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Technology Literacy for the Nation and for Its Citizens

(This document was prepared at the request of the Intel Corporation
by Lajeane Thomas and Donald Knezek of the International Society
for Technology in Education)

Lajeane G. Thomas, Ed.D.
Donald G. Knezek, Ph.D.

Introduction

There exists in this nation a dangerously high percentage of otherwise educated citizens who share both an ignorance of the underlying principles of post-industrial technologies and an acceptance of that ignorance as inevitable (Fort, 1993). While the world economy depends increasingly on electronic digital technologies for collecting, processing, manipulating and using information, our school curricula continue to address the mathematics and science of out-dated tools.

"Throughout history, every significant increase in human productivity has involved better use of better tools."

          - R. Bennet,  Chair
            Utah Strategic Planning Commission (Utah SBE,1988)
 

Technology Literacy and Success in the Global Economy

Nations are leaders because of their invention and innovation with tools and processes. Whether the topic be agriculture, medicine, the economy, the military or influence on the masses (mass media), the status of a nation in the world community continues to be determined by the ability to invent or acquire modern tools and to master innovative processes with these tools. The tools and processes of this generation relate to information technologies, and it is on the basis of capacity for information processing that national haves and have-nots are emerging.

World technology leadership depends on our sustaining a national talent pool capable of technology invention and innovation. But unless students understand fundamental scientific principles of technology early in their academic careers, it is unlikely that their choices for in-depth study and career selection will include the science of technology. Eighty percent of students are not reared in a home environment that encourages the exploration of science and technology (Fort, 1993). Therefore, this talent pool can only be maximized if technology literacy is included in every student's schooling. If the large majority of tomorrow's workers do not achieve technology literacy, the nation may well find itself at technological standstill, for as James Rutherford points out in the Preface to Science for all Americans (1990), "without the continuous development and creative use of new technologies, society will limit its capacity ..." ( p. vii).

As modern technology threatens to take over many tasks performed by unskilled workers, there is a danger that displaced workers who have no technology skills will see their standard of living -- indeed their very ability to earn a living -- nose dive amid significant technology-based economic success by the nation. From now to the year 2000 five of the 10 fastest growing careers will be computer related (Cooksey, 1994). It is vital that as the U. S. positions itself for continued world technology leadership that capacity be built among all its citizens for understanding, coping with and applying emerging technologies.

Over half of the laws the Congress passes involve some aspect of science or technology, and the number of those continues to increase. For participatory democracy to succeed and for voters to make informed decisions about their lives and their environments, citizens must become familiar both with fundamental scientific principles underlying technology and with technology's impact on society. (Fort, 1993).

From an economic point of view, national technology literacy is critical on two fronts. First, as a nation we must be able to innovate in the development and application of technology to sustain the Unites States as a world economic leader. Second, as individuals we must be able to understand, deal with and use technology to our advantage in our personal and work-related lives. If this nation does not pursue technology literacy for every individual during and beyond the schooling process, talents for innovation in technology will be lost and economic success of individuals will be limited. It is necessary for business, education and government leaders to assess technology risks and opportunities for formulating effective technology policy and plans.

Defining Technology Literacy

Technology literacy is more than the understanding of current uses of technology, and it is more than the ability to use common technology-based tools according to a given prescription for achieving some specific outcome. Technology literacy involves:

  • demystifying technology through conceptual understandings of the underlying science and mathematics principles,
  • operational competence with modern technology systems,
  • the ability to evaluate and use a variety of common technology applications,
  • the ability to innovate and invent ways of applying technology in challenging new situations,
  • an awareness of technology-related careers and of factors critical to
  • success in those careers, and
  • understanding of and sensitivity to societal issues related to technology.

Modern technologies rely on digital representation of information. They use mathematical and logical operations on these representations to access, create, manage, and communicate information.

Information is accessed from a vast array of sources and is stored in a variety of formats and on a variety of media. Actions on information received may be very complex or extremely simple, but each is reduced to a set of logical or mathematical operations performed by a processing unit with one or more microprocessors at its heart. This processing unit also directs disposition of resulting information.

Technology literacy that we require as a nation and as individuals involves conceptualization, engineering, production and testing. To achieve technology literacy, learners must observe specific examples to illuminate these concepts, and they must try their own hand at constructing or modifying examples in laboratory and real-world settings.

Achieving Technology Literacy

Technology Literacy Among School-Aged Learners

International comparisons of student achievement in mathematics, science and technology place U.S. students far back in the pack. The International Assessment of Educational Progress test scores for 1991 imply that U.S. math and science education does not compare favorably against a list of countries including South Korea, Taiwan, Switzerland, Hungary, the former Soviet Union, Slovnia, Italy, Israel, Canada, France, Scotland, Spain, the United States, Ireland, and Jordan in order from highest scores to lowest (Thornburg, 1992). According to a study by the International Association for the Evaluation of Educational Achievement described in Time Magazine, ninth graders in the United States ranked 14th in science when measured against ninth graders in numerous other countries (Tifft, 1989). Our schools are not producing the future pool of science and technology innovators and managers this nation needs, and it is imperative that this change.

New technologies, especially those that are computer-based, are viewed as increasingly important tools. As early as 1983, the National Commission on Excellence in Education saw the need for all students to become technology literate as part of a basic high school education. Their report, A Nation at Risk recommended that high schools equip graduates to:

  • understand the computer as an information computation, and communication device;
  • use the computer in the study of the other basics and for personal and work-related purposes; and
  • understand the world of computers, electronics, and related technologies.

    (U.S. Department of Education, 1983, p. 26).

 

The educational system in America must rise to the challenge of providing quality education for all students to ensure opportunities for their success in the economy of the next century. Systemic reforms in our educational system must occur that result in technology literacy for all Americans, including teachers, administrators, teacher educators and students. This can only occur if resources are provided to school systems and teacher preparation programs to support this systemic change.

The Goals 2000: Educate America Act passed in March, 1994 by Congress, reflects the national effort to promote systemic changes in the American educational system. Its purpose is to provide a framework for meeting the National Education Goals. This legislation sets as a national priority universal access to technology for teaching and learning. Development of state and local blueprints for change is the next critical step.

Developing Blueprints for Change

Powerful national initiatives are underway that provide a mechanism for including technology literacy in blueprints for educational change. With the recent establishment of an Office for Technology in the U.S. Department of Education and the appointment of Dr. Linda Roberts as its Director, national leadership is in place to guide and assist the development of state technology plans. Critical to effective plans are strategies that provide investigation of the status quo, development of a vision through collaboration across stakeholder groups, identification of standards or goals, design of strategies for implementation, and development of plans for evaluation.

Critical components of the technology literacy curriculum are embedded in emerging national standards for mathematics and science education, and leveraging the momentum of these two standards movements offers great potential for moving forward the national technology literacy agenda. Federal program specifications, funding opportunities across the nation, publishing efforts, broadcasting, professional growth opportunities, education legislation, curriculum efforts at all levels, and state plans for systemic improvement of education reference mathematics and science standards as the definitive guide for change in those curricula. Schools are changing schedules, teaching environments, resources, tools, teachers, and means of assessment to support changes advocated within the math and science standards.

The blueprint for achieving universal technology literacy can take advantage of that momentum and can benefit greatly from the influence of these standards projects by closely aligning the technology literacy implementation plan with the established standards activities in each field. True science literacy and true math literacy include knowledge of both the science of technology and the mathematics of technology. One cannot be considered literate in science, mathematics or any other discipline without knowing how that discipline connects to the modern world.

Standards-based restructuring of science and mathematics curricula and planning for technology provide the very best opportunity for schools to address universal technology literacy. If our nation is to develop leaders in technology innovation, a foundation for understanding the concepts of information technologies must be laid within the science curriculum and supported within the mathematics curriculum. Within the broad blueprint for change, the curricula for science literacy, mathematics literacy and technology literacy converge.

