Teaching with Technology in 2018
        In our third-annual ed tech survey, teachers reveal an overwhelmingly positive attitude toward tech in the classroom and its impact on teaching, learning and professional development.
        
        
         
 
Teachers are growing fonder of technology every year. Even  the dreaded mobile phone is gaining acceptance as a classroom tool, at least  among those who participated in THE  Journal's third-annual Teaching with Technology Survey.
Teacher Attitudes  Toward Tech
While teachers in each of the preceding survey were, for the  most part, pumped up about tech for learning, this year's results reveal an evolving  positivism not just about tech, but about the direction tech is heading.
Exactly three-quarters of teachers in the survey indicated  tech has had an extremely positive (38.37 percent) or mostly positive (36.63  percent) impact on education. The remaining 25 percent said tech has had both  positive and negative effects on education. Zero respondents said tech had a  negative or extremely negative impact.

Roughly the same number were positive about tech's impact on  the difficulty of teaching. About 77 percent said tech has made their jobs  easier (44.48 percent) or much easier (32.27 percent). About 15 percent said  it's made their job harder, and 2 percent said it's made their job much harder.  The rest were neutral.

There was overwhelming agreement, as well, that tech has had  a positive impact on the effectiveness of teaching. Eighty-seven percent of  respondents said tech has positively impacted their ability to teach. Ten  percent said it's had no effect. Three percent said it's had a negative effect.

Responses about tech's impact on student learning were  similar, with 84 percent saying it's had a positive impact, 6 percent saying  it's had a negative impact and 10 percent being neutral.

When asked whether they "believe technology will have a  positive role to play in education in the future," respondents were nearly  unanimous: 96 percent said "yes."
Teachers' Favorite (and  Least Favorite) Technologies
An overwhelming majority favored schools providing devices  to students (81 percent), but it was just a large majority that favored  students bringing their own devices to schools for classroom learning (47  percent). About a third were against students bringing devices for classroom  learning; the rest were neutral. Nearly half of respondents said students in at  least some grades in their schools had 1-to-1 devices. Just 14 percent require  students to bring their own devices (BYOD).

The most common devices used in classrooms this year were  laptops, cited by 37 percent of respondents. That was followed by Chromebooks  at about 14 percent and mobile phones also at about 14 percent. Paper/pencil  came in fourth at 12.5 percent, followed by tablets (10 percent) and desktop  PCs (9 percent).

Among teachers, though, the most popular devices were  laptops running traditional operating systems (Windows, macOS, Linux), with  about 91 percent saying those devices are either essential (46 percent) or  valuable (44 percent) for teaching and learning. Media tablets (iPads and  Amazon devices) barely edged out Chromebooks for a surprising second place  finish, with 77 percent positive. Chromebooks were at 76 percent positive. 
High-end workstations, all-in-one computers and detachable  tablets running traditional operating systems all came in around 72 percent  positive.
For the first year of this survey, smartphones had more  positive ratings than negative. About 6.5 percent said mobile phones are  essential to teaching and learning, with 35 percent saying they're valuable. A  bare majority (52.5 percent) said they allow the use of smartphones in the  classroom. Meanwhile, 16 percent of respondents said phones are not very  valuable, and nearly 14 percent said they're detrimental to teaching and  learning, and 20 percent reported that their institutions ban students from  bringing phones on campus. Confiscation is the penalty for using cell phones in  the classroom among 60 percent of respondents, followed by suspension (5  percent), expulsion (1 percent) and referral to law enforcement (1 percent).  The remainder reported no penalty or no significant penalty.
The highest "detrimental" rating this year, however, went to  smart watches, at nearly 16 percent. Smart watches' positive ratings were in  the single digits.

This year's survey also asked teachers about specific  technologies used in their schools, including makerspaces and electronic  textbooks.
Almost two-thirds (63 percent) said their schools use a mix  of electronic and paper textbooks. Just 11 percent are fully digital at this  point.
Open educational resources are in use by 80 percent of  respondents to the survey as part of classroom instruction.
Makerspaces are in 35 percent of schools represented by this  year's survey participants. In those schools that have one, the makerspace is  located in the library/media center (53 percent), in classrooms (49 percent)  and in a dedicated facility (18 percent). 
Technologies associated with makerspaces are also becoming  more common, with educators reporting that their teaching environments include  3D printers (31 percent), robotics systems (28 percent), die cutters (28  percent), scientific sensors and probes (27 percent), and 3D scanners (8  percent).

Support and Teacher  Confidence
Most teachers said they receive adequate training and  support for the tech they use (61 percent). However, that support doesn't  necessarily come via official channels. Most teachers said that when they run  into technical trouble, they solve their own problems either by searching  online for help (40 percent), turning to peers for help (15.4 percent), asking  students for help (3 percent) or going to user forums (3 percent). Just 22  percent turn to the help desk or IT department firs for help, and just 10  percent go to an instructional technologist.

Two-thirds of teachers spend more than half their  instructional time using technology. More than two-thirds of respondents teach  either exclusively blended classes (36 percent) or some blended classes (31  percent). Only a third said they flip their classrooms. And overall, teachers  are confident in their ability with tech. About 20 percent said they're  absolutely confident in their tech capabilities, and 67 percent said they're  very confident. Another 11 percent rated their skills as adequate. Less than 2  percent said they're overwhelmed by tech and that their skills are below  average.
Teachers are less confident in their students' ability with  technology. Five percent rated their students as excellent with tech; 37  percent gave them an above average rating; 47 percent said their students are  average. Eleven percent put their students below average or failing.
Meanwhile, 57 percent assign homework that requires the use  of technology, though only 10 percent of respondents said their schools provide  internet access for students who lack access at home. Only 6 percent said they  believe that all of their students have internet access.
For their own training, teachers seem to prefer a mix of  electronic and face-to-face professional development (PD) (81 percent), with 14  percent preferring PD to be delivered electronically.