What the Research Actually Says About EdTech with Adam Sparks - podcast episode cover

What the Research Actually Says About EdTech with Adam Sparks

May 27, 20261 hr 11 minEp. 16
--:--
--:--
Download Metacast podcast app
Listen to this episode in Metacast mobile app
Don't just listen to podcasts. Learn from them with transcripts, summaries, and chapters for every episode. Skim, search, and bookmark insights. Learn more

Episode description

The screen time debate is loud, emotional, and increasingly driving education policy. But what does the research actually say? Adam Sparks, former classroom teacher, Stanford-trained learning designer, and co-founder of the writing tool Short Answer, brings the receipts.


In this episode, Lindy and Adam dig into why blanket screen time bans are a response to moral panic more than evidence, what John Hattie's meta-analyses actually tell us about technology in classrooms, and why lumping thousands of different tools under the label "EdTech" makes about as much sense as measuring the effect size of a chalkboard. They also get into how to evaluate EdTech efficacy, what a logic model is and why every school should be asking for one, and how Short Answer is rethinking writing instruction in the age of AI.


Short Answer: https://myshortanswer.com/  


Adam’s Substack: https://adamsparks.substack.com/ 


Connect with Adam: adam@myshortanswer.com


Short Answers Portfolio of Efficacy: https://myshortanswer.com/our-approach/ 


Writing Instruction for the Age of AI Workshop: https://myshortanswer.com/professional-development/ 

Transcript

Welcome to MakeEdTech100. I'm LindyHoc, educator, K-12 edtech advisor, and your host. This is a podcast where we keep it real about what actually works in classrooms. No hype, no overwhelm, just practical strategies, honest stories, and tools that make a real difference for teachers and students. So come along with me on a journey to MakeEdTech100 Today's guest was already quoted on the podcast a few episodes ago.

Adam Sparks is the source of use case not existence when it comes to technology use in classrooms. So to continue my series on screen time in schools, I knew I had to get Adam on for a great conversation. Adam is an English and social studies teacher who recently finished his master's degree in learning design and technology, and as part of his master's coursework, he built a digital writing tool called Short Answer. It's really amazing. We'll talk about that more in the episode.

It's so powerful that he now works full-time developing and sharing Short Answer with schools and educators. Welcome to the podcast, Adam. Hey thanks for having me I'm very excited to be here and chat with you Andy Tell us, what else do listeners need to know about you I think you?

got it I taught for seven years I went to grad school I built what was supposed to be a master's project We got grant funding and launched it and here we are building it three years later So feel lucky to do the work I do I do it with my wife Alexa which is special and unique and fun and I'm really passionate about e-education and technology in our current moment and so I feel like I'm in the right place I'm I'm really on fire by the work right now which is fun

I named the podcast Make Ed Tech 100 because that meaning is open to interpretation of whatever it means to you. So I like to ask every guest to tell us what does Make Ed Tech 100 mean to you?

Oh man Well I think of 100 it's like keep it 100 Like it's like 100 like keep Yeah, keep ed tech good I don't know if that's I I equate it in my mind to good I don't know if that's right or or wrong but yeah so keep educational technology high quality Yeah which is fitting for our current moment W- it is very fitting for the current moment. So yeah that's where my mind goes I don't know The current conversation is focusing on quantity and not quality, Yes right?

So that is super, super fitting amongst the screen time debate you're a former classroom teacher. I didn't realize you taught social studies as well, by the way. I knew you taught English, obviously, The Writing Connection, and you're building an education product to assist with writing instruction. Build, built and building. Building education products never ends. Right and present and future tense, all of the above. So I love that you have both of those perspectives.

When you hear Utah passed a screen time bill this legislative season, something like 15 other states had legislations considering some form of screen time blanket ban or limitation. LAUSD also passed some sort of policy or something about screen time at LAUSD in particular, so that's a school district level, not a state level. What's your gut reaction to hearing that? I have a lot First I wanna say I think it it's all coming from a good place It's people are really Agree.

and have been for a while a-about like cell phones and and social media and the impact that that has on kids and their social lives and their overall health and wellbeing I get that and so I think those concerns have been around for a while what I think unfortunately what's happening is we're taking our fear and frustration and all the emotion that comes with that and we're we're just kind of increasing we're just kind of applying that fear and frustration to all technology and I think

that is misguided And so I think most of these laws that are either passed or in the process of you know being proposed and debated um are are generally misguided because I think they're falling for this kind of moment of moral panic around technology that it's inherently bad that's directly contradicted by research showing positive effect sizes of of technology use in classrooms for different use cases in different contexts so I think we're ignoring research in the name of

emotion and fear and I think a lot of politicians are all too willing to cash in on that to score some points with their constituencies it's pretty low-hanging fruit and it's pretty like acro it it's increasingly it's it's cutting across political divides of like this fear of technology And again it comes from a good place We wanna do what's best for kids But unfortunately I think that fear has has gotten the best of us and we're starting to push the pendulum way too far in one

