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<title>Computers in the Classroom--Not</title>
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      <p><img src="The_Economist.gif" width="104" height="52"></p>
      <p><font color="#FF0000" face="Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif">Computers in 
        schools</font><font color="#FF0000"> </font></p>
      <p><font size="+2">Pass the chalk</font></p>
      <p><font size="-1">Oct 24th 2002 </font></p>
      <p><i>Not helpful</i></p>
      <p>BACK in 1922, Thomas Edison predicted that &#147;the motion picture is 
        destined to revolutionise our educational system and...in a few years 
        it will supplant largely, if not entirely, the use of textbooks.&#148; 
        Well, we all make mistakes. But at least Edison did not squander vast 
        quantities of public money on installing cinema screens in schools around 
        the country.</p>
      <p>With computers, the story has been different. Many governments have packed 
        them into schools, convinced that their presence would improve the pace 
        and efficiency of learning. Large numbers of studies, some more academically 
        respectable than others, have purported to show that computers help children 
        to learn. Now, however, a study that compares classes with computers against 
        similar classes without them casts doubt on that view.</p>
      <p>In the current Economic Journal, Joshua Angrist of the Massachusetts 
        Institute of Technology and Victor Lavy of the Hebrew University of Jerusalem 
        look at a scheme which put computers into many of Israel's primary and 
        middle schools in the mid-1990s. Dr Angrist and Dr Lavy compare the test 
        scores for maths and Hebrew achieved by children in the fourth and eighth 
        grades (ie, aged about nine and 13) in schools with and without computers. 
        They also asked the classes' teachers how they used various teaching materials, 
        such as Xeroxed worksheets and, of course, computer programs. </p>
      <p>The researchers found that the Israeli scheme had much less effect on 
        teaching methods in middle schools than in elementary schools. It also 
        found no evidence that the use of computers improved children's test scores. 
        In fact, it found the reverse. In the case of the maths scores of fourth-graders, 
        there was a consistently negative relationship between computer use and 
        test scores. </p>
      <p>The authors offer three possible explanations of why this might be. First, 
        the introduction of computers into classrooms might have gobbled up cash 
        that would otherwise have paid for other aspects of education. But that 
        is unlikely in this case since the money for the programme came from the 
        national lottery, and the study found no significant change in teaching 
        resources, methods or training in schools that acquired computers through 
        the scheme. </p>
      <p>A second possibility is that the transition to using computers in instruction 
        takes time to have an effect. Maybe, say the authors, but the schools 
        surveyed had been using the scheme's computers for a full school year. 
        That was enough for the new computers to have had a large (and apparently 
        malign) influence on fourth-grade maths scores. The third explanation 
        is the simplest: that the use of computers in teaching is no better (and 
        perhaps worse) than other teaching methods. </p>
      <p>The bottom line, says Dr Angrist, is that &#147;the costs are clear-cut 
        and the benefits are murky.&#148; The burden of proof now lies with the 
        promoters of classroom computers. And the only reliable way to make their 
        case is, surely, to conduct a proper study, with children randomly allocated 
        to teachers who use computers and teachers who use other methods, including 
        the cheapest of all: chalk and talk.</p>
      <p></p>
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