Unless America's students are equipped to enter a changing workplace, the financial future for graduates -- and for the nation as a whole -- will be bleak. The U.S. Department of Labor's Secretary's Commission on Achieving Necessary Skills: What Work Requires of Schools (SCANS) identified five "competencies" that support skills and personal qualities needed for high performance work. Included in the five "competencies" are skills specifically related to the use of technology. They are the ability to productively use:

  • information - acquiring, evaluating, and processing data;
  • technology - selecting, using, and applying technology; and
  • systems - understanding social, organizational, and technological systems

    (Packer, 1992).

The SCANS Report (1991) indicates that these "competencies" represent essential preparation for all students, both those going directly to work and those planning further education. Currently, a large percentage of students graduate from America's high schools underprepared in the skills necessary for success in the workplace. Technology literacy is a positive factor contributing to individual workplace success.

Technology Literacy Among Adults

The Education Goals 2000 include as a national agenda that "Every adult American will be literate and will possess the knowledge and skills necessary to compete in a global economy and exercise the rights and responsibilities of citizenship." The concept of literacy in this context must include not only reading, writing and mathematical skills, but also sophistication with technology that opens the door to access and exchange of information, manipulation of technologies in the workplace, and means for analyzing and solving problems. Adults entering the workplace today can expect several job moves and as many as three major career changes during their working years. We know most new jobs will involve technology. Therefore, technology literacy is a critical component of personal and institutional plans to re-skill.

The fiscal well being of the nation and of the individual depends increasingly on complex technologies. Today's technology offers enormous potential for substantially changing the field of adult literacy (U.S. Congress, 1993). Advantages of learning about technology are as applicable to this group of learners as to the school-age population.

The Home-School Connection

Many successful educational programs take advantage of the home-school connection. Learning activities at home that align with learning activities at school are an important way to reinforce and strengthen children's learning and to provide adult opportunities. Taking advantage of the home-school connection makes the parent a partner in their child's learning for future success. Because adults and children often share a common need for achieving technology literacy, strategies with a strong home-school component hold special promise for this effort.

Establishing an Infrastructure for Support of Technology Literacy

Without an infrastructure for support of technology literacy, there can be little expectation of success. Teachers and learners must have adequate access to appropriate technologies and high quality instructional materials that support learning objectives. As with other laboratory sciences, true understanding of the science of technology requires that learners "do" the science. Because these scientific principles are not now addressed in the curriculum, significant and ongoing staff development is a necessity. Extending teachers' scientific expertise, modeling effective teaching, mentoring and long-term follow-up are characteristics of staff development that will provide teachers the skill and confidence to make the desired changes in learning activities. Effective blueprints for change, therefore, specify an infrastructure of support which includes:

  • access to appropriate equipment,
  • availability of high quality instructional materials,
  • implementation of content-specific teacher training,
  • availability of technical, curricular and pedagogical assistance, and reliance on a cycle of evaluation for program improvement.

Any expectation of success in achieving the goal of universal technology literacy is dependent on this infrastructure.

Policy Leadership for a Technology Literate Nation

Several policy initiatives on the national level are converging in a way that provides a window of opportunity to put the U. S. well on its way to technology literacy. Not since the Sputnik panic has there been such fertile federal ground. Most recently, the enactment this spring of the Goals 2000: Educate America Act demonstrates the current administration's commitment to reinvent the economic infrastructure of this nation with technology at its core. The act clearly identifies education as the primary vehicle for advancing the national technology agenda, and it specifies coordinated planning at the federal level as a central theme. Indeed, it mandates a "National Long-Range Technology Plan" (U.S. House, p.30).

With this Act, a federal leadership structure is established with the necessary status and connections to set a national technology literacy agenda. Through development of the national long-range technology plan, administration of a system of state planning grants, collaboration with other offices in the U. S. Department of Education, and "in consultation with the Office of Science and Technology Policy, the National Science Foundation, the Department of Commerce, the Department of Energy, the National Aeronautics and Space Administration, and other appropriate Federal departments or agencies" (U.S. House, p.30), the Office of Educational Technology is clearly an important point of contact. The Office is uniquely positioned to ensure that technology literacy for all Americans is a significant component of the national agenda (U. S. House, 1994).

Opportunities for congressional and advisory group testimony, of course, remain important in keeping this agenda before policy-makers. A coordinated effort by the U.S.A. Office of the International Society for Technology in Education (ISTE) to inform individual members, organizational affiliates, and members of its Private Sector Council of opportunities for testimony can optimize inclusion of the agenda in policy outreach efforts.

Respected professional organizations such as the National Council of Teachers of Mathematics (NCTM), the National Science Teachers Association (NSTA), the American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS), National Council for the Social Studies (NCSS), and the International Society for Technology in Education (ISTE) are often called upon by policy-makers at all levels for broad-based and unbiased information to support policy and legislative decisions. These organizations also provide information to large numbers of individuals through journals and a variety of other media. Many of these organizations support a formal structure for sustained interaction with the private sector; others welcome informal dialog as a means of staying in the loop of product and service development for their membership. Specific dialog, either formal or informal, with leaders and managers within influential professional organizations provides rich opportunities to promote a national agenda for technology literacy.

Call to Action

Technology literacy is necessary for the well-being of the Nation and its citizens. Clearly, standards-based educational reform efforts have fallen short of bringing technology literacy to all learners. Retraining efforts too often fail to adequately educate workers in the area of technology. The goal of universal technology literacy presents specific challenges and calls to action in the areas of curriculum reform, adult education, and policy formulation. If universal technology literacy is to be achieved, the following calls to action must be met.

  • Action #1: Revise school curricula and develop standards to address the science and mathematics of technology.
  • Action #2: Establish technology literacy as a priority for adult education and worker retraining.
  • Action #3: Formulate policies that place technology literacy for all Americans on the national agenda

The task of achieving a technology-literate nation will depend on the combined efforts of the education, business, and policy-making communities.

References

Cooksey, B. "Strong Skills Key to Workplace of Future". Shreveport Times. 10/11/92.

Fort, D. (May, 1993). "Science Shy, Science Savvy, Science Smart". Phi Delta Kappan, 74, 9: 674-683.

Thornburg, D. Edutrends 2010: Restructuring, Technology, and the Future of Education. Starsong Publications, 1992.

Packer, A. (March, 1992). "Taking Action on the SCANS Report", Educational Leadership. 49, 6: 27-31.

Rutherford, J. (1990). Science for All Americans. London: Oxford University Press.

The Secretary's Commission on Achieving Necessary Skills. (1991). "What Work Requires of Schools: A SCANS Report for America 2000". Washington D.C.: U.S. Department of Labor.

Tifft, S. (1989). "A Crisis Looms in Science". Time Magazine. Sept. 11, 1989.

U.S. Department of Education, National Commission on Excellence, "A Nation At Risk ". Washington, D.C.: U.S. Government Printing Office, April 1983.

U. S. House of Representatives Report 103-446, 103rd Congress, 2nd session. "Goals 2000: Educate America Act". March 21, 1994.

U.S. Congress, Office of Technology Assessment, Adult Literacy and New Technologies: Tools for a Lifetime. 1993.

Utah State Board of Education (1988), A Shift in Focus: A Report by the Strategic Planning Commission, Author.

 

Lajeane G. Thomas, ISTE President
Louisiana Tech University
Professor, Curriculum, Instruction, and Leadership
P.O. Box 3161
Ruston, Louisiana 71272
 
Donald G. Knezek, ISTE Executive Board
Associate Director for Educational Technology
Education Service Center, Region 20
1314 Hines Avenue
San Antonio, Texas 78208
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