Friday, December 30, 2016

Last Day of the Year Ideas


I am at Beijing Normal University’s Smart Learning Institute (SLI) as I make these notes on the last day of the year of 2016. Among other things, I am working on an introductory textbook on advanced learning technologies and advising on a number of SLI projects and efforts.

This is typically a time for reflection and making plans for a brighter future. My reflections are more dark than I dare admit as they are focused mainly on the undemocratic election of an incoming President in the USA and all of the ugliness and bitterness that occurred during that process. I occasionally think about global issues beyond the boundaries of the world’s most spoiled nation – for example, such things as 2016 being the warmest year on record worldwide and the many tragedies that occurred in various places (e.g., Hurricane Matthew in Haiti, the siege of Aleppo, etc.). I vaguely remember a song by the Kingston Trio from my youth called “The Merry Minuet” ( see the lyrics at this URL: http://www.oldielyrics.com/lyrics/the_kingston_trio/the_merry_minuet.html). 

Remembering that Kingston Trio song brought back the memory of another song – Malvina Reynolds’ “Little Boxes” – see https://www.douban.com/note/221995170/. Too much negativity (as in the Presidential campaign of the person who was elected while losing the popular vote) – better to recall the song “Simple Gifts” – see http://www.musicnotes.net/SONGS/05-SIMPL.html and sung so beautifully by Judy Colllins – see https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kWTDgc96bg8 .

Enough reflection – on to preflection – thinking about the future in this case – specifically about the future of smart learning and advanced learning technologies. Advanced? What counts as advanced? Something new? Not a good criterion. There are too many new things and not all of them represent improvements. With regard to technologies in support of learning and instruction, what would count as an advance would be a technology that provided significant and sustained improvement on a large scale for many in a variety of learning and instructional contexts. There have not been many such advances over the years of investing in educational technology. Not many. Which ones come to mind? Then ask, were improvements significant, sustained and attained on a large scale? What remains? Perhaps Sesame Street. What else?

Smart technologies? Smart? What counts as smart? It is hard enough to identify a smart person. Some people claim to be smart – the incoming President, for example. Well, I have known a few people whom I would call really smart and none of them would dare call themselves smart. For example, Bob Gagné is one. His memory was amazing. He could recall the entire text of Edgar Allan Poe’s “The Raven” (see http://www.houseofusher.net/raven.html) from memory. When I asked him if he had to memorize it for a course, he said no. When he met Pat, the woman he later married, he went to the library to read about love and found that poem and he was able to recall it verbatim some 50 years later. He also remembered a children’s German song that he was able to recite when introduced to a German colleague of mine – a song he had learned 50 or so years earlier when studying German as an undergraduate. There are many other examples of his amazing ability to remember things and people that add to his many accomplishments in the area of educational research. He was smart, but he never boasted about being smart, at least not to my knowledge.

Think about a person you consider smart. Then think about the characteristics of that person and why you consider her or him to be smart. Is it due to that person’s memory? Analytical abilities? Creativity? What makes a smart person smart? I am not sure, but I have two ideas. One is based on a hierarchy of things that begins with data at a low level, and then up to information (structured data) at a higher level, and then to knowledge (rules and principles connecting various kinds of information) at a still higher level, and then to wisdom (e.g., the ability to apply or choose not to apply knowledge in various circumstances and perhaps even to create new knowledge in the form on new rules and principles). Who among us in wise?

My father was wise – or at least that is what I would say. He was a Rabbi and he came from a long line of Rabbis. He never pressed me to become a Rabbi although at one time that was expected. He told me that a Rabbi was a teacher, and a teacher was the voice that encourages, the ear that listens, the eye that reflects, the hand that guides, the face that does not turn away … and I saw him practice those abilities in many situations and came to believe that I could not meet his standards.

The other idea I have about being or becoming smart is that it is the result of disciplined inquiry – first one asks a question, then one becomes preoccupied with having that and subsequent questions. To have a question is to admit that one does not understand, to commit time and effort (a lot of time and serious effort) to finding answers, to be willing to explore alternative explanations and answers, and to question one’s assumptions.

It is now quite popular to talk about edutainment – mixing education with entertainment. I see very limited potential for advancements in learning based on edutainment. My notion can be called edunishment – a mixture of education and punishment. The punishment is in the form of things one gives up in order to attain very high levels of understanding and expertise. Sustained and focused inquiry takes a great deal of time and effort and may leave little time for the things that so many others enjoy. The joy then has to be in attaining understanding and insight. 


