Skip to main content

Google Classroom and Future Capabilities

Last month I was contacted by Google to take a short online survey about their educational apps.  My main focus was asking: Why do you not have a learning management system?  As an adjunct at a few colleges and a former Virtual High School teacher, I know the Blackboard system all too well.  It is well known for being stuck in the 1990's and always being down for system updates.  I explained in the survey that although Google offers some learning management systems through the Chrome App Store, I will not trust them.  The main reason for this is that Blackboard is purchasing successful learning management companies left and right.  Training a team of educators on a new LMS takes a long time and it also take a long time for them to want to utilize and embrace it.  A free LMS might seem great but if it is extinct a year later, you lose a lot of traction with teachers who do not want to be trained on something new.  I also spoke to the fact that the Google Apps are beneficial for classrooms, however you need to have multiple tabs open and must give instructions for integrating with your school's LMS. 

This past week Google announced they will be introducing their new "Google Classroom" this September.  This will be a huge game changer for education.  Finally, free online tools with no advertising will be connected with a user-friendly classroom learning management system.

The question is, what will Google do next?  My answer or rather hope is that they solve the challenges we have in today's public schools with text books.  I envision Google hiring top-notch teachers to write out curriculum.  This would not just be your typical text book.  Instead the curriculum would include projects, or "missions" for every lesson.  This means for each new concept comes a project (online or hands-on).

Personally, I think we are going through a weird time in technology integration and text-books.  The big name textbook publishers (no need to name them, we all know who they are) are creating enriching online texts.  They are at the same time receiving lots of negative press due to their very questionable relationship with the creation and implementation of the Common Core.  Then you have other resources jumping in and trying to create copyright-free texts.  The problem is that the free texts are not always of high quality and as a result have little respect from the teaching community.  Google has the resources to bring in top-notch teachers and have them write curriculum.  Every teacher likes to have their own curriculum but they also like the safety of having a textbook to keep their lessons on track.

On the other end of the spectrum, internet servers in schools are simply way too slow.  I have visited plenty of schools in Massachusetts where the internet could not handle playing basic video tutorials. I am not sure how the PARCC's assessment roll-out will occur if schools are unable to provide internet and computers to students.  It should be an interesting couple of years ahead of us for sure. 







Comments

Tony B. said…
Quick Update: I've tried to embed a Google Form assessment into my Google Classroom and it will not let me. This is a big deal! Hopefully this will get addressed!

Popular posts from this blog

Band Room: A New Design

Just in case we ever get a new or renovated high school (I might be dreaming), I wanted to be prepared for helping input the best design possible for a new band and chorus room.  I ended up attending a clinic by the Wenger group.  Wenger is the company that made the acoustic shells on our high school auditorium stage along with the two "soundproof" practice rooms that were installed back in the 1960's.  The company is now the standard company used in the United States for music room design. I learned many things at this clinic.  Firstly, I learned that most bands and choruses have their own rehearsal rooms, practice rooms, and offices.  We spent a long time focusing on where sound goes after it leaves the instrument.  Our music room has a ceiling that needs to be at least four feet higher.  Additionally all the equipment in the room cuts down on reverberation.  It is suggested that any closets or storage areas in a band room have open grilled doors so that air and sound c...

Let’s Create a Composition Revolution in Massachusetts

Young Composers and Improvisers Workshop www.yciw.net Teaching composition is no easy task as the majority of pedagogical resources available lack the understanding of the typical classroom anatomy. Many teachers feel uncomfortable teaching this subject as we were not taught such concepts in our college pedagogy courses and may have never really delved into composition in our own role of music maker.  This really puts us out of our comfort zone, and yet the benefits of a successful composition curriculum can become a catalyst for increased meaningful music making for our students .   A music teacher in New York by the name of Matt McLean set out to debunk the common misconceptions we sometimes envision in classroom music composition.   Matt created the non-profit organization and curriculum called the Young Composers and Improvisers Workshop (YCIW).  He notes that “as a music educator I've seen my students develop their strongest connection to music when...