direction And in the process we're we're increasingly stripping valuable resources out of the hands of kids and teachers and that is as a former educator who had to fight tooth and nail to get devices in my classroom and when I got those devices it it completely changed my quality of instruction in my classroom I find it so so frustrating And it's hard for me to talk about it now cause I'm building an ed tech tool and so people automatically assume the worst of like you're just y-you

the only reason you care about this is cause it it's gonna hurt your bottom line I promise you that's not it I promise you it's it it's more growing out of this experience Like the reason I wanted to build ed tech to begin with was because of how profound of a positive impact it had on my classroom I think most of these laws are misguided I'm hoping that we can bend them towards positive outcomes for ed tech and I'm happy to talk more about what that might look like But generally I think

they're misguided to answer your question Agreed. Lumping everything, all technology, all screen time under one umbrella is, it's very misguided, and there's a lot of misinformation, disinformation, malinformation out there that's really pushing that narrative. And I agree with you.

I said, I think in both the first and second episode I did in this series was just me sharing my thoughts on this, and I said, "I think that screen time should be being evaluated," because there is a lot of bad use of screen time. You know, if you're only using screens as a reward or the students that work fast and need something to do because they plowed through your learning tasks really fast and it's used as some sort of, like, reward, is-- if that's the only way you're using tech.

Or there's a huge difference between digital curriculums and instructional technology tools. If you are only having students working in digital curriculums where they're watching videos and answering questions, they're not creating. They're a very consumption-based tech that's very, very, very, very different than in true instructional tech tools.

No I I totally agree with with everything you just said and I it's it's a part of A larger point that I think is really important It's it's like ed ed tech quote-unquote is not one thing It's thousands of things It's it's what you're describing It's like it's digital curricula it's instructional tools it's administrative tools it's A large umbrella It's it's a It's a huge umbrella and we're lumping them we're lumping all of

these interventions literally thousands of interventions under one label and we're saying it is inherently bad because of the medium and researchers So the most influential of the researchers that I know of that have talked about this is John Hattie I know that's a name that a lot of folks in education will recognize just because his meta meta-analysis work in visible learning is very influential and he had a chapter on technology influences in that book And in his most recent one he

he literally said something to the effect of like If there is to be a third version of this book we're not gonna have a chapter on technology because it's absurd to refer to technology as an intervention in and of itself It's a medium through which thousands of interventions can be implemented and so we need to instead measure that Like the use cases and the context and and the tools themselves I think that's a healthy perspective and that's coming from arguably the

most influential education researcher of the last 20 years we're ignoring that advice in our current moment and Mm-hmm I'm talking about when I talk about we're ignoring researchers in our current of moral panic and I find it very frustrating It's like saying, this is a good analogy I have right in front of me. Two learning tools that I use all the time when I'm teaching: a pen or writing utensil and Post-it Notes.

It's like saying all pens are terrible, and we should get rid of every pen in every classroom in the world, and there's no good use of a pen. The that's literally what this argument comes down to. Or Post-it Notes, all Post-it Notes are bad. They're terrible for the environment. They're using trees to create them. We should never, ever, ever, ever use a Post-it Note as part of learning It ever again.

it's like it Exactly It's it's like it's like saying like What's the effect size of a chalkboard Like well depends on what you're using the chalkboard for So if you The larger Yeah.

if you strip if you strip down the arguments being made here what you get what it what it reduces down to eventually is 1950s and 60s media ecology philosophy like Marshall McLuhan and others where basically like the medium is the message The the medium itself is what determines the message And then in this case they're saying like the medium of technology Is inherently distracting you use technology you will be distracted and that's that's it Kids can't handle it that philosophical

perspective was written off years ago it is technologically deterministic Like humans have free will We can bend technology to serve our interests and serve our needs and we do that every day in classrooms through very simple things like content filters or through basic classroom management processes that I'm happy to get into and talk about and I mean this literally like I I I think I was aware of this anti-edtech movement pretty early in the game because I I

went to a conference in oh my almost three years ago in Delaware and Jar Dr Jared Cooney Horvath who is I would say is the leader of the anti-edtech movement His book The Digital Delusion is what is testimony to the US Senate a couple months ago like is what has Is he the one that compared it to anthrax? Was that, was that the guy that compared... Okay. All right.

I mentioned that in the first or second episode that, yeah, there was a guy, I didn't remember his name, but that compared tech use to anthrax, basically saying that like anthrax, none of it is good. Yep Yeah. uh uh just the fact that someone's willing to make that comparison I think gives you a sense of I I don't think they should be taken seriously if you're making those types of comparisons in front of the US Senate Like that's a silly and dangerous analogy to make It is. It is dangerous.

