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Student Perceptions of Web-Enhanced Instruction

Cherrie L. Kassem and Phyllis A. McCraw

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Abstract

In an effort to address national and state technology standards, the computer teacher at Midland School decided to teach seventh grade students how to use Nicenet, an Internet Classroom Assistant. For one marking period during spring of 2002, students used Nicenet to find assignments and follow online instructions, send and receive e-mails, post appropriate Internet links for classmates, contribute to threaded discussions, and collaborate with classmates on a group project. At the conclusion of Nicenet instruction, a researcher administered a survey to students to learn their perceptions regarding Nicenet use. Among other findings, survey results showed that most students (85%) liked using Nicenet; 25.5% of the students found Nicenet to be very helpful or useful, and 83% of the students said Nicenet improved learning at least moderately. The article suggests ways to improve instruction using Nicenet or similar Internet Classroom Assistants in the future.

Introduction

Students working with laptop

The International Society for Technology in Education (ISTE) developed National Educational Technology Standards (NETS) for K-12 students in an effort to highlight the technology literacy skills students need to become lifelong learners in an information society. Among these skills are the abilities to: use technology tools to enhance learning; use telecommunications to collaborate with and interact with peers; use technology to locate and collect information from a variety of sources; and use technology for informed decision-making (ISTE, 1998).

Many states have developed technology curriculum standards that parallel the ISTE standards. The New Jersey Core Curriculum Content Standards, for example, specifically describe needed technology skills as part of the Cross-Content Workplace Readiness Standards. Among the technology skills described are the ability to access information on specific topics and the ability to use technology to make decisions (New Jersey Department of Education, May 1996).

In an effort to address the above curriculum standards, the computer teacher at Midland School in New Jersey decided to employ what Judi Harris (1998) has termed "educational telecomputing activities." Thus, the computer teacher introduced her seventh grade students to an Internet Classroom Assistant (Nicenet, www.nicenet.org) for Web-enhanced instruction during one marking period in the spring of 2002. The computer teacher decided that by the end of the marking period, students should be able to: explain the components and uses of Nicenet; find assignments and follow instructions using the Class Schedule feature of Nicenet; send and receive e-mails using Nicenet's Messaging feature; post appropriate Internet links for classmates; contribute to threaded discussions using the Conferencing feature; and collaborate with classmates on a group project using the Conferencing and Document Sharing features.

At the conclusion of Nicenet instruction, a collaborating researcher administered a student survey to ascertain students' perceptions of Nicenet use in order to improve future instruction. The purposes of this article are to describe the uses of an Internet Classroom Assistant at Midland School, to summarize the results of the Nicenet student survey, and to make recommendations for the use of Nicenet or other similar sites in the future.

Background

Midland School is a public school in Bergen County, New Jersey that serves about 500 students grades pre-K through eight. Per pupil expenditures at Midland exceed the state average. The average class size at Midland is below the state average, as is the student/faculty ratio. Students at Midland perform better than the state average on required statewide proficiency assessments. The Computer Lab at Midland is reportedly "state of the art," with all computers connected to the Internet. Most students at Midland school have computers with Internet access in their homes (New Jersey School Report Card, 2000).

Nicenet (www.nicenet.org), an Internet Classroom Assistant (ICA), was founded in 1995 and offered free of charge by a non-profit organization of Internet professionals, with server space donated by the Searle Center for Teaching Excellence at Northwestern University. Nicenet offers Conferencing, Scheduling, Document Sharing, Personal Messaging, and Link Sharing features in a low graphics environment. One of the best features of Nicenet is its ease of use. Anyone can set up a class in a very short time (about two minutes) and with little technical expertise; class administrators are assigned a class "key" to supply to students so that students can create their own accounts. The class key, username, and password protect entrance to the ICA so that only class members can participate. Students need only find a computer with Internet access and a Web browser to use Nicenet; no software, server space, or knowledge of HTML is required. Nicenet contains no advertisements.

Uses of Nicenet at Midland School

Kleiner (1998) suggested that instructors first use the ICA as a support tool for students in on-campus courses. In that way, students can learn how the system works before using it at a distance. Accordingly, the computer teacher at Midland School decided to use Nicenet primarily for on-campus support with two classes of seventh graders during the last marking period (about 8 weeks) of the year. She told students they would be learning about a special Web site designed to facilitate communication, research, and decision making. She then explained and demonstrated Nicenet's features and showed students how to log on. Students' first task was to log themselves onto Nicenet and then to email the instructor of their success. All assignments were posted under Class Schedule, requiring students to use this feature to keep up with course expectations for each class session.

For the first assignment, the computer teacher showed students how to add a document and a Web site to Nicenet. She asked students to think of their favorite form of entertainment (e.g., video, TV, movies, music, etc.) and then to use the "Add a Document" feature of Nicenet to describe why that form of entertainment was their favorite. Additionally, she asked students to find a Web site related to their favorite form of entertainment and to submit that URL under the Link Sharing feature of Nicenet. All students were encouraged to read what other students had posted and to pursue links of interest to them.

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Meridian: A Middle School Computer Technologies Journal
a service of NC State University, Raleigh, NC
Volume 6, Issue 1, Winter 2003
ISSN 1097 9778
URL: http://www.ncsu.edu/meridian/win2003/web-enhanced/index.html
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