In households that don't have a culture of computer use, it is often children who teach their parents how to accomplish various tasks on the internet. In fact, technology can create anxiety for parents when they feel that their children know much more than they do.
Traditionally, the learning dynamic in families has been from parent to child; but as technology continues to evolve, the learning dynamic in families with respect to technology is evolving as well. Technology and its increasing integration into schools has been changing this dynamic into one of co-learning.
A Cooney Center report on digital equity observes that “Children and parents frequently learn with, and about, technology together, especially in families with the lowest incomes and where parents have less education.” In households where all family members use the internet, 77 percent of parents say they have helped their child with technology and over 50 percent said that their students have taught them. Among parents who have not graduated from high school, this figure jumps to 62 percent.
It comes as no surprise that technology is changing how families learn. How parents and children engage with the world around them is radically different than how it was 20 years ago. Newspapers, magazines, books, television, and radio used to be central components to learning in most families. This still may be the case, but, for better or worse, a rapid transition to online learning has taken place and has influenced the nature of learning within households.
Instead of students hovering over a textbook at a kitchen table and answering questions alone on a worksheet, many students are now engaged in real-time conversations and collaborative work online. Instead of accepting a historical document at face value, students can research origins, purpose, value, and limitations of that document online by examining multiple resources, asking questions, and digging deeper.
Likewise, students can engage in rich online discussions and peer review the work of others in multiple disciplines. Online learning has made learning less isolating and more collaborative, and sometimes this type of learning is harder for parents to access especially in cases when they have less experience with technology.
Parents are definitely aware of the changing nature of tech use in education and are largely supportive. When Microsoft Education surveyed about tech use at school, 86 percent of parents believed that technology “in school – including computers and educational software – would be helpful to their child’s education.”
But even as school districts spend billions of dollars each year on technology, including hardware, software, broadband, and maintenance, schools struggle to systematically integrate technology in learning. As a result, parents often experience significant classroom differences between different grades and schools as their students progress through the system.
The vastly different uses and expectations of technology by teachers creates uncertainty with respect to how parents can help their students be successful. Moreover, these investments and lack of consistency create confusion and, in many cases, a new digital divide, as seen in a Learning.com equip article.
The changing nature of family learning around technology coupled with the inconsistent use of technology across a school district cause anxiety. In a Psychology Today article, author Jim Taylor observes that parent anxiety over technology can lead to an unwillingness to “to assert themselves in their children’s technological lives. Because of their children’s sense of superiority and lack of respect for parents’ authority in these matters, children may be unwilling to listen to their parents’ attempts to guide or limit their use of technology.”
It is important to realize that integrating technology into schools ends up extending far beyond the classroom. For parents who have lower digital skills, tech integration in learning can foster a sense of helplessness with supporting their own child or children, who then often take on a greater role of teaching technology in the home. If this leads parents to divest from being a supporter of student learning because they are confused about how to accomplish this, then we all lose.
When educators fail to recognize this dynamic, digital inequity flourishes as schools continue to move towards online learning platforms and tools.
To re-engage parents in student learning, one focus should be to encourage parents to become more digitally literate.
Of course, encouraging digital literacy is one thing, but providing realistic opportunities is another. Some schools, for example, have offered technology learning nights for their parents. At Sunset High School in Beaverton, Oregon, a portion of every monthly Latino Parent Night is dedicated to digital learning. These meetings have been going on for the past three years and have consistent attendance of 25-50 people. For more details on how to set up a parent learning group, check out this EdSurge article and view this short video on engaging Latino parents by building a tech community.
Daycare and snacks are often provided, and the central focus is teaching parents about technology use (like how to check a student's attendance and academic progress on a computer) as well as teaching parents any relevant mobile phone apps that connect to the school. Additionally, these evening courses at school focus on digital citizenship issues and some parenting norms around technology that parents might not have thought about as they didn't experience them when they were students.
Given the fact that many students are teaching and exposing their parents to new types of technology, it is of utmost importance that schools teach both students and parents about digital citizenship. Some topics for our meetings include:
Learning with Technology: Supporting Education at Home (Checking attendance and homework)
Aprendizaje con Tecnología: Apoyando la Educación en el Hogar (comprobar asistencia y tarea).
Connected Parents: Cyberbullying and Digital Drama
Padres Conectados: Acoso Cibernético y Drama Digital
Social Networks: Videogames and Mental Health
Redes Sociales: videojuegos y salud mental
Young Children and Technology: How long is too much?
Niños Pequeños y Tecnología: ¿Cuánto tiempo es demasiado?
How to get your kids to sleep through the night
¿Como hacer que tus hijos duerman toda la noche?
Tips for families facing hate and mass shootings.
Consejos para Familias que Enfrentan acciones de odio y los tiroteos masivos
Parents – especially those who don’t often use technology – often assume that younger people are "just good at it" because they grew up with it, but of course this is not necessarily the case. If schools explicitly teach digital citizenship and digital literacy ideas, students in turn can take these ideas back home. If parents become more aware of some of the challenges around technology use in today's world, both parents and students can work together as a team when challenges arise.
When it comes to bullying, meanness, privacy, digital footprints, passwords, etc., families that talk about these issues are much more able to actively deal with these issues.
In the end, schools should offer opportunities for parents and students to learn about digital citizenship and digital literacy. These two strategies help when it comes to the "digital use and knowledge" divide that is found in many schools today.