It really is. It's a dangerous analogy.

is Um and and he So he was the keynote speaker at a conference I went to in Delaware like three years ago It was ResearchEd and was the he was like the final speaker of the conference he sp Half of his talk was was literally referencing like 50s and 60s philosophers on media ecology It's like interesting work and it it's certainly something we can debate amongst you know uh uh higher ed circles and and folks interested in like philosophy and theory not research

and it shouldn't be used to guide education policy And it's insane to me that that's what we're using basically it's disappointing on so many levels so yeah I'm happy to get into any of the details within there but it it it's it's it's been distracting for me as someone like building edtech It's it's been hard to focus on the work w in this when when you're living through this moment where people are almost talking about the work you do as if you work in like like the tobacco industry or Yes.

Yes! It's crazy I shared in a couple episodes ago too that I have had some very interesting and negative interactions in the past few months especially when I tell people what I do, because they read The Anxious Generation, and they think that no matter what, all technology is now, you know, frying the neurons in our brain and that kind of thing. I do wanna dig into research more because multiple things. One, you and your wife, 'cause your... So your wife's did y- master's degree too.

You both did your master's degrees at Stanford, right? Kind of at the same time. And your, and your wife's degree is more research education? Tell... I can't remember for sure.

No that's a good co so yeah we did So we both did our master's at the Stanford Graduate School of Education Mine was in learning design and technology so it's more I don't wanna say it's more pedagogy-focused The the folks in EDF will be mad about that label But it it's more focused on like solving problems in education using the unique affordances of technology to help solve those problems Because There, are unique affordances of technology that can help solve those problems

There there's a whole degree at... There wouldn't be a deg- a master's degree at Stanford University if there wasn't evidence backing the use of technology in learning I y yes thank you Like w we're writing off an entire field of validated research I I I met with my program director just yesterday to talk about this Her name's Dr Karin Forssell She literally wrote the book on efficacy and ed tech efficacy and like how you structure a learning.

tool to actualize best practices in research so that's LDT She's wonderful That's Karin Forssell She's the program director But then my wife studied education data science so she studied Mm. it's a lot more obviously data science intensive and so it is a bit more research-oriented as opposed to like practitioner-oriented Yep.

And so she did some original research in Dr Dora Demsky's lab on AI and its ability to provide feedback on student writing and of bending AI feedback towards best practices and and feedback more generally and so I I think we bring a really healthy lens to this current moment of like AI and ed tech in education because she has a deeply technical understanding of AI and machine learning and natural language processing and and I think I have the pedagogy side of things cause

I taught for seven years and I'm know I've worked in schools And so I think we bring a healthy perspective to it And I I training and education we received at Stanford like I was talking to Karin about this yesterday I feel like it prepared me perfectly for this moment cause there is a whole body of research to support technology as a meaningful technology is a broad label but like technology can be used meaningfully to improve learning outcomes for kids So I'm happy to fight for it

You just gave, I feel like, your credentials as one of the top people I know to refer to, to actually say what does the research say, and make sure reciting hi-high causal research as well. You dug into it a little bit but tell us more of like what does the research actually say about technology used as part of the learning process in K-12 in particular?

And I know, again, I'm lumping a big umbrella of technology but especially looking to-towards the, you know, is it frying the neurons of our brain argument.

Yeah it can if it's used really poorly If if you're just parking a kid in front of YouTube and being like Hey dude have some have some Chromebook time Like of course yeah but it can also be used the exact opposite way and have extremely positive outcomes especially when you lean into the unique affordances of technology So it depends on how you use it and I that's not an answer people like They want a blanket statement of like bad black or white It's neither It's gray It it depends on how Yep.

It it technology This is a Sal Khan quote I use it all the time Technology is an amplification of human intent If you're a really great teacher can use technology to make you a super great teacher Yep. Give you superpowers, what I always say.

Yeah Research supports that If if you're if you're a burnout teacher you don't wanna be in the classroom anymore you're just kinda doing it cause you whatever five more years and you can get to retirement you just kinda roll in and and technology's a great way to just kinda park the kids on something and keep them busy you can do that too And and Yeah.

kids can fry their neurons just doing whatever they want on the internet it depends on how the tech is used and I think the research supports that i-in terms of like talking about blanket research kind of writ large the closest thing you can get to that are meta-analyses cause they look at like a a huge swath of studies within different domains so that's why I cite the John Hattie research cause he's looked at like for example he looked

at the use of technology and its use to provide feedback student work and found an effect size of I think 0.5 standard deviations which is a large effect There's lo-- Yes, very large.

Largely positive so that is one simple use case a positive use case And and this is this You don't need research to tell you this if you've used technology in the classroom It's like well I could manually collect 120 papers that kids have handwritten and spend my weekend reading through it and hopefully I can get them the feedback back by like Next Thursday and they handed it in on Yeah more than likely because I'm having to read through maybe like whatever like 20

of like 120 of these and try to provide comments and things and by the time I get them the feedback back will they even remember what we were working on or I can use a wonderful new AI tool like Short Answer or pick your favorite cause there's many tools that will do this now And the kids submit their let's say exit ticket they can get feedback on the quality of that of their response And, explanation before they leave the classroom And so they they can then use

