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subject: Webcams For Teaching In Today's Schools [print this page]


The great Winston Churchill once said that the empires of the future are the empires of the mind. He spoke justly. While in ancient times brute force was power, an educated mind is now a country's most effective weapon. Clearly, there is a greater challenge than ever for teachers to come up with innovative means of teaching. One such innovation is video-conferencing.

Two-sided Jury

Experts believe there is usually no difference in learning through video-conferencing and learning the time-honored way, which is face to face and from inside a classroom. Students are exposed to the same amount of knowledge; teachers go through the same process of preparing their lessons.

The drawback to teaching through video-conferencing, however, is that it's a medium ripe for abuse. Because teachers do not have to physically interact with their students, there is a higher risk of mediocre teaching strategies and style. The same is true of ineffective learning on the part of students, precisely because the teacher cannot physically and immediately gauge how blank a student's stare is, for example, or how frequently the student had doodled on his notebook rather than take down notes.

Lessons from a Virtual Classroom

Essentially, video-conferencing is a good innovation to education because it democratizes access to knowledge. In fact, through video-conferencing, knowledge can be shared to any part of the world, no matter how inaccessible this place may be.

With the invasion of technology in almost all aspects of life, more and more schools are offering online education. The surprising outcome is that there are now also more and more students who have come to accept this mode of teaching. In fact, visionaries predict that at some point in the future, video-conference will become a very vital cog in the knowledge wheel. It will supplant the standard face-to-face teaching method. Teachers will be Real real lessons - from virtual classrooms, in real time.

The secret to becoming an effective virtual teacher does not lie in how well you are familiar with video conferencing technology (although this knowledge is also a plus), nor does it depend on how well you enunciate words to beat the expected video-audio time lag. It all depends on the lesson plan.

Writing the Virtual Lesson Plan

How, then, does one become a good online teacher? The secret is not just familiarity with video-conferencing technology but also continued adherence to a very old and often overlooked fixture of classrooms: The lesson plan.

There is a need for teachers to map out their virtual teaching strategy. In doing so, answering the following questions would surely help:

1. What do you expect the students to learn after each lesson?

2. How will you present the topic?

3. 3. What materials you will use to support the lesson? Will you be using visual aids or audio clips?

4. How long will the lesson be?

video-conferencing Today

Video-conferencing, while already used by a few educators and learners, is still in kindergarten, as far as education is concerned. In time, however, it will go to school the same way that other innovations did. When this happens, learning through video-conferencing could prove to be not just be a novel experience but a rewarding one at that.

by: Noah Smith




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