|  |  | Recent Studies in Educational TechnologyThe current results, trends, issues. 
  The Role
    of Online Communications in Schools: A National Studyhttp://www.cast.org/publications/ stsstudy/ index.html  A major study by the Center for
    Applied Special Technology
  demonstrates that
    students with online access perform better. It offers evidence that using the Internet can
    help students become independent, critical thinkers, able to find information, organize
    and evaluate it, and then effectively express their new knowledge and ideas in compelling
    ways. 
Technology Counts '98http://www.edweek.org/sreports/tc98/
     Education Week's annual assessment of the current state of technology implementation, and
    its effectiveness, in U.S. schools.
 
Educators Emphasize Teacher Training in Technologyhttp://www.nytimes.com/library/
    tech/ 98/ 10/ cyber/ education/ 07education.html  
The Computer Delusionhttp://www.theatlantic.com/issues/97jul/computer.htm
    This magazine article argues there is no good evidence that most uses of computers
    significantly improve teaching and learning. (see also Critic of Technology in Schools
    Faces Tough Audience, http://www.nytimes.com/library/tech/98/
    04/ cyber/ education/ 29education.html
  
Mathematics for the Moment, or the Milleniumhttp://www.edweek.org/ew/vol-18/29boaler.h18Stanford University Assistant Professor of Education Jo Boaler reports on a recent study
    of two groups of students aged 13-16, one using a "textbook" approach to math
    instruction, the other using what Boaler calls a "project" approach.
 
 "At the beginning of the research period," writes Boaler, "the students at
    the two schools had experienced the same mathematical approaches and, at that time, they
    demonstrated the same levels of mathematical attainment on a range of tests.... At the end
    of the three-year period, the students had developed in very different ways. One of the
    results of these differences was that students at the second school--what I will call the
    project school, as opposed to the textbook school--attained significantly higher grades on
    the national exam. This was not because these students knew more mathematics, but because
    they had developed a different form of knowledge."
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