that feedback to improve what they're you know their understanding again before they leave the classroom that's one simple use case that when you extrapolate that out and look at studies across many different contexts again effect size of 0.5 like super positive are other domains where we could look at There was recently a meta-analysis done by Rebecca Silverman at Stanford She looked at This was in the context of early childhood literacy so teaching kids how to read

and write generally positive effect sizes It was a very nuanced study and there's like literally it comes down to like specific features and apps that do or d don't support early childhood literacy outcomes but effect sizes ranging from like 0.2 to 0.3 which is like generally positive now this is a whole other area that we could get into if you want to around what qualifies as a large effect size Cause that's another thing that the anti-ed tech movement is is

doing at the movement sort of positive research about technology cause I've And Those are large effect sizes So there's a researcher at Brown his name's Matthew Craft he has pushed back on this narrative that has grown up in education in the last 15 20 years that came from John Hattie that a large effect size is is anything 0.4 standard deviations and above If it's below 0.4 standard deviations and below it's a small effect size actually Jared Cooney Horvath used that reference

point in his testimony to the Senate He he literally subtracted that hinge point to take away from edu educational technologies effect size which is absolutely insane and total pseudoscience But but people have pushed back on that 0.4 standard deviation specifically Matthew Craft of like if you look at just at meta-analyses like the average effect size is really small for education interventions So actually like anything that's I think is is 0.2 and above is

actually quite large in education like in terms of what a positive effect size would be And so I try to explain that to folks and it's just like Well no no no just no That that that evidence doesn't count Mm. that's what makes me think that we're in a moment of moral panic cause it's like these are researchers Like these these are people that like Spend their time reading peer-reviewed research in journals Yeah, their life is literally dedicated to this.

Like, this is what they do with their life every day. And they're to them, like, who do we listen to?

Yeah. Exactly And man there's a whole other post Substack post coming soon about like reform needs to come from all sides Yes at a policy level Yes at an ed tech level implementation level It also needs to come at a research level because research community in education is a mess and leads to unclear guidance to schools on what is best practice And it's partly why we're in the moment that we're in and arguing over what a what qualifies as a large effect size

is a perfect example of that So that's a really long-winded way of saying research supports technology in schools when used well it's just that we're ignoring it So Matthew Craft, just to make sure I understand correctly, his argument is, so like Hattie's saying 0.5 effect size and above, Point four saying actually... Oh, 0.4, sorry, 0.4. Matthew Craft is saying that actually in education and the way education studies work, that we can go down to a 0.2 effect size.

Yeah and his argument there which I think is real cause he's replicated it now twice is basically that Hattie threw everything in including like correlational studies which tend to have higher effect sizes He threw in studies that where the measures that were being used were created for the specific test that was being done as opposed to like broader measures like standardized tests and things like that Which tend so you tend to get higher effect sizes So basically to to put it

into layman's terms like Hattie threw in all the research It's kind of like a hot dog It's easy to consume but you and and tasty but you don't wanna know what's in it whereas Matthew Kraft only looked at like high quality like randomized control trial-level studies And when you look at that majority like almo I think it's like 33 it's like in the 30s percent of studies have no effect on outcomes Cause it's really hard to have an effect on hard cause education's really hard.

There's so Yeah. at play in So many fac- yeah, it's really hard to say, like, this is the factor that improved student learning outcomes or this is the factor that didn't. So that's another reason why just having this blanket technology is the reason that test scores are down, and technology is the reason that engagement is down, is really, really flawed thinking, because, Subscribe we're, we're not taking into account testing becoming more and more a thing in schools.

The pandemic causing huge amounts of trauma. I just read a whole book on trauma, and now I'm on the trauma train, because I knew this, but this book was so enlightening to me at how much trauma affects our brain, and every brain inputs trauma differently. Sometimes what is, you know, of like big T trauma, little T trauma, people say. Sometimes what one brain interprets as little T trauma, another brain interprets as big T trauma.

And the pandemic, I believe, caused trauma in every single one of us, adults that have fully developed brains, and we haven't even begun to think about the trauma that happened to the kids from 2020 to 2022. And I think there's a lot of brains that had a lot of big T trauma, and when you have big T trauma, your brain just shuts down. But that's not part of the conversation. Yeah The correlation does not equal causation argument, right? Like, we're saying, "Oh, I listened to this NPR."

Actually, honestly, I didn't make it through. I need to go back to it, but I got so frustrated. It was an NPR segment. I can't remember the exact, And usually I really-- I love NPR. My husband's an NPR addict. He's the one that sent it to me.

I can't remember the name of the segment, and usually I really like this journalist and I listen to it, but it was so one-sided and it was the, this principal arguing that at the same time that we put Devices in schools and that her middle school went one-to-one Chromebooks was the same time that test scores and engagement started to go down. No, that's correlation-- Correlation does not equal causation. You cannot say because this happened, it's because of this.

