RobK wrote:
leiafee wrote:
Needless to say I'm one of the converted!
You also have an agenda - you sell training, and appear to sell whiteboards too!
To be fair, I did admit that up front. If it wasn't clear enough I apologise, I thought from context and the website it was pretty apparent what I do for a living. I would not have enthused at this length save for the fact that this
is the 'show off your stuff' section and I Opus is pretty much perfect for developing whiteboard apps.
(btw the job description says 'technician' not 'marketing' and I'm certainly not trying to present the offical company opinion here, but I personally find the whiteboard stuff
fun--hence the evanglising
)
I'm happy to agree to disagree...
Quote:
it's purely the interactive whiteboard part of the equation I see no point in ... I can see the value of a data projector (or plasma screen) being installed within every classroom, and would have thought that this, coupled with a cordless gyro mouse, could achieve much the same things for whole class teaching?
We have supplied plasma screens instead on occasion so I suppose I should declare an interest there too, but the price of a new one is not dissimilar from a basic whiteboard. And the interaction (my opinion only)
is the point. It may be slightly cheaper (sometimes) than a full whiteboard solution but it's a awful lot of money to spend if all you're going to do if run your PowerPoint presentations.
For some teachers and schools the costs vs the benefits may not work out, but many other have and continue to find it has made a positive difference to their teaching and the enthusiasm of their classes. Frequently they find once they start using it for basic things further ideas as to how it could be used come to them.
That said I do believe it's an optional extra at this point in time--plenty of teachers have been in the job a long time perfectly succesfully without the 'bells and whistles' of modern technology.
Obviously the last thing I'd want on our training courses is teachers who aren't interested, don't want to be there and feel pressured into using something they don't want to! But one of the most satisfying parts of my job is when teachers volunteer ideas of how they can use it--and they're generally much better than the examples we try and think up!
Teachers know how to teach, far be it from us to teach professional people their job. All we try to do is supply the technology and the training to give them the tools to use if they want them.[/b]