Available Formats
Remixing the Curriculum: The Teachers Guide to Technology in the Classroom
By (Author) Elizabeth Stringer Keefe
By (author) Adam Steiner
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Rowman & Littlefield Publishers
6th February 2018
United States
Professional and Scholarly
Non Fiction
Education / Educational sciences / Pedagogy
Curriculum planning and development
Teaching of a specific subject
Educational: Sciences, general science
371.33
Paperback
138
Width 151mm, Height 230mm, Spine 11mm
218g
Remixing the Curriculum offers educators a way to rethink traditional curricular approaches through a curricular remix, a concept in which a curriculum becomes different from its original form, retaining its basic foundational elements, but experiencing a metamorphosis to create a new version. Remixing the Curriculum suggests that the way to develop curriculum to maximize student access and engagement is to employ essential elements of traditional pedagogy, but infuse it with technology to create new features through the X Framework (XFW). XFW capitalizes on four essential features of educators practice and learning: Technology Fitness, in which a teacher self-evaluates their comfort level using technology; Proactive Teaching, which front-loads the planning and preparation for instruction to prior to implementation; Universal Design for Learning (UDL), a set of principles which guide the conditions for learning, including flexible learning environments to accommodate individual learning differences; and Assistive Technology, technology to improve the capabilities of students with disabilities. At the intersection of these four quadrants is X, which serves as a fulcrum for access to the curriculum.
Stringer Keefe (education, Lesley University) and Steiner (technology/instruction, Boston College) bring current methodologies and theories to technology and instruction in K12 through an innovative approach called the X Framework (XFW). It is composed of four pieces: technology fitness, proactive teaching, universal design for learning, and assistive technology. Seasoned teachers through education students will find the X Framework approachable and well supported by research. The book is organized into two parts: The Technology Mindset and Remixing the Classroom. The authors contend that XFW can shift educators out of traditional practices that do not address all students needs. Different learning needs, styles, and backgrounds demand a practice that provides an increased opportunity to access the curriculum. Stringer Keefe and Steiner also provide straightforward and accessible information about classroom technology approaches, devices, hardware, software, and programs that can inspire all educators to try something new and remold their classrooms. Included at the end of the book is a helpful reference list that encourages further research, reading, and exploration. The content focuses on current K12 teachers, but preservice education students will also gain valuable insights into the realities, challenges, and opportunities of K12 teaching.
Summing Up: Highly recommended. Upper-division undergraduates, graduate students, and professionals and practitioners.
Elizabeth Stringer Keefeis a teacher educator and researcher at the Graduate School of Education at Lesley University, where she serves as faculty coordinator of Graduate Studies in Autism and regularly teaches about technology for curriculum and communication. Her research focuses on the preparation of special education teachers and teacher education policy.
Adam Steiner is a technology integration specialist for the Holliston Public Schools and recently completed his PhD at Boston College with a focus on curriculum, instruction, and technology. He is a lifelong resident of Framingham, Massachusetts where he lives with his wife and two children.