Yeah Yeah Yeah Yeah and it it's wild that we're prioritizing correlational studies over causal studies Yes. that that that kinda shows me this is about moral panic and emotion more than it is about evidence cause yeah I mean what else correlates correlation we could draw is that around that same time kids started spending seven to eight hours outside of school on their cell phone or Yep.

devices Yep. of going home to read Harry Potter we're going home to scroll through TikTok That may also play into it into this as as you mentioned as does the trauma of a pandemic as does I mean a generation of kids that was raised on reading methodology that has increasingly been questioned with the science of reading movement we could go down a list of 1,000 different reasons why test scores are are likely declining cause it is real that they're declining Yes.

but drawing this simple correlation of like we we bought computers and scores went down It's it's Yep.

correlation I you can imagine So it's it's not I don't think it's strong evidence and I think the people that would tell you that they support this like science of insert your favorite part of education science of movement tell you we need causal evidence To support interventions if we're gonna put them in schools And simultaneously they're ignoring their own advice in this moment and being like No actually correlational evidence is enough it's it's pretty

absurd So it it's frustrating but I am hopeful and I wrote a Substack post about this just yesterday I am hopeful that like it can this current moment can push for some positive reform cause I do think edtech does need some reform Agreed. We wouldn't be here having this conversation if it didn't need reform, is my opinion.

no it does need reform Th-there are some flaws in the industry that should be addressed but stripping resources out of the hands of teachers is worst possible way to go about doing this but unfortunately it's just the easiest thing to legislate so it's what we're doing Yep. here we are I also wanna talk about efficacy, 'cause I know this is something I've ta- I-- we've had conversations about this, and ed tech efficacy in general.

If you're not familiar with that terminology, it basically, efficacy measures whether a tool, in this case we're talking digital learning tools, improve student outcomes or not. There's a huge conversation in the ed tech world about how do we measure ed tech effic-efficacy, and how do we actually know if an ed tech tool is improving student outcomes?

So that's what makes this really really hard and that's why people go to school for eight years to study this and then spend their lives trying to figure this out it's educational re education is a social science Social science is hard cause there are so many variables that you try to control are almost impossible to control in the way that if you wanna compare it to medical science um like that that you can control in a in a human's body as opposed to like a classroom Right

speaking to answer your question how do you measure efficacy The gold standard of efficacy in technology and a lot of education in general is a randomized control trial or if below that it's like a quasi-experimental study At a very broad level we're gonna paint with a broad brush here cause we could get into nerdy specifics but I don't think we need to turn this into a research methods grad school class So like at a basic level it's you go to a a large

subset of kids ideally Some of them get the intervention So let's just go with Short Answer the platform we're building These kids will use Short Answer during this period Let's And this subset of kids that's been randomly selected a a large number of them they're not going to use Short Answer They're gonna do business as usual will these We'll we'll come up with a different plan et cetera et cetera We'll do like a pre/post let's say So we'll look at their writing scores on the

state test the year before and then we'll look on the writing scores on the state test the year after and we'll compare the control group the the kids that didn't use Short Answer to the kids that did the experimental group we will subtract them and then we'll divide it by the standard deviation within the test scores find an effect size So when I say effect size that's what I'm referring to It's like a 0.2 a 0.3 And like what qualifies as big Well if I would say if you I'm gonna go

with Matthew Kraft if the deviation is 0.2 or above you have a a medium to large effect size If it's 0.05 and above it's it's a smaller effect size Sorry If it's 0.2 and above it's large If it's 0.05 to 0.2 it's medium If it's below 0.05 it's it's small and that's a randomized control trial Now h I need to complicate that so hooray we got our standard you know standard deviation and it's wonderful The problem with that in educational technology is what you talked about at the

beginning of the podcast which is edtech moves fast and it changes a lot Like a product is never built You're always building it so the problem with that is okay we we run a randomized control trial It's great We we 0.5 standard deviation effect size Amazing You know Look at this W we improved learning outcomes Well the problem with that is if in the process of doing that research you also added 20 new features to your platform that completely changed the what you do All, all the time.

which happens all the Yeah. technology And that's a positive thing And it's a good thing. Yeah. a great thing Like if we have a new whatever new research comes out that like actually if you do it this way it's better we can quickly change it right If you have a textbook good luck Like that thing ain't getting updated for a decade Like Yep.

are so slow Yep. positive affordance One of the downsides is that you end up measuring tools that no longer exist because like it changed over time And so the best advice I've seen on this this comes from who Molly Zimmerman and Jennifer Carolan They wrote an article that we read in grad school at Stanford I think the healthiest approach to efficacy in edtech is a portfolio approach where you build out multiple different studies of varying sizes and quality over time because that

better enables you to track your product as it changes over time But just as importantly it allows you to measure your impact in different contexts over time Cause the challenge of edtech that it's used at scale Like we've got kids in rural West Texas using Short Answer and we've got kids in urban Beijing using Short Answer Those are very different contexts And so the way that tool works and is used in those contexts is probably completely different you need a smattering of

