Thursday, 22 March 2012

Reflection No.3 --- The Stereo Corner


In one of the corners of the main room, we have a reading area. Besides the shelves of normal story books, there’s a stereo corner with a shelf full of story books with digital resource. This stereo corner has its own set of table, chairs and a stereo. The books in this corner all have either tape or CD with them. Children are free to turn the stereo on and read the books along the recorded stories. The corner contains classic stories, new stories, and popular stories around the children.

The children love this digital-reading corner and have their own favourite stories here. Most children can use the stereo quite well. They even teach their friends to use the stereo and have fun reading the stories together!  This shows that most of the children already have the skills to control the stereo. They are also competent enough to help each other solving problems in using technology. Therefore, the children are gaining their growing understanding of how technologies can help them and others (Ministry of Education, 1996), in this case, by using the stereo to help a child himself and his friend to read the stories. The children literally run the corner themselves. Sometimes they would grab my hand and ask me to join. Learning to use the stereo helps children to develop working theories for making sense of the modern technological world (Ministry of Education, 1996). Being capable of using the stereo gives them the strategies and confidence for actively exploring and making sense of the world by using technological equipments (Ministry of Education, 1996). Constantly having the stereo available for children provides them rich opportunities to experience some of the technology and resources for reading (Ministry of Education, 1996).

What captures the children’s interest in the stereo corner? Besides the popularity of the stories, I think there are two key advantages included: children taking control and developing self-help skills. First of all, children may have a sense of achievement controlling the stereo. In early childhood settings, stereos are normally used for mat time by teachers. At mat time, there are rules and boundaries that teachers are mostly in control of choosing the stories and using the stereo. Controlling the stereo not only empowers the children’s literature learning, but also enables their sense of belonging. Managing a machine that can read stories nice and loud would make the children feel that they are playing an active part in the running of the daily routine (Ministry of Education, 1996). Second of all, the self-helping structure makes story-reading simple for the children. Children at the stage of early childhood (before school age) are not able to read. They need support for reading a story. Instead of asking a busy teacher to sit down and read a story for them, turning on the stereo by a press of a button seems much simpler for the children. The stereo helps children to take responsibility for their own learning (Ministry of Education, 1996). Hence, the technology of the stereo expands children’s development of literature learning, sense of belonging, as well as it addressing their needs by enriching working theories self-help skills (Ministry of Education, 1996; Ministry of Education 2007).

Extending from the use of the stereo, technology resources like computer and walky talkie all have the same purpose --- help people and solve problems (Smorti, 1999). Teaching children technology is about teaching the ability of using technology. It's about the ability to make life easier. It is us teachers’ responsibility to teach the children to use the powerful tool of technology to become independent, life-long learners.

References:


Ministry of Education. (2007). The New Zealand curriculum. Wellington, New Zealand: Learning Media.
Ministry of Education. (1996). Te Whāriki: He whāriki mātauranga mo ngā mokopuna o Aotearoa: Early childhood curriculum. Wellington, New Zealand: Learning Media.
Smorti, S. (1999, Autumn) Technology in early childhood. Early Education, 19.

2 comments:

  1. I like the way of your centre, in my previous practicum, there was no centre that freely allowed children to turn the stereo on and read the books along the recorded stories, they just put the radio, tapes and CDs on the place to high position that children cannot reach in order to protect them. Most of time, Children just can read stories with CD or tapes in the mat time.
    This is a clear digital technology for children. They learned how to play the radio and showed their understanding of benefit of technology for them. It develops their self-confidence.
    This is a good way to develop their literacy, especially listening. I believe that listening is quite important for the beginning of their literacy developing. Well Done! I will try to practice in my home centre. I hope the children will not break that. Yea…………

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  2. It is a good reflection. Stereo is as digital technology used in your centre to support children’s own learning by playing CD and listening to the stories, which encourages children to develop their self-help skill and problem solving. When children pressed the stereo to listen to stories, it actually develops children’s literacy learning and independent skill, and confident to control it. Therefore, children will feel good about themselves, just like you said feel achievement.
    But I am not quite sure that how children feel sense of belonging through using stereo?
    I really like you said that teaching technology is about teaching children the ability of using technology. You address the teacher’s role here. It’s good to see you reflected on it.

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