Module 4 Reflection
Module 4 Reflection
Solutions
Peachey (2016) suggests that technology has the capacity to engage students because it
makes them responsible for finding answers or solutions to problems. In other words, they can
create something using digital tools and that allows their learning to become real. While the
ReadWriteThink digital note-taking and outline tool was a time-saving tool that engaged the
student by allowing her to easily organize her thoughts, plans, and extract valuable information
from her online research, as well as making her responsible for creating her writing plan from
beginning to end, it was not the most effective tool to use for research synthesis. As a solution,
the next time around, I can allow the student to choose a prewriting tool that better suits her
needs. By allowing students to choose the writing tool that interests them or best suits their
needs, I can also increase student engagement. Patall, Cooper, and Robinson (as cited in
Goodwin and Hubbell, 2013) found that choice can increase students intrinsic motivation.
Evernote (https://evernote.com/) might be a solution to the challenge of linking research websites
to the writing outline. Using Evernote, students can even incorporate images or other multimedia
in their notes. Moreover, to solve the problem of incorporating citations, the student should use
http://www.bibme.org/ at the same time as using a note creation or outline creation tool.
Conclusion
Implementing a TPACK idea can be an engaging activity, but thorough planning is
necessary to circumvent any type of problems that might limit student creativity or potential. In
this case, the student sought a more complex, all-in-one digital tool that she could use to
incorporate all of her research findings, ideas, plans, and citations, so she needed more options of
suitable technology tools.
References
Crockett, L., Jukes, I., & Churches, A. (2011). Literacy is not enough: 21st century fluencies for
the digital age. Thousand Oaks, CA: Corwin.
Goodwin, B., & Hubbell, E. (2013). The 12 touchstones of good teaching: A checklist for staying
focused every day. Alexandria, VA: ASCD.
Peachey, N. (2016). 7 ways you can use technology to engage students. Retrieved from
https://www.english.com/blog/ways-technology-engages-students