different research into a portfolio over time to speak to those different contexts because education is deeply contextual so like the randomized control trial is the gold level you know whatever the the high the highest bar o of efficacy And then I suppose a meta-analysis of randomized control trials would then be the only thing that would be above that but for an ed tech company because you're constantly changing I think that portfolio approach is healthy And that's why if you go to our

website sorry for the shameless plug if if you go to myshortanswer.com and click on the Our Pedagogy page there's a little button that says See our portfolio of efficacy everything ranging from a logic model which is basically just like Here's what our app does Here's the research that supports every different part of our app and and why it does what it does That doesn't mean that our app works it just means that there's at least a a theoretical explanation of why it might

work and then you'll see our learner study that we ran as a part of my master's capstone project and then you'll see case studies that we put together based on surveys and triangulation of interviews and several other factors And what we're doing is slowly trying to build up towards the causational evidence that I just talked about like a randomized control trial but we haven't got there yet because RCTs are expensive and take forever and for a small

company like us where we're still building a product and changing things dramatically from day to day it doesn't make sense So I think that portfolio approach is healthy and I think here's a healthy reform idea require that an ed tech product at least have a logic model or theory of change in order to be used in schools It's a very simple way to try to bend adoption towards efficacy and towards quality opposed to what we were talking about at the beginning of the conversation

where it's like about the medium or just about X number of minutes per day or like silly things that aren't aligned with research that could be a very simple step forward towards improved focus on quality that was a long-winded response but this was literally my master's so Yeah, y that hit on a was fantastic. I like talking about That was fantastic, and I love that you noted that it, it's also so tricky with ed tech research. It's not like researching a textbook-based curriculum That is static.

And I, I'll, I tell teachers this, I tell ed tech companies this: the small, tiny little things are what make or break an ed tech product. Like, the teeny tiniest little details. So you could make a really small change, a UI change, a UX change, a design change, a pedagogical change in a product, and it can completely make or break the teacher using it, how the teacher uses it, and that can completely change a study that was done prior or post that change, or both You're 100 right?

and I've never had more appreciation for that concept than I do now as someone building this stuff at I bet.

if we choose to make this little user interface element a tab instead of a toggle that can have a profound impact at scale So yeah it's it's fascinating And this is what I love about the work You go from 10,000-foot level conversations about what qualifies as an effect size a positive effect size in meta-analyses and and then you zoom all the way into like what should the radius of this of the corner of this button like how Should it be a three radius or a five

radius when I design it in Figma So it's like it's granular and it's it's it's universal all at the same time and it's fascinating work cause it all matters Yeah, and the more you get in and use and explore ed tech tools, the more you start to notice those little tiny details. For me, when I'm evaluating an ed tech product, I look for those little tiny details, and that's a big indicator to me of the quality of the product. Last question on this topic, and then we'll move on.

If you are a school leader, a teacher listening to this, and you're like, "I wanna make sure that I am using high-quality ed tech tools in my classroom," or a school leader that's like, "I wanna make sure I'm putting high-quality ed tech tools in the hands of my teachers and students," what would be your advice to them? What would you tell them?

First I would take matters into your own hands and what I mean by that is if a teacher's requesting to use a tool go to the Not look at it Do they have a page or somewhere where they're explaining the research supporting their tool And when I say research I mean research What what you'll find is there are a lot of tools that they a white paper. No, not a white paper.

a lot of vibey hand-waving that happens with like our learning principles and it's just like this sort of like vague explanation of like constructivism It's like okay that's nice but that's not research That that's just Yeah That's That's a philosophy. I you're It's a aligning your tool to an educational philosophy, which is not bad, but it's not research.

Yeah. It's not bad But it's like what are the specific things your app is doing and are those things supported by research And that's called the it's called theory of Common it's called logic model But that to me that's that's the baseline of efficacy And under the Every Student Succeeds Act that was Sense by the Obama administration they Media. created these tiers of efficacy and the first tier the Oh, they did? I didn't know that I'm at least looking for that.

baseline Does it have a logic model Does it have a theory of change Do they even have somewhere on their site where they're talking about efficacy Because if not alarm bells should be ringing It doesn't necessarily mean that a tool isn't research-supported or backed or aligned to best practice if it doesn't have it but it's a pretty strong indication that the people building it haven't considered that which to me is a sign that you know it's a strong signal I that would

be my simplest advice There are other places though that schools can go to get advice on this stuff ISTE has a product index that's pretty good where they kind of rate and review and kind of vet technology EdSurge has one Common Sense Media used to have one but they gave up Okay. I they did so their product index is I think it's still around maybe but they're not updating It I don't know I know Johns Hopkins University has one It's called like Okay.

ooh something but the the problem with all of these is like a a lot of administrators don't know they exist and a lot of them also just like not up to date cause it's hard to keep up to date with the edtech market They change all the time. Yeah. all the time right So it's like I applied last year and I was approved and got a good score Mm-hmm.

