Pubdate: Fri, 22 Jun 2007 Source: Globe and Mail (Canada) Copyright: 2007, The Globe and Mail Company Contact: http://www.globeandmail.ca/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/168 Author: Siri Agrell Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/people/Kieran+King Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mjcn.htm (Marijuana - Canada) CHALLENGING AUTHORITY: FACT CHECKING THE TEACHER Does the Web Make Students Smarter, or Smarty-Pants? As Leslie Chan delivered a lecture about the history of the United Nations to his students at the University of Toronto earlier this year, some pupils took notes on laptops, others dozed and one was busy reading the UN website to verify the dates and figures being presented by his teacher. "After a couple of minutes, he pointed out to me that one of the things I said was outdated," Mr. Chan said. "It was a good example of fact checking, and I welcomed it. But he was so caught up with proving me wrong that he missed the point of the lecture." Like Mr. Chan, more teachers are having to prepare themselves for confrontations with students who can find a second opinion or contradictory fact at the click of a mouse. This generation of high-school and university students have been weaned on Google, Wikipedia and a sort of Web 2.0 approach to learning, where information is easily accessible, interactive and up for debate. In Saskatchewan this month, a 15-year-old student named Kieran King was suspended from his school after a series of events sparked by his skepticism of an anti-drug presentation. After watching a video on marijuana that he believed contained factual errors, Kieran started his own online research project about the drug - - and shared his findings with other students, to the chagrin of school administrators. Kieran's mother, Jo Anne Euler, said she is not surprised by his actions because she raised her kids to be curious. "We're big looker-uppers," she said. "The kids hate telling me when they don't know what a word means because they know that I will look it up and read all the definitions to them." Her son has taken this family predilection for accuracy online, using the Internet to exhaustively investigate topics that interest him. Ms. Euler said he would sometimes come home from school at lunchtime if he had been told something he wanted to check. Reached in Shanghai, where he is studying Mandarin and working as a tutor, Kieran said he challenged the school's drug presentation because of its lack of cited sources, as well as several specific claims he questioned. "The main part I remember from that video was a cartoon man looking down his pants and being shocked," Kieran said via e-mail. "This was signifying either impotence or, more likely, decrease in genital size." John Portelli, co-director of the Centre for Leadership & Diversity at the University of Toronto's Ontario Institute for Studies in Education, said he has grown accustomed to students seeking out information and promoting their own authority. "They test me," he said. "I have to tell myself, here is the real test: What do I do?" Mr. Portelli said the traditional idea that teachers know everything is problematic and promotes confrontational behaviour from students. Teachers should be open to debate, he said, but also discourage their students from "destructive inquiry," where they use the Internet to bully or make fun of an instructor. University of Toronto professor Mr. Chan, whose wife teaches at a high school, said many teachers are unprepared for the challenges of a wired student body. "They shy away from it," he said. "Technology is disruptive - cellphones in the classroom and all this buzzing around - and it creates tension. We do need to learn how to deal with the technology in a way that's acceptable to everyone." Teacher training in Canada does not include lessons in dealing with an interactive classroom, he said, or how to communicate with students who seem to know it all. Mr. Chan said the curriculum of professional training courses needs to be upgraded to deal with such scenarios. When it comes to his own students, Mr. Chan actually wishes they challenged him more - he says most rely on last-minute Wikipedia searches to get them through a course. "A lot of them actually get a little bit lazy because of Google," he said. "I spend a lot of time encouraging them to question and to question constructively." - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake