This week let's talk about the death of my childhood. Tape cassettes, VHS's, and box set TVs all went extinct in a puff, and the new millennium raged on without them. Every black Friday lines wind around corners and malls are packed to the rafters (NWG Staff), as people wait in line for the best deals on laptops, flats screens and tablets. Consumers eagerly demand newer, faster, better technology, yet nearly 16 years after the Y2K craze, many schools have yet to leave the comfort of using 20th century technology in classrooms. In the ever evolving world of educational technology, hardware is becoming obsolete at an increasingly fast rate. This week we'll take a look at 3 technologies that are rapidly declining in popularity, but are integral pieces of classroom hardware.
The first device that is beginning to be phased off the market are jump drives. Just like the floppy storage disc devices of the past, the jump drive allows users to store data and take anywhere (Gunter), but with multi-gigabit cloud space coming with many email accounts as a free feature, people find less need to carry documents on an external device. Why bother with carrying extra data sticks with less than 3gigs of space when I could simply email the file to myself, or save it to my cloud? With mobile devices allowing access to documents in any location, I predict that jump drives with less than a terabyte of space will soon disappear off of shelves.
![]() |
Image: 'Levoluzione della specie' http://www.flickr.com/photos/9049083@N04/3895614433 Found on flickrcc.net |
The second device that will soon vanish from k-12 classrooms is the desktop printer. While ink jet, photo, and laser printers are great devices (Gunter) to have in the home, they will have no place in the classroom. Many people create and store items to the cloud without realizing it; pictures, iMessages, emails. Most new printers on the market are Bluetooth capable, which means users can access their clouds and wirelessly send documents to any printer within their school network. Perhaps you think a photo printer is needed for teachers want to clear the "class in action" pictures off of their phones and cameras; but in reality free photo services, like YorkPhoto and PhotoWorld, allow users to email or upload your photos and have up to 100 prints shipped back for free. Hooray for removing those clunky devices, taking up much needed desk space, and more freedom to print from any location!
![]() |
Image: 'HP LaserJet Enterprise M830' http://www.flickr.com/photos/61980314@N04/10187568294
Found on flickrcc.net
|
The final device that I predict will no longer be a classroom standard is the keyboard; especially those that require cords. Keyboards are gradually becoming smaller and more portable. Tablets created the consumer demand snappable keyboards, coders created the demand for rollable silicone keyboards, and the Millennial spawned the text to talk sensation. With the ever evolving capabilities of Siri and Alexa, or the assistance of apps like Dragon Text, the newest generation of learners has found a way to forgo using any keyboard that requires more fingers than their thumbs. Our kiosk (Gunter) ready culture is offering touchscreen solutions to what some dub the germ infested publicly used keyboard problem. When not cleaned regularly keyboards can spread viruses quickly (Reddy). Why run the risk of catching the flu, when I can bring my personal portable keyboard with me, or simply dictate my required notes to an app?
![]() |
Image: 'Giving a try at the bluetooth official keyboard and magic mouse' http://www.flickr.com/photos/30013612@N03/16076525467 Found on flickrcc.net |
In truth, many of these changes may take decades to come about, or they could happen within a few months. Technology expands exponentially on a daily rate, and developers are constantly finding ways to improve user efficiency. Schools should fall into suit with consumers, and be willing to wait in endless lines for the best deals, stay up all night learning to use new techie toys, and watch countless advertisements with research on the best tools for classroom technology adaption. If schools apply Black Friday logic to our school education technology acquisitions, they too would hardly notice the obsoletion of 20th century technologies.
Resources
Gunter, R., & Gunter, G. (2015).
Communications, Networks, the Internet, and the World Wide Web. In Teachers
discovering computers: Integrating Technology in a Changing World (Eighth ed.,
pp. 1-489). Boston, MA: Cengage Learning.
NWG Staff. The Longest Black Friday Lines And Biggest Crowds Of 2014 (10 Photos). (2014, December 1). Retrieved October 17, 2015.
Reddy, S. (2014, September 20). Germs at the Office Are Often Found on Keyboards and at Coffee Stations. Retrieved October 17, 2015, from http://www.wsj.com/articles/germs-at-the-office-are-often-found-on-keyboards-and-at-coffee-stations-1412032235
No comments:
Post a Comment