/ ow, and it is noi said son in i meetii •timisiit, 1 ve it Monday, January 20, 1986/The Battalion/Page 9 BISD emphasizes computer learning By KAREN MCINTOSH Reporter le *Wti| Last summer, kids could be found eked in dark, noisy, video game n agiioi jms. They were dropping the last arter of their week’s allowance o a Pac-Man or a Donkey-Kong ichine so they could play just one re game before it was time to go But now that the interest in video mes is waning, children are wait- to see 0/1 howma ; in lines to put their floppy disks ;o personal computers and play )re challenging games involving ogramming, spelling and math- latics. Children begin learning about nfmters when they enter their stelementary school classroom. In kindergarten, children are rning how to work with comput- child to spell and tell time, teachers say. And using a program called print shop, Ruffmo says, students can print Christmas cards, notecards and notepads. “The program uses their higher- level thinking skills,” Ruffino says. And in the remedial and special education classes, students are im proving thinking skills by working with computers, Lambert says. “They really get a good feeling about themselves if they can operate a computer,” she says. Sylvia Colwell, the remedial math e 10 ArJ dosed e In the Bryan Independent School y do5iim tr j ct students are learning from on our outers every day. le boats § ue A nn Lambert, supervisor of intmail nputereducation in the Bryan In- pendent School District, says com- peoplti ters are novv j n every classroom. e y ca,n id students are learning to use all nove o; (jets of the computers, had ik Lambert says computer-assisted econc tructional programs have been ? likeka ;( j in B yan schools since the 30-81 school year. i Doris Ruffino, principal of Bon in Elementary in Bryan, says com- ters have become a valuable tea- TlJiCl Ingtool in today’s technologically- ented society. ‘Our children today are very so- psdeated,” Ruffino says. “They e VCR’s and video games at e. . . . The computer attracts keeps their attention.” he says that although the com er is a learning tool it does re- ire more student participation. e children can’t be passive h the computer,” she says. “They lave to tell it what to do.” Lambert says students at all grade els are using the computers. Kindergartners learn to recognize ters and numbers using the >G0 program. LOGO was developed by Texas itruments and is designed to help ich young children, Lambert says. Older students are using a word xessor program to write assign- ints. This program helps the student :ome better organized and pro- es a bonus for teachers. 'It makes it easier to grade and rect papers," Lambert says. Tie computer also can teach the me ow and reading teacher at Henderson Elementary, uses the computer for drills and re-enforcement of skills previously learned. “They work on the computer for 20-30 minutes every other day,” she says. Colwell says her classes are a self- paced format and students have ac cess to four microcomputers. Lambert says computers have been very successful in special edu cation classes and a lot of software has been written for those students. But the computer has been suc cessful in regular classes also, Lam bert says. She says the computer has been particularly helpful in helping chil dren work with numbers — so help ful that the computers are used ev eryday in fifth and sixth grade classes. “There are five computers in ev ery math classroom,” she says. “We’ve purchased software that is used for review, practice, re-en forcement and enrichment.” But computers are not being used only to teacn children the three R’s. Dr. R.D. Zelner, head of educa tion technology at Texas A&M, says elementary school students can use a computer creatively. “There are programs that lead kids into short-story writing,” Zelner says. “The teacher can program the steps the children should follow.” Another program helps children write their own music, Zelner says. All these programs are valuable to the student, Zelner says, and simply working on a computer helps a child by improving hand-eye coordina tion. Along with learning how to use a computer, students also are learning when and where to use a computer. Lambert says the school district is teaching a unit on the appropriate uses of a computer in society. “If someone has written a pro gram,” Lambert says, “the children zire being taught they do not have a right to mess tnat program up.” The State Board of Eduacation now requires that students exhibit a mastery of the essential elements for computer literacy by the eighth grade. The rule forced teachers to edu cate themselves about computers. Lambert says the district is help ing by offering computer workshops during the spring and summer. “They (workshops) are strictly vol untary,” she says, “and we have had tremendous turnouts.” Lambert says the students are not the only ones to benefit from contact with computers. “Our children today are very sophisticated. They have VCR’s and video games at home. . . . The computer attracts and keeps their attention.” — Doris RuTino, principal of Bonham Elementary. Some teachers have really taken an interest in computers and have enrolled in courses at A&M. Ruffino says that most of the tea chers have 15 hours of computer classes, but not everyone is enthu siastic. “Some of them just will not have anything to do with computers,” she says. And how do computers compare with humans in the teaching cat egory? Zelner says that, according to stu dents, teachers and computers are neck and neck. Zelner says students rated the. computer and the teacher as equal, while in the fairness category the computer won out. He says students feel warmth in the friendly greetings, figures and beeps of the computer. And Zelner says teachers lost in the fairness categbry because stu dents feel the computer is not bi ased. But Zelner says he does not want the computer to replace the teacher. He says the computer is merely a teaching tool. Zelner says, “The computer frees the teacher to have more time and higher quality contact with students. Xambert says the parents love the computers. “They’d like for us to have one for every student,” she says. The Bryan ISD is seeking to get parents involved in the computer learning program through a project called VIPS, Volunteers in Public Schools. “Parents and grandparents use the computers with the students on several of the campuses,” Lambert says. “We have no trouble getting parents to volunteer.” Carol Frosch is in charge of the volunteers at Johnson Elementary School. “I got involved because I used to be a math teacher,” Frosch says. “This is my first year in Bryan. I called and asked what kind of help they needed and this is what they signed me up for.” Frosch says the children are ex cited about the computers and have fun while they are learning. “It’s good to see them gain in knowledge and experience as the year goes on,” she says. Lambert says computers have brought a new dimension to the classroom and in future years stu dents will advance to higher levels of computer literacy. “We will be doing at the lower grade levels what the seventh and eighth graders are doing now,” she says. The districts overall plan for the . computer education program in el ementary schools is to produce indi viduals who can function in the new computer society. KLIPSCH CARVER YAMAHA ELECTRONICS EXCELLENCE grate iebi SOP arW Yamaha R-3 Yamaha CD 300 35 Watts Per Channel Digital Tuner Variable Loudness ONLY $229°° Yamaha P220 New Model ONLY $259 00 Yamaha NS 10T Semi-Auto Silver Only Reg. 129 00 SALE $99 00 2 Way 6” Woofer Reg. 200 00 SALE $1 59°° Pair Major Credit Cards Accepted AUDIOW 707 TEXAS 696-5719 mm Full Service Free Delivery Chic-fil-A Delivers to Dorms Mon.-Sat. 6-10 p.m. 764-0049 #L50 Off 5-Dozen Or More" CHick-Fii-A Nuggets"! With This Coupon. This offer not good with any other coupon offer. 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