Most Teachers Say Classroom Tech Helps Students, but Teachers Need More Training

Most Teachers Say Classroom Tech Helps Students, but Teachers Need More Training

Nearly four in five — 78 percent — of teachers say they haven't received the training they need to effectively use the technology they're asked to in the classroom, according to a new report from SAM Labs. At the same time, 82 percent of survey respondents said they believe students who use technology in the classroom are better prepared for their future careers.

The report is the result of an online survey administered to 250 teachers in the United States. Other key findings include:

  • Nearly half — 48 percent — of those surveyed said they believe students retain more information across all subjects when learning with technology;
  • 41 percent said that students learn faster with technology;
  • 31 percent said they believe students who learn with technology have higher test scores;
  • 69 percent of participants said they believe technology can be used to support any subject;
  • 37 percent of surveyed teachers said they spend free time learning how to use the technology they use in the classroom;
  • One-third said they wish they had more resources to support the technology-based lesson plans;
  • More than half — 58 percent — of teachers said they feel confident using technology in their classrooms;
  • 44 percent said they wish they had access to more classroom tech; and
  • 24 percent said they are afraid that their students know more about technology than they do.

The researchers also asked teachers which subjects they have seen student improvement from as a result of the use of technology. Those results include:

  • Math, at 65 percent;
  • Reading and writing, at 56 percent;
  • 39 percent said English;
  • 21 percent pointed to history;
  • Earth sciences came in fifth at 20 percent;
  • Geography was identified by 18 percent of respondents;
  • 15 percent said they saw improvements in biology or chemistry; and
  • Foreign languages came in last at 11 percent.

"While the $200 million grant to support coding and computer science education is a step in the right direction for the U.S. education system – though probably one that should have been taken years ago – we need to carefully determine how this money will actually be most impactful in the classroom" said Joachim Horn, CEO of SAM Labs, referring to a plan floated by the White House to spend $200 million on STEM education in a prepared statement. "Because they are on the front lines with students every day, teachers are in the best position to identify the opportunities — and the challenges — that the government will face in supporting students' education. By first focusing on how we can support and train our educators, we will quickly see U.S. students excel in STEM."

About the Author

Joshua Bolkan is contributing editor for Campus Technology, THE Journal and STEAM Universe. He can be reached at [email protected].

Featured

  • tool icons with variety of business icons

    SETDA Releases Free EdTech Quality Action Toolkit

    The State Educational Technology Directors Association (SETDA) has put together a free K-12 EdTech Quality Action Toolkit that provides a framework for evaluating education technology products as well as guidance on regulatory compliance, templates for communicating with vendors, training resources, and more.

  • Engineering team implements digital guardrails on AI

    3 Starting Points for Integrating AI Guardrails in K 12 Districts

    As education leaders start to craft an AI policy that is both practical and flexible enough to evolve with this fast-changing technology, there is at least one principle that should be foundational: AI should serve to augment human critical thinking and creativity but never replace human interaction and decision-making.

  • cyber security padlock

    Report: AI Adoption Forces Trade-Off Between Speed and Identity Security

    AI adoption is forcing enterprises to trade security for speed — and identity controls are the first casualty, according to a new report from Delinea, a provider of identity security solutions for both human and AI agent identities.

  • abstract representation of artificial intelligence with data streams and circuits

    Anthropic to Study Risks and Economic Effects of Advanced AI

    Anthropic has launched a new research effort focused on the biggest societal challenges posed by more powerful AI systems.