I am now reminding myself of T. S. Eliot’s “Chrouses from the Rock” and these lines: “The endless cycle of idea and action, Endless invention, endless experiment, Brings knowledge of motion, but not of stillness; Knowledge of speech, but not of silence … The things that men count for happiness, seeking The good deeds that lead to obscurity, accepting With equal face those that bring ignominy, The applause of all or the love of none. All men are ready to invest their money But most expect dividends. I say to you:  Make perfect your will. I say:  take no thought of the harvest, But only of proper sowing.” (see the entire poem written in 1934 at http://courseweb.ischool.illinois.edu/~katewill/spring2011 502/502%20and%20other%20readings/eliot%20choruses_from_the_rock.pdf – some think only of the dividends, recalling the recent election, but others think of something more meaningful – such as can be found in many of the songs of the year’s Nobel Prize Winner in Literature – Bob Dylan – see http://www.azlyrics.com/d/dylan.html and especially the lyrics to “The Ballad of Frankie Lee and Judas Priest” including these ending lines – “Well, the moral of the story The moral of the song Is simply that one should never be Where ones does not belong So when you see your neighbor carryin' somethin' Help him with his load And don't go mistaking Paradise For that home across the road.”

The message for the advocates of emerging educational technologies – “don’t go mistaking paradise for that home across the road.” It’s about the learning – not the technology.


Well, that is all by way of a prologue and a foundation for thinking about an advanced learning technology. I call this idea the Buddy Pack. It is a kind of back pack but typically meant to be in front rather than on one’s back. It is aimed at kids between the ages of 3 and 10 – the developing years … the years when a basis for inquiry can be established but rarely is. The Buddy Pack has embedded technologies that enable it to perform as a kind of companion – a carry along buddy to provide information, give guidance, and even ask questions from time to time.

v  Buddy Pack Characteristics and Features

Ø  can be worn as a front pack or as a back pack as it has shoulder straps but also slips over the head
Ø  is waterproof since it contains some electronics
Ø  is in the shape of an endangered animal (e.g., a panda, a tiger, a dodo bird, etc.)
Ø  has two digital cameras, one on the front and one on the back
Ø  has built-in speakers nears the top (near the ears) and a built-in microphone so as to support two-way communication with the child
Ø  has databases covering many general topics (e.g., world geography, world history, history of science, animals of the world, plant life, human anatomy, and so on)
Ø  has built-in WiFi that facilitates communication with larger data repositories as well as communication with parents and friends
Ø  has a fold out keyboard and input device with a touchscreen to facilitate the kind of capability available on a tablet device
Ø  has the ability to automatically call for help with a simple mechanism
Ø  has face and fingerprint recognition of the child and parents for security purposes
Ø  has the ability to be put into quiet mode at night, on an airplane or in a move theater
Ø  has built-in GPS so that it knows where the child is, can tell the child about the location, and the parents can locate the child if necessary
Ø  has a solar panel on the top back to keep the battery charged when outdoors


All of the technologies to support the Buddy Pack exist. There is some evidence that a companion technology can impact early learning. Perhaps such a device is worth exploring. Perhaps. I want one. I want mine to be in the shape of a gorilla. 

Have a Happy New 2017

Monday, November 7, 2016

No Citizen Left Behind

On this election eve, I am no longer willing to watch television and the campaign advertisements. I voted early, but I am still quite concerned about the election and what happens afterwards.

It is not the best of times nor the worst of times. It is perhaps the least thoughtful of times. It is the Alt-Right waging war against socialists. The tea and beer party against the wine and cheese party. What happens afterwards?

I recall a war waged in my discipline (instructional design and technology) between those who favored direct instruction and those who favored discovery learning. 

That war is being abandoned by a more pragmatic approach that favors what works for whom in which circumstances. Sometimes, for some learners, some learning tasks and some situations, direct instruction is effective and efficient. On other occasions, for some learners, learning tasks and learning situations, discovery learning is effective and even efficient given an appropriate time perspective. What matters is supporting every learner (and teachers) in every different learning situation. What matters is what works and not what ism one invokes.

What is needed afterwards is a set of common goals and shared values. It should be possible to identify a few of these. Some of these might involve national aspirations. For example, the USA  might aspire to have the lowest infant mortality rate – right now we are about 46th – far from the lowest – see http://www.infoplease.com/ipa/A0934744.html

Or, we might aspire to be number one in terms of longevity – we are  not even in the top ten today – see http://www.infoplease.com/ipa/A0934744.html

Or we might agree to lower the rate of illiteracy in the USA – now about one in five adults in the USA cannot read at a 5th grade level. One in five! 

Well, the USA is in the top ten with regard to spending per capita on defense – see https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_countries_by_military_expenditure_per_capita.

If we were to agree to a few common goals and then agree to the general principle of not leaving anyone behind or out, then the healing could begin. When has that ever happened, I wonder? I hope someone has an answer.

