This study focuses on the use of paired keyboards attached to a single microcomputer
as a means to facilitate internet exploration. A classroom teacher with
nineteen years experience and an educator worked with an intact third grade
class of twenty-nine public school students. Children worked in pairs, with
one child considered as the knowledgeable other who, through interaction
with a partner, might extend the partner's Zone of Proximal Development.
This type of learning environment allowed for selective intervention among
groups which facilitated and accelerated internet exploration and made the
experience a much more successful and rewarding one. Interviews along with
ongoing weekly observations were employed to examine this scaffolding approach
while the students were on-line. The use of paired keyboards become, in
a Vygotskian sense, a tool in children's learning. Review of the process
indicated that this approach enabled students who were unfamiliar with either
computers or the internet to be successful in their quest for information
and global collaboration. The implication is that meaningful learning takes
place when educators are creative in the way that computer hardware/software
is used in support of facilitating education through internet exploration.
We hope you found what you needed on this page. If you have any questions
or comments, please contact me.
Howard J. Bender, Ph.D.
President
The Education Process Improvement Center, Inc.
P.O. Box 186
Riverdale, Maryland 20738
hjbender@epicent.com