Mm. if I added 15 new features I guess I'll have to apply again And then like even large organizations like Common Sense Media can't keep up and that's why I do think we need some sort of regulatory body that can like actually be the stamp of approval just like the way we have the FDA and like food and drug need we need the equivalent of that in in education of like a stamp of approval from a verified government source that's like This is good and okay cause that is w going back

to like the flaws of the industry one of them is there's a lot of garbage efficacy numbers being thrown around that are based on not real research It's just kind of like testimonials and sort of like we're we put together our little case study and we're pretending it's like a peer-reviewed randomized control trial and in reality it's just like an interview with one teacher that had a good experience Like that type of stuff probably should not be allowed or if it is it needs to come

with a label that's like This statement has not been approved by the Food and Drug Administration You know what I mean so th-there is a lot of fake efficacy going around That's one of the major flaws that hopefully can be addressed in this current moment of angst but now I've gotten off topic So to go back to your original question look for a theory of change look for a portfolio of efficacy on the website then in lieu of that maybe go to one of these product indexes

and see what other people are saying Yeah.

if you're looking at using an ed tech tool call the district down the street from you that maybe already is using it or had teachers and get their perspective Unfortunately we A lot of times in school districts we live in silos where like even we're like right next to each other but we don't talk to the district over about what's working and what's not so I think those conversations could be healthy too But just even just taking a more proactive stance of like I'm gonna

look into the efficacy before I approve a tool that in and of itself would be a step forward cause oftentimes that's not happening So maybe this current moment could be good for that at least Switching gears, I wanna make sure we talk more about Short Answer, 'cause it is a really, really amazing tool. Pretend I am a skeptical English teacher, and walk me through Short Answer and why should I spend my very limited time to explore Short Answer and try it with my students?

So if you're a skeptical English teacher then I'm gonna start with the why I'm not gonna start with the product Let's look at our current moment We now live in a world where AI can write for you like a machine can can write it's a momentous it it's a crazy moment in human history that completely upends I think how we need to approach we teach and assess writing It doesn't devalue teaching kids how to write It is still critically important to learn how to write But I do think it

changes how we go about teaching writing the first thing that I would say once writing leaves the classroom which it necessarily needs to because oftentimes it just takes a long time to produce longer form writing writing leaves the classroom it's hard to know how much of an influence AI is having on that student's process a very simple step forward is we need to do more writing in class will probably look like shorter form writing I also think you know the first thing

I see when I log into Gmail in twenty twenty-six is a thing that says Hey want me to write the email for you Our kids are Wait for me.

and Yep. and that button's gonna go everywhere So that's gonna result in less writing practice Our kids already struggle with writing The less you practice the more your skills atrophy Troubling situation We can't just say Well the English teacher needs to do more writing We don't they don't have the bandwidth It it's gonna take a team It's gonna take have to embed more writing across the curriculum I think that's kind of step number two where it can't just fall on

the English teacher anymore It needs to be embedded across the curriculum That's been advocated for for decades It's been historically really challenging to pull off but I think any writing tool needs to be built with that in mind and and that's partly why we built Short Answer And then the third piece that I would say to address this challenge is it has to be an engaging experience It has to be an experience where the kid is gonna fall in love with writing cause how on earth are

we gonna motivate kids to want to learn how to do this really really challenging thing arguably one of the hardest things you learn how to do in school Cause writing is so cognitively complex hard.

How are we gonna motivate a kid to wanna to wrestle with this and struggle and fail at it where they can press a button and it'll do it for them in ten seconds So the third piece is I struggle to say engagement cause then we fall into like well it's just gonna be a game and silliness But no but it needs to be an experience where a kid falls in love with writing and reaches a flow state and just like loves doing it inherently And so those three pieces more in class more

across the curriculum and more engaging I think are critical and that's why we have built Short Answer So I like to start with the why especially when talking about cynical English teachers and cynical teachers in general about why should I use your ed tech tool That's our why The way that we do it with Short Answer is through short form social writing practice that's intended to be em-embedded across the curriculum combining daily formative assessment of whatever skill you're

teaching with writing instruction So teacher pulls up code kids sign in kids see prompt Prompt could be anything from if you're in English class copy-paste in your opening paragraph to the research paper we're writing if you're in science class explain the process of cell division as an exit ticket right It it could be anything It could be assessing content it could be doing literal writing instruction Kids do it submit it then teacher clicks begin feedback Going back to Hattie's

effect size point five effect size of of using technology to improve feedback processes in in classrooms kids either get feedback from their peers and that's a huge part of what we try to do cause we think inherently motivating for kids because it creates an authentic audience for their work of like Oh my gosh my classmates are gonna see what I wrote I should try hard And it's anonymous so we do it safely but I think that's a key part of it Or they get feedback from AI

or they get feedback from both And I think there's some really interesting things you can do with augmenting AI and and peer feedback so they get that feedback they reflect on it And then as a class then the final step is discussion and reflection So every Short Answer activity follows that same kind of core structure of do some writing get some feedback and reflect on the feedback and then ideally go back to the do some more writing because we're using that feedback to improve our

understanding and using that discussion to improve our understanding so that's Short Answer as it currently exists We have a whole new host of features coming soon Oh. are gonna completely augment that entire process it's gonna lead to some massive changes to Short Answer this summer So stay tuned for that just gonna tease them I don't wanna say Exciting.

