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Elizabeth's avatar

I'm worried a realistic 'wasted by ed tech' part of the graph might actually be flatter than the article even indicates. A lot of 'personalized' apps effectively cut out teacher expertise, and some of the new tools seem to encourage the kind of cognitive offloading that would prevent teachers from developing expertise, so the tools are replacing a lot of the work that teachers would otherwise do, but at a perpetual novice level of quality.

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sj's avatar

Also: these folks love to claim what they are not trying to do, while supporting it just happening, So they're not trying to replace teachers, but as a commenter said, "what if you don't have a math teacher?" and something tells me that These folks wouldn't say "GET A MATH TEACHER!" and oh, build a fund to do that? Nope, they'd "help..."

I'm reading Robin Isserles' _The Costs of Completion: Student Success in Community College"https://www.press.jhu.edu/books/title/12672/costs-completion about how the edu-philanthropists are "fixing" college students failing math in college, by completely ignoring the fact that they're arriving with minimal skills and pushing college placement for everybody and being extremely creative with statistics inspiring articles like this about

the legal requirements to "maximize" completing college level courses in the first year. https://update.occrl.illinois.edu/winter24/community_colleges_dera/index.html . No, our faculty aren't "buying in" (yes, it's always transactional for them)... *because it doesn't work for the students and we don't like failing the students.*

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