicator of the extent to which technology was
assimilated
into the thinking of the student teachers was reflected in their
sketches of
the ideal classroom. Traditionally in the student teaching curriculum,
a standard
assignment has been for the students in elementary education to draw a
floor
plan of the ideal classroom. The YLP faculty made this assignment as
usual in
the fall of 1994, with no mention of technology. Surprisingly,
technology appeared
to have permeated the consciousness of 37 out of the 45 students. With
no prompting,
these students included classroom computers in various configurations
in their
ideal classrooms. The previous year only 4 of the 45 students included
one or
more computers in their ideal classrooms.
A more powerful measure of the impact of the technology was the
evidence that
the student teachers used e-mail and their group mail reflector not
only to
complete coursework, find Internet resources for their mini units, and
correspond
with their instructors, but also to plan TGIF parties, design a class
T-shirt,
and put out requests for extra graduation tickets.
An early draft of Standards for English Language Arts
published by the
National Council of Teachers of English (1994) and the International
Reading
Association states that
literacy is profoundly social. Literacy develops in response
to students'
needs to participate in larger and larger language communities, both
at home
and in the school. From infancy through adulthood, language and
literacy are
best learned in social relationships with others and through
purposeful and
challenging engagements in meaningful activity (p.4).
Technological literacy is also a profoundly social experience,
observable in
group interactions, in forging new connections beyond walls, and in
the cooperative
learning that comes from sharing resources.
Click
here to see some group interactions
With the demand for PowerBooks outstripping the number of available
machines,
necessity forced sharing of PowerBooks in several of the larger
sections of
the courses. Although admittedly inconvenient, it may have had some
hidden benefits,
resulting from forced sharing and teamwork. A recent report (West,
1995) based on the research done in Apple Classrooms of Tomorrow
(ACOT)
suggests that less may be more. The study suggests that students
working in
clusters or small groups with computers may actually benefit from the
group
work, and that rather than being an isolating experience, computer
work is conducive
to cooperative, small-group efforts.
Another nontraditional indicator of the level of integration of
technology
into the social lives of the student teachers came as they planned
their end-of-the-year
party. The students wrote a skit, accompanied by a giant storybook
entitled
Adventures in YLP Land, in which various students wrote
adventure stories.
In one, a character became trapped in an endless listserve, able to
escape only
when he learned to click his heels three times while chanting
"unsubscribe!
unsubscribe! unsubscribe!"

