Flipbooks

Opportunities in Lutheran Education | Lutheran Life Issue 322

Issue link: https://discover.cph.org/i/1479857

Contents of this Issue

Navigation

Page 3 of 15

Q: How do you think technology in the classroom has affected the average student? A: The modern era of technology in education started in the 1990s. The first phase focused on purchasing computers and more hardware for classrooms and schools, then we saw a growth in software and applications available, but they were not clearly aligned with the goals and needs of most educators. Then came the third wave—the internet—and with it, growing experiments about how to connect students and the classroom with people and resources from all over the world. This is as social media and mobile devices became readily available to many young people. The technology became a means of [students] communicating with one another, expressing themselves in various ways, and experimentation with different forms of creative expression. Mission-Minded Innovation AN INTERVIEW WITH BERNARD BULL Bernard Bull is a speaker, author of Digitized: Spiritual Impli- cations of Technology, and the editor of The Pedagogy of Faith. He has studied trends in technology for more than twenty years. He is president of Concordia University, Nebraska. 4 Lutheran Life

Articles in this issue

view archives of Flipbooks - Opportunities in Lutheran Education | Lutheran Life Issue 322