J. Michael Spector
Election eve, 2016

J. Michael Spector, Ph.D.
Professor, Department of Learning Technologies
College of Information, University of North Texas
3940 N. Elm St., G150, Denton, TX 76207   USA
TEL +1 940 369 5070 / +1 706 202 9350 / FAX +1 940 565 4194

Wednesday, August 17, 2016

the impact of technology vs. the impact of using technology



I have been working in the area of assessing progress of learning in complex problem-solving domains for almost 20 years now (not much progress I am embarrassed to admit), and I have also been doing evaluations of university programs, grant projects and large European networks of excellence for about 15 years. In both cases, I have come to the conclusion that it is formative assessment (of learners) and formative evaluation (of programs, projects, and products) that matters most. The primary goals are to help students progress and develop, and to help programs and projects achieve their intended goals and objectives. Secondary goals include reporting the extent of progress and success.

In addition, I have been speaking at numerous venues on emerging educational technologies and have come to adopt the mantra that it is not about the technology – it is about the learning and instruction. It is not technology that impacts learning and instruction. It is the use of technology that might impact learning and instruction – use by teachers and students, support for effective use by teachers and students, ongoing training for teachers and students in the effective use of technology … it is how a technology is used and integrated into learning activities that makes a difference (when a difference is in fact reported, which is somewhat rare).

One problem that really gets under my thin skin (and skull) is the advocacy for a particular technology as THE solution. If only every student had a laptop … or an iPad … or an iPhone … nonsense. If only every student learned to think critically, to reflect about the problem space and alternative solution approaches, to question assumptions, to monitor progress of learning … if only … then there might be some real impact on learning. Technologies can be used to support those goals (critical thinking, inquiry learning, reflection, hypothesis testing, self-regulation, etc.), but what matters are the processes associated with learning … not specific technologies. Yes, I am a founding member of the national technology geek society … guilty as charged … but I have seen silly uses and implementations of powerful technologies that resulted in no significant difference … so I am now officially a geek drop-out and advocate of the three Rs – reasoning, reflection, and reliability … I am considering founding a new society to be called R3-D3 for the three Rs plus doubting, deliberating and determining … membership is free and  open to all.

Tuesday, July 5, 2016

Apologizing as a Weakness or a Strength



An often repeated statement is that apologizing is a sign of weakness. Another statement is that apologizing does not change what has already happened. Given recent political events, I have begun to wonder if there is any truth to such statements. I begin with one of my favorite poems – Ozymandias by Percy Bysshe Shelley (see http://www.online-literature.com/shelley_percy/672/) in which the following words appear:

‘My name is Ozymandias, King of Kings:
Look on my works, ye might, and despair!’
Nothing beside remains. Round the decay
Of that colossal wreck, boundless and bare,
The lone and level sands stretch far away.

Who is really strong? Hitler might be said to be responsible for the deaths of some 60 million or more people in the period around World War II, two thirds of whom were civilians (see http://worldwar2-database.blogspot.com/2010/10/world-war-ii-casualties.html). In spite of such horrific numbers, there is no Aryan race dominating the world, the Jewish people still survive, and Germany is a peaceful and thriving nation. Perhaps the strong are those who learn from the past, as my older and wiser brother often reminds me. Perhaps there are too few of those people … perhaps due to how history becomes colored by ambition, bias, local interest and a narrow interpretation of facts. Perhaps.

Whom do you consider strong? I consider my parents (may they rest in peace and their tribe increase) as among the strong. My mother was born in a rural log cabin in LA (lower Alabama) and weighed only two and a half pounds at birth. She lived into her seventies in spite of many chronic illnesses, and she managed to raise four children who have become responsible adults (my apologies for the implied self-praise). My father stayed married to her throughout many trials and tribulations for about sixty years (he survived her by only 100 days), and he managed to return to his rabbinical studies and fulfill his lifelong goal of becoming a rabbi late in life in spite of many setbacks. They were strong in so many ways, yet they readily admitted weaknesses and apologized for things they regretted doing on many occasions.

The people I know often apologize for things they have done and later regret (my apologies for stating the obvious). Does that make them weak? I think it reflects a particular strength – namely the strength of knowing their weaknesses and recognizing their missteps. On the other hand, a refusal to never apologize reflects a certain kind of weakness – namely, a reluctance to admit to being human and subject to the imperfections that affect everyone. I occasionally recall some of the statements of O. K. Bouwsma, one of my mentors in graduate school. He noted that the people blamed for polluting a river usually seemed to be those living upstream. Put otherwise, Bouwsma would say that a common problem involved the wrongheaded confidence that one has in one’s own beliefs. It could be the case that one knows less that one is inclined to believe that one knows. It could be the case that while one cannot undo the past that one can do better in the future. It could be the case that we can all become teachers in the sense of Rabbi Spector: the voice that comforts, the ear that listens, the eye that reflects, the hand that guides, the face that does not turn away.