Click
here to look at some video and images
A final graphic measure of the students' integration of technology is
documented
with video from their actual student teaching experiences. Students
were not
required to take PowerBooks to schools with them, nor was there a
technology
requirement in 1994 or 1995 for their actual student teaching.
Nevertheless,
a number of them chose to integrate technology into their lessons.
Video footage
from some of these classrooms documents their use of the technology in
their
teaching experience.
The continuous infusion of technology as a strand in the preservice
program
has already provided some dramatic results. As reported by the OTA
(1995),
Telling students what is possible is not enough, they must see
technology
used by their instructors, observe the use of technological tools in
their
classrooms, and practice teaching with technology themselves if they
are to
use these tools effectively in their own teaching (p. 184)
Lessons Learned
The TTa model is constantly evolving as researchers and faculty learn
from their
efforts and refine the program from one year to the next. As the project
scales
up to include more students, it is important to keep in mind some of the
lessons
learned thus far. Following are a few observations:
- Students benefit from sharing and working in small groups or in
teams of
two as they learn new technologies. A mathematics instructor
commented "The
101/219 students merely see the potential and are 'going ape' over
the possibilities.
It is the best thing we have tried. I see that if they can learn
about math
and math teaching in a new and different way, they are more apt to
teach differently
themselves."
- A key element in the success of this effort has been the strong
technical
support available to the student teachers. A walk-in office, staffed
by research
assistants all day, has been able to provide immediate help for most
technical
problems. As a result, we received a very revealing response when we
asked
the student teachers in the YLP group in December 1995 what their
biggest
problems using technology were. A majority wrote "none," did not
answer, or
wrote "n/a." Of the 22 who did indicate problems, purely technical
problems
were reported by about five students, such as "PowerBook problems,"
or "battery
problems." Many complained of access-related problems such as having
to share
PowerBooks, not having enough live phone lines in the classroom, or
not having
enough printers. These could be viewed as successes because they
indicate
a desire on the part of the students to increase their use of the
technology.
A third group reported problems with instruction-related items, such
as wanting
more detailed documentation.
- As reported in surveys and interviews, as much hands-on experience
as possible
with technology, rather than lectures and demonstrations, is
critical. Every
semester the faculty has seen a need to increase the hands-on
opportunities
for the students. Even with increased lab time in the fall semester
of 1995,
the evaluations still had a number of responses to "What suggestions
would
you make for changes for next year?" These responses included "more
lab time,"
"more access to computer room," "more computers with modem hookups"
or "more
time hooked up."
- Real classroom teachers who use technology effectively are the
best role
models as instructional leaders. Whenever possible, it is important
to involve
them in the technology strand of teacher education, bringing them in
to give
demonstrations of their own technology uses or involving them
through network
interactions with undergraduate education students.
- The contextualization of technology is critical. If student
teachers use
the Web to find resources for units they are creating, to connect
with classrooms
across the world for classroom curriculum projects, or to learn to
create
digitized images of themselves and their students for their personal
Web pages,
the technology becomes a means to an end rather than an end unto
itself, and
thus, is much more effective.
As the OTA (1995) report concludes,
There are approximately 1300 institutions of higher
education preparing
future teachers in this country. In the 1990-91 school year, nearly
100,000
student teachers graduated with a bachelors degree in teacher
education in the
United States. In the next decade, the nation's schools will need to
hire about
2 million teachers (p. 166).
Ideally, these new teachers should be able to use a range of
technological tools
to provide effective instruction and help their student teachers
become comfortable
with and knowledgeable about technology. The most direct and
cost-effective
way to educate teachers about technology is through the preservice
education
they receive in colleges of education or other institutions.
As colleges of education move into the area of technology training,
it becomes
increasingly important to document the successes and failures,
publicize recommendations
for future action, and raise the general awareness of the critical
need we face
to provide effective instruction for technology integration for these
next two
million teachers.
References
Conte, C., Commmunications Development Incorporated of Washington
DC, & Kopp, K. (1995). The learning connection: Will the information highway transform
schools and prepare students for the twenty-first century? Benton Foundation Communications
Policy Project [On-line]. An updated version of this article is currently (7/99)
available at: http://www.benton.org/Library/Schools/ (Link no longer valid).
Levin,
J. A., Riel,
M., Miyake,
N., & Cohen,
M. (1987) Education on the electronic frontier: Teleapprentices in
globally
distributed educational contexts. Educational Psychology, 12,
254-260
Levin, S., Levin, J., & Boehmer, R. (1994, April). Teaching
Teleapprenticeships
in a freshman biology course. Paper presented at the annual meeting
of the
American Educational Research Association, New Orleans, LA.
Levin, J., Waugh,
M., Brown, D., & Clift,
R. (1994). Teaching Teleapprenticeships: A new organizational framework
for improving teacher education using electronic networks.Journal of Machine-Mediated
Learning, 4 (2 & 3), 149-161.
National Council of Teachers of English. (1994).
Standards
for English language Arts. Unpublished draft.
Office of Technology Assessment (1995). Teachers and
technology: Making the connection (OTA-EHR-616). Washington, DC: U.S. Government
Printing Office.
West, P. (1995). With computers, Apple project
finds less
may be more. Education Week, 11, 6-8.
Contributors

Catherine O. Thurston
Catherine Thurston is Project Director of the Teaching
Teleapprenticeships
Project, College of Education at the University of Illinois,
Urbana-Champaign.
She has been involved with a series of educational technology
initiatives at
the university for the past 8 years. She is particularly interested in
issues
of staff development and technology use in teacher training. (Address:
Office
of Teleapprenticeships, 32 Education Building, UIUC, 1310 S. Sixth
St., Champaign,
IL 61820. E-mail: cthursto@uiuc.edu).

Evangeline "Vanna" D. Secaras
Evangeline Secaras is a Doctoral Candidate at the University of
Illinois, College
of Education in the Department of Educational Psychology. Her
specialization
is in the use of multimedia in the K-12 classroom. Her research
interests include
how the use of multimedia affects the way teachers teach and the way
students
learn and what impact this would have on visual literacy in the 21st
Century.
(Address: Office of Teleapprenticeships, 32 Education Building, UIUC,
1310 S.
Sixth St., Champaign, IL 61820. E-mail: esecaras@uiuc.edu).

James A. Levin
Dr. James Levin is a professor in the College of Education at the
University
of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. He says of himself, "For many years I
have
been exploring ways in which technology can be used to improve
education. I
am especially excited by the ways in which new communication
technologies fundamentally
change the relationship between education and the rest of society."
(Address:
Office of Teleapprenticeships, 32 Education Building, UIUC, 1310 S.
Sixth St.,
Champaign, IL 61820. Email: j-levin@uiuc.edu).
Designer

Xueqin (Jean) Zhang
Xueqin Zhang was a doctoral student in Educational Computing, Design, and Telecommunications
at Kansas State University during the 1995-96 year.
She has since moved to California and has found work in Silicon Valley.
Copyright © 1996, ISTE (International Society for Technology
in Education).
All rights reserved.
| integration, technology,
teacher education, teleapprenticeships |
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