Title: Editorial: Repeaters, not reporters - Gregg Downey, Editor, eSchool News Post by: Mark David on April 23, 2007, 03:42:03 PM The efficacy of math and reading software has been maligned around the world as the result of careless, inappropriate, and misguided news reports about a study paid for by U.S. taxpayers. The Bush Administration was the proximate cause of this disservice, but so-called reporters supplied the megaphone. All in all, the spectacle was enough to make me want to burn my press pass. One would have hoped editors and reporters might have learned by now that swallowing whole what comes out of Washington can lead to journalistic indigestion. But it doesn't look like they've absorbed this basic lesson. Indeed, if any conclusions at all could be drawn from the research released so far, the study boils down to some pretty unspectacular findings, as were cogently enumerated by Computerworld's senior news columnist Frank Hayes:
•Educational software doesn't automatically improve test scores; •Educational software works better when class sizes are smaller; and •Educational software works better when kids use it more. Read More.. (http://www.eschoolnews.com/news/showStory.cfm?ArticleID=7017) |