Digital Curriculum in the Classroom: Authority, Control, and Teacher Role

Authors

  • Gillian Puttick TERC, 2067 Massachusetts Avenue, Cambridge, MA 02140
  • Brian Drayton TERC, 2067 Massachusetts Avenue, Cambridge, MA 02140
  • Joan Karp Program Evaluation and Research Group, Endicott College, Beverly MA 01915

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.3991/ijet.v10i6.4825

Keywords:

Authority, digital curriculum, high school science instruction, teacher orchestration

Abstract


With greater online access and greater use of computers and tablets, educational materials are increasingly available digitally, and are soon predicted to become the standard for science classrooms. However, researchers have found that institutionalized structures and cultural factors in schools affect teacher uptake and integration of technology. Findings are sparse that detail the complexities of how teachers actually incorporate technology in their teaching as they negotiate the introduction of a new and potentially disruptive innovation. With respect to a digital curriculum in particular, teachers can be unclear about their role vis-a-vis the curriculum, as the "computer" potentially becomes an alternative source of authority in the classroom, and this can mean that the teacher is no longer in control. This paper reports on the implementation of two units of an innovative environmental science program, Biocomplexity and the Habitable Planet, as a digital curriculum. We discuss some of the lessons learned about the mix of challenges, anticipated and unanticipated, that confronted four high school teachers as they implemented the curriculum in their classrooms. We suggest that developers and users of digital curricula pay particular attention to how they envision where the authority for teaching and learning in the classroom should reside.

Author Biographies

Gillian Puttick, TERC, 2067 Massachusetts Avenue, Cambridge, MA 02140

Senior Scientist, Center for School Reform

Brian Drayton, TERC, 2067 Massachusetts Avenue, Cambridge, MA 02140

Center Director, Center for School Reform

Joan Karp, Program Evaluation and Research Group, Endicott College, Beverly MA 01915

Senior Evaluator

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Published

2015-12-16

How to Cite

Puttick, G., Drayton, B., & Karp, J. (2015). Digital Curriculum in the Classroom: Authority, Control, and Teacher Role. International Journal of Emerging Technologies in Learning (iJET), 10(6), pp. 11–20. https://doi.org/10.3991/ijet.v10i6.4825

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Section

Papers