But that's the core idea and it's very straightforward Our kind of philosophy going back to your point on design is like we wanna do a f only a few things but we wanna do them extremely well as opposed to trying to be like the we do a bajillion different things type of tool so it's very simple and I think in that way it serves us well And so we have about a hundred thousand monthly active teachers and students across all Wow.

states and several countries at this point And but that's that's kind of the core of it both what it does and the why behind we do I love it. It is-- it's so engaging. Students love it. Like, they really do. It really gets them excited to want to write. And that anonymous peer feedback element really motivates them to try because they don't wanna submit something terrible That their peers are gonna look at and tear apart and get horrible feedback on. So it really does motivate.

And I love that you hit on the engagement point. I, I talk about... And I talk to teachers about this a lot when I'm training them about our educational philosophy. I'm not having them write like they're, you know, I'm sure you had to do it in your teacher prep program where you had to write your philosophy on education. We don't go that far. But I do like to get them to really think, like, what is your philosophy as a teacher? What is your role? What is your purpose as a teacher?

And some teachers really think that they are there to get kids to do hard stuff, and that kids should just be able to, that grit, just plow through and do the hard thing. I don't need to try to engage them. I just feel so strongly against that. And the more that I teach, work with, talk to Gen Z and Gen Alpha learners, the more I realize that they are so different, as in every generation. Every generation is significantly different than the previous generations on a whole, right?

Lumping them all together. Because we have different experiences growing up Now technology has just changed the generational experience immensely, and I really feel that if we don't engage Gen Z and Gen Alpha learners in a different way than we have previous generations, that we are just gonna see test scores just plummet Yeah and down and down and down.

And Short Answer just is really great at hitting that, the combination of a little bit of, like, gamification with a little bit of peer feedback, with the AI feedback, with the teacher leading. The teacher leads the entire activity, that it is very engaging for Gen Z and Gen Alpha learners in my experience. More Gen Z. I've, I've seen it more with Gen Z than Gen Alpha. On that note, is there a-- Do you say with Short Answer middle school, high school only, high school only, all K12?

Can I use it in higher ed if I'm a higher ed person listening here? Good question It's generally second grade through 12th grade Okay. I'll be honest we get some classes it goes like gangbusters and they're like Heck yeah this is amazing Our second graders are writing And then in some classes it's like This is way too advanced So it d it just Depends on the Depends on where they are.

Yeah. spec that's specific with second grade Yep it's third th third through 12th at the higher ed level it's a bit we've had some some folks use it with some success but it's it tends to be K-12 oriented And especially when you use the tool you'll kind of understand why It you can tell from the design it's oriented towards K-12 going back you said something that was really interesting and something I think about a lot when you're talking

about engagement and what does it look like and I think that's like what partly what makes designing ed tech so interesting is like wanna create an engaging experience that a kid wants to do But you don't want it to spill so far that the kids are just conking out kind of playing games and not really Yes.

Yes. I I do think in the in the larger context of this conversation around ed tech reform and why people are skeptical of ed tech is there are a lot of tools that have kind of leaned really heavily into sort There's not the candy side of things where it's like yeah the kids beg the teacher to do it but the kids beg the teacher to do it because just playing games for 20 minutes Like a huge amount of learning value.

Yeah. Yeah. So it's this really fine line to walk and I always get nervous when I even say the word gamification because I Yes. kind of Yes. go off for people like no no no it's I mean if you use our tool you'll get a sense of it It's like pr the gamification is Very light.

Very light that we're hoping the core engagement comes from what you just talked about which is like Oh my gosh my classmates are gonna see what I wrote And and there's something just intrinsically motivating about like creating something and sharing it with people I'm hoping that W-which I think is it's not extrinsic it's not points and bells and whistles and badges it's creative and and sharing and and social in ways that I think are more healthy and

Which is how Gen Z and Gen Alpha, that's the world that they live in. They live in a world of gamification. I actually have an episode coming up here in a few weeks, closer to end of June it'll come out, where we're really diving into gamification versus game-based learning and the misconceptions. There's a huge misconceptions of not understanding the difference. Gamification is... Well, actually, let me start with game-based learning. Game-based learning is you're learning through a game.

You are playing a game, and it's the learning process. Gamification is we're adding elements of gaming to learning. So points, that's gamification right there. Badges, leaderboards, XP, that's s- kinda same as points. That's gamification. So huge misunderstandings between the differences in the two, and I do think that both have gotten also a bad rap 'cause of a lot of misinformation around it. And there are products out there that have gone too far with Yeah gamification.

100 think that that hasn't helped the bad, but The way that Gen Z and Gen Alpha learn and the way their brains think and the world that they live in of social media and interactive internet experiences, they really do engage to those small gamification elements in my experiences. And that's where ed tech can, if done right, can really help with that engagement factor. And it's so ironic