Millennial Parents: Schools Could Do Better Teaching Tech
        
        
        
			- By Dian Schaffhauser
- 07/29/14
Millennial parents aren't necessarily happy with the track  schools are following in teaching technology to their kids — and among  students, girls are less satisfied than boys. That's what the Center for the Digital Future found  out when it drilled down into on-going survey work. The center is part of the Annenberg School for Communication and  Journalism at the University of Southern  California. The latest work was a collaborative effort between the center  and research firm Bovitz.
Overall, the researchers found that most — 56 percent — parents  and students find the technological facilities in their schools at least  "adequate." The same percentage of parents said they believe teachers  are "adequately" preparing their students to use new technologies.  Students themselves aren't so sure; only 46 percent said they agreed with that  statement.
When the parent respondents were grouped by age, those who  fall into the Millennial Generation — those who are currently the youngest  parents — reported less confidence than any other age group. According to the  findings, only 47 percent of parents aged 18 to 34 said teachers in their  children's schools are "adequately preparing them to use new  technologies," compared to 59 percent of non-Millennial parents. Fifty-one  percent of Millennial parents said the technology in schools was adequate,  compared to 56 percent of non-Millennials.
Differences also surfaced in how male and female students judged  technological facilities in schools and their teachers' abilities in educating  them about new technologies. While only half of female students said they agreed  that the technology in their schools was adequate, reports of satisfaction went  up to 65 percent among male students. And while half of male students told  researchers they considered teachers adequately prepared to help them use new  tech, only 43 percent of female students did.
"America's future is based on technology, yet barely a  majority of parents and students think schools are up to the challenge of  training the next generation of technology users," said Center Director Jeffrey  Cole. "We believe that America can make great strides in improving  education if a new generation of teachers from the Millennial generation — those  born into using technology — has the opportunity to shape the next era of  instruction."
Added Bovitz President Greg Bovitz, who is also a senior  fellow at the center, "It's a clear case of digital adopters teaching  digital natives. In the current classroom, the students have an innate  advantage when it comes to technology."
These results come from supplemental survey work done with  the Center's Digital  Future Project research, which covers subjects such as privacy, social  media use and use of technology at school. The "Topical Survey," from  which this was culled, has a margin of error of plus or minus 3.1 percent.
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
            
        
        
                
                    About the Author
                    
                
                    
                    Dian Schaffhauser is a former senior contributing editor for 1105 Media's education publications THE Journal, Campus Technology and Spaces4Learning.