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Home›EdTech Policy & Reform›The Secret to Building Great EdTech Products? Getting Teachers Involved

The Secret to Building Great EdTech Products? Getting Teachers Involved

By Matthew Lynch
January 5, 2017
2
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From as early as calculators and laptops, to as current as SmartBoards and virtual classrooms, EdTech’s entire purpose is to serve students in the best way possible. Technology is put in place to make tasks that were once complicated or time-consuming more efficient and effective. The calculator computes calculations that would take much longer by hand. The SmartBoard takes the chalkboard experience and makes it more interactive between teacher and student.

With each EdTech product that is dreamt up and put into production, there must be some need in the classroom that it’s looking to fill. Who would be more qualified to identify these requirements and propose possible EdTech solutions than teachers themselves? They are the ones that spend time in the classroom, day in and day out, trying to help their students succeed. Teachers may not have the specific skills to get a new education app or product off the ground, but they would be the single greatest resource in creating the concepts.

The next great EdTech app or product could be birthed by simply sitting down with a veteran teacher and asking the question, “What is your classroom’s biggest need?” That question alone will begin a brainstorming process that could change the landscape of not just their classroom, but all classrooms.

EdTech companies and startups may have the brainpower to bring it from idea to product, but they can’t bring the factual educational knowledge to the table that a teacher can. It would be in their best interest to partner with a teacher, a school, or a district to create a pool of ideas, then use that to move forward. Having a teacher as a consultant throughout their creation of the product could greatly determine their success or failure in the market. With each significant step of the process, getting feedback can steer their process in the right direction.

Aside from the creation of a product, EdTech companies also need to keep in mind who is going to decide whether their products to succeed or fail: teachers. At the end of the day, these companies are making products, apps, and gadgets in hopes that teachers will use them to help their students excel each day. If an EdTech company thinks that they can create a product for teachers to use, without consulting a teacher on whether or not it’s a good idea, they’re taking an enormous gamble on the success of their creation.

Teachers and EdTech companies need to work together to create the products that will create permanent change in classrooms across the globe. Teachers need EdTech companies to build great products to serve their students more effectively. EdTech companies need schools and teachers to buy into their creations so that they can find a successful home for their products. It needs to be a two-way street of communication and production. The authentic insight a teacher can provide, paired with the manpower and brainpower and EdTech company can bring to the table, the world of education could be changed massively, and for the better.

Imagine when the calculator was introduced into the classroom. A multiplication or division problem that used to take a few minutes to compute now only took seconds. This increased efficiency then opened up more time in the day to learn about larger, more complex math concepts. It minimized trivial calculations and gave teachers more time to focus on the big picture.

With each new product that EdTech companies come up with, that should be the goal. It needs to be a product that not only makes learning more efficient but creates more space for bigger and better things.

Who are the most qualified individuals to think up these products? Teachers. The more they are a part of the production process, the better served the educational community will be.

 


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2 comments

  1. Tiffanie Bosson 5 January, 2017 at 18:43 Reply

    The involvement of teachers in product development based on feasibility studies and the whole fraternity is vital. I appreciate the work done by Edtech in trying to blend technology with education and development of tools and Softwares that make the learning process efficient.
    I appreciate your insights.

  2. Thomas Branson 6 January, 2017 at 06:28 Reply

    I appreciate your covering the topic in your recent articles. Faculty involvement in the development of Edtech products is important since they are in a position to come up with curriculum and are well accustomed to student behaviors and learning trends.

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Since technology is not going anywhere and does more good than harm, adapting is the best course of action. That is where The Tech Edvocate comes in. We plan to cover the PreK-12 and Higher Education EdTech sectors and provide our readers with the latest news and opinion on the subject. From time to time, I will invite other voices to weigh in on important issues in EdTech. We hope to provide a well-rounded, multi-faceted look at the past, present, the future of EdTech in the US and internationally.

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