{"id":3179,"date":"2014-05-20T06:32:55","date_gmt":"2014-05-20T10:32:55","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/edutechdebate.org\/?p=3179"},"modified":"2014-05-04T07:52:30","modified_gmt":"2014-05-04T11:52:30","slug":"are-we-asking-the-wrong-question-when-we-focus-on-educational-technology","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/edutechdebate.org\/olpc-2014\/are-we-asking-the-wrong-question-when-we-focus-on-educational-technology\/","title":{"rendered":"Are We Asking The Wrong Question When We Focus on Educational Technology?"},"content":{"rendered":"
<\/a><\/p>\n Education is the process whereby information is organised into knowledge and, with appropriate processing and experience may result in wisdom and therefore a happier, productive and less risky life. Both factual and emotional education basically use the same process and both require that, as well as the provision of information, the recipient has opportunity to interact with the information in different ways, and develop a multi-perspective \u2018feel\u2019 for the information so that it is not just perceived as an isolated, one-dimensional fact.<\/p>\n In my clinical experience as a Developmental Paediatrician<\/a> I have always accepted Freud\u2019s statement that \u2019the task of adults is to work and love\u2019 and \u2018the task of children is to play\u2019. Children\u2019s play is in fact a combination of work and love, and the way that children learn is through playing, which is always multi-dimensional. Children listening to a story only really remember the story when they begin to act it or make the teller act it, make faces like the characters, dress up, draw pictures and submit their toys to the events of the story. <\/p>\n Good teachers instinctively know these things and ensure that all sensory modalities are used to engage children in the learning (playing). Good teachers also know that children have large individual differences in whether auditory, tactile, visual or emotional pathways are their preferred way of processing information and foster the appropriate ones and the appropriate rate of learning for the individual child.<\/p>\n