5 Biggest Barriers to Education Technology
It’s hard to imagine going hours without using any sort of
common technology in the course of our daily lives, but that’s exactly what
happens in many classrooms across America. While education technology has grown
as a field over the past few years, many schools and classrooms struggle with
adopting new technology. Teachers and administrators face a multitude of
hurdles and a general lack of support for education technology initiatives.
What is
Educational Technology?
Increasingly, teachers are using technology in the classroom to aidlearning and make it easier to chart student progress. In many classrooms
across the country, students are assigned laptops or tablets, which they use to
carry out in-class research, lessons, and projects. Teachers also often use
SMART boards which are interactive whiteboards with touch screens. Education
technology also encompasses programs that can be accessed via the internet that
teachers use to share homework assignments, quizzes, and other materials with
students.
Use of education technology has been growing in recent years, though common
tools like laptops have by no means been universally adopted.
Common
Problems
Technology
has been integrated in almost every other aspect of our lives today, so why is
there a lag in some classrooms and districts? Some of the largest barriers to
the adoption of education technology include:
1. Cost: Perhaps the largest obstacle to adopting education
technology is the least surprising one: many technologies are just too cost
prohibitive. Cutting edge technology often requires a significant investment,
and, with certain technologies becoming outmoded in a matter of years, it’s no
wonder budget-bound schools are cautious about making such investments. Budget
problems lead to classroom policies, like BYOD (Bring Your Own Device), which
create more problems. For example, when students are asked to bring their own
tech devices to schools, there’s no guarantee that a teacher’s online materials
will work across different devices. Continual underfunding of
schools at the state and national levels only exacerbates the cost problem.
2. Lack of training: Schools must
invest money and time into education technology initiatives to see positive
results. Even if teachers have access to learning technologies, they’re not
receiving the proper training to harness these technologies. Tech training is
especially important for teachers because many of them aren’t “digital natives”
— they didn’t grow up with technology at their fingertips like most of their
students have — so new technology often has a steep learning curve.
3. Resistance to adopting new technologies: Lack
of training and lack of familiarity with tech fuels a third issue: many
teachers and administrators resist adopting new technologies in the classroom.
It’s understandable that time-crunched teachers are wary of adopting new
classroom tools, especially when they’re lacking support on a school,
departmental, or district level. Parents who think their kids are already
inundated with too much tech access may also represent barriers to tech
adoption.
4. Too much red tape: School
districts don’t make it easy for tech providers to develop and introduce new
technologies in classrooms. The sales cycle for ed tech often hovers around a
long eight months, with companies that create ed tech tools having to get sign
offs from state policy makers, school boards, chief information officers,
school principals, and others before the tools can be adopted. Frankly, it’s
not the most profitable way to do business, so many technology companies focus
their efforts in other sectors.
5. Insufficient infrastructure: Even if
districts widened their budgets for education technology, they would still
encounter a barrier to adoption: many school districts lack the network
infrastructure needed to support education technology. Perhaps the largest
issue is lack of internet access. The Sprint Business survey reports that more
than 16% of teachers say their school districts don’t provide regular access to
the internet for students in the majority of the district. With so many
education technologies relying on the internet for access to programs and
systems, lack of internet access significantly hinders adoption.
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