Swot Analysis
Swot Analysis
Emily Rhinehart
I am currently a 2nd grade teacher in Bartow County. This fall will be my fourth year
teaching 2nd grade. I have taught inclusion and will be teaching a small EIP (Early Intervention
Plan) classroom for the first time. This class will have 1:1 iPads and have some extra support
from Title 1 teachers concerning reading and math interventions. I look forward to experiencing
a new challenge in this classroom setting as all of these students will be below grade level. I am
hoping that through attaining my Educational Specialist degree in Instructional Technology I will
have the skill set to incorporate technology into my teaching in the most efficient and meaningful
way.
Strengths
A strength is that I am open minded and willing to implement anything new into my
teaching if it will benefit the learning outcomes of my students. Part of TKES (Teacher Keys
technology in the classroom; however, no one ever trained teachers on the best approach. My
first two years teaching I was in a trailer and only had 3 computers and usually only 1 that
worked. This means that I had to try to find ways to expose my students to using technology, or
sharing it, because there was not enough to really make it applicable or meaningful. Another
strength is developing a useful plan or strategy for implementing technology. When there is a
limited amount it is an important skill as an educator to be able to diagnose which students could
benefit the most from the use of technology if it is used as a tool for intervention. In this
particular classroom the working computer was rotated between a higher level group using it
once weekly for enrichment and a lower level group using it daily for building fluency.
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Weakness
in teaching. Although I grew up with technology in the classroom and taking computer courses
in middle and high school I am still not 100% confident that I am using technology in my
classroom in the most effective ways. As far as knowledge with technology I would say I know
the general functions of computers, smart boards, etc. but I cannot fix or do any trouble shooting.
This can present a major problem when I depend on technology daily in my room for checking
homework, morning work, or leading a mini lesson. Mostly, I depend on the smart board and the
document camera so that we can go over work in math or look at an article in writing. Whenever
an issue arises with the technology that requires anything more than turning it off and on again I
When it comes to independent work, I try and always have some activity that involves
technology (laptop, desktop, iPad) where the student can practice skills, create comic strips, or
use online dictionaries. All of these are related to reading and I haven’t been able to implement
this as much with writing, math, or science. But after reflecting there are so many videos,
research, webquests, or scavenger hunts I could have them doing in science. My area of
weakness is knowing if the ways I implement technology are actually enhancing learning.
Opportunities
While I have already discussed the many ways I use technology in my classroom, there
are still many more opportunities that I foresee. Since I will have 1:1 iPads this year for my small
classroom I do not have to strategize to figure out who would benefit most from the use of the
technology or how to rotate them so that everyone gets to use them. This freedom will allow for
students to use the iPad as a tool to help to reinforce the standards we are learning. I like for my
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students to use various online sites to create comic strips for retelling a certain scene from a text,
create wordle blurbs for vocabulary and examining character traits, or create a timeline to
sequence the main events in their story. Students also use programs to focus on a specific deficit
a student may have (this year it was Orton Gillingham or MobyMax) like phonemic awareness,
phonics, or letter recognition. I also have students on a site, Raz-Kids, building fluency and
comprehension by reading passages, taking quizzes and I am going to start having them record
themselves. This is a vital tool that I have not used previously that will allow my students to hear
In math I use technology mostly as an intervention for students below grade level
working on specific standards that they struggle with. The program we use is called iReady and
it has a diagnostic test that shows student deficits in specific standards and then tailors lessons to
meet their needs. This year, I am going to have my students using MobyMax to practice their
timed math facts instead of using pencil and paper. I would like to find some interactive tools I
could let my students use during their independent work time in math also.
In writing my students only use technology when I introduce a new writing genre using a
video, usually BrainPop, or when I teach informative writing and I let my students conduct
research using a safe search engine like KidRex. I am learning some neat concepts in my visual
literacy course about ways to implement images into lessons. This year I plan on showing my
students images and having them practice decoding messages by using critical thinking skills,
and social studies. This is the biggest opportunity because I seldom use technology with teaching
these subjects and because my allotted time for these subjects is going from 15-20 minutes to a
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full hour. Now that there is more time I am going to focus on STEM lessons and hopefully using
videos and images to guide the lessons. I would love for my students to be able to conduct
research and take virtual field trips this year using their iPads. I look forward to learning about
The best opportunity or reason to use technology in the classroom is how simple it makes
fluency while other students are working on letter recognition and then a higher group is reading
a chapter book and creating a comic strip to depict their favorite scene.
Threats
A major threat to the use of technology in the classroom is planning. There is no way
around it that implementing technology requires more planning on the part of the teacher. Some
might see technology as an easy way of not planning but “putting” kids on a computer. This is
not the case at all. Students must have a structured task or assignment on the computer and the
assignment has to be connected to the standard being taught as well as challenging to the student.
Not all students can be doing the same task either as differentiation must still occur even when
using technology. Another threat to the use of technology in the classroom is that is requires
teacher interaction and monitoring. Students cannot be left fully unattended with technology. The
teacher must facilitate the use of the technology by monitoring and making sure the child is on
the appropriate work site and that they fully understand the assignment. A student will most
likely need help navigating the site in the beginning and it will take time in the classroom to
transition into using technology with learning logins and how to properly get to sites.
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My personal technology goals for this year are to incorporate the iPads into independent
work time in other areas besides reading. My main focus is on building the use of iPads into the
science and social studies curriculum. I want the use of the technology to be purposeful and for
my students to see the iPads as a tool for gaining knowledge. I want to model for my students
how to be visually literate and to build a community of students who decipher and decode
information in any format. My goal is to start the year understanding that as a community of
learners we learn and grow better through tools, an open dialogue, technology, and flexibility. I
want my students to have respect for the use of technology and not get off task during class time.
Hopefully, the time I spend at the beginning of the year focusing on the rules of the iPad will
My personal technology plan for this school year is to start the year creating our own
contract as a class of behaviors we should exhibit while using technology and behaviors that
would cause you to lose your privileges and have students sign in agreement to the rules. I think
students will feel more accountable when it is a rule they helped create. I attended a county wide
science and social studies training this summer that provided a lot of new information regarding
the updated standards and STEM lessons to use in the classroom. This school year I plan on
implementing many new ideas regarding math drills, imagery and visuals used in writing, more
online testing through Blackboard, and research projects in science and social studies. I believe
that through the courses I am taking for my Specialist degree I will continue to learn of
innovative ways to involve my students in the education process through the use of technology.