A blog for the Christian confused about education options for your children.

This blog was inspired by a half-day education seminar at Idlewild Baptist Church in Tampa, Florida, November 13, 2010. So many Christians are unsure of where God is leading them to educate their children. There are many choices: public school, private school, prep school, classical school, charter school, home school, a combination of two ore more. Where do you turn for answers?

This blog presents a variety of perspectives on school options, all from a biblical worldview.

Sunday, February 27, 2011

How Important Is Technology In Choosing A School?

This article so misses the point.  Many educators are emphasizing technology in the classroom as the answer to our nation's education ills.  The author reports:
“Technology is the way our students are learning,” she told FoxNews.com.
Like many other teachers around the country, she recognizes the growing importance of bringing technology into the classroom. "I believe that it will enrich our students experience in a 21st century school. I believe it will make us a global community and help our students to learn beyond our physical classroom.”
Having new technology is nice, but it is not the answer.
 
One of the blessings of God‟s common grace is the gift of technology. Technology may be defined as the application of man‟s creative abilities to industrial, commercial, or other practical objectives. Technology includes the electronic and computer products and systems that result from that application.

The Bible describes positively a wide range of technologies that are used to great benefit in various vocations. God is described in Scripture as being a Maker (Job 4:17; 32:22; 35:10; Prov 14:31; 17:5; 22:2; Is 17:7). Other passages describe God Himself as metalworker (Is 1:24–26) and tentmaker (Ex 25:9). Other vocations that involve the use of technology are the shepherd (Ps 23:1), the potter (Is 64:8), the builder (Ps 102:25), and the farmer (Ps 80:8; Hos 10:11).
 
On the other hand, technology may be used for evil. Technology is not pleasing to God when it is used by man to promote idolatry, pride, self-reliance, materialism, and the human illusion of unlimited achievement without consideration of God. (Gen. 11).

Thus, rightly used, as a blessing of God‟s common grace, technology can provide many benefits and conveniences. Technology also can be dreadfully dehumanizing, idolatrous, and promotive of sinful pride and self-reliance. If used wrongly, technology can be destructive of human dignity (part of the imago dei) as men and women feel themselves no longer persons with a name that expresses their unique dignity, but, in Arnold Toynbee‟s words, “serial numbers punched on a card designed to travel through the entrails of a computer.”
 
Crusades to revolutionize schools through technological advances have existed as long as education itself. We eschew academic fads that promise greater hopes (“It‟s new, easy and fast!”) but fail to deliver time and again. Instead, look for schools that are committed to the ancient, tried, and true methods of teaching.  
 
Computers have their dangers and deficiencies as well. Computers promote passive, as opposed to active, learning. They may promote isolated learning, as opposed to the relational, propositional, interactive, and oral learning essential to a sound education. Larry Cuban of Stanford University and former president of the American Educational Research Association has observed, "There is no clear, commanding body of evidence that Students' sustained use of multimedia machines, the Internet, word processing, spreadsheets, and other popular applications has any impact on academic achievement." Indeed, a number of studies have demonstrated that the pervasive use of computers in the classroom as an impersonal replacement for a living, breathing Teacher is detrimental to education.

Never forget that the best means of instructing Students is through qualified human Teachers. While personal computers can assist the accomplishment of work and studies, they are no replacement for capable Christian instructors who love the Lord, love their Students, love their subject, and have a passion to communicate that love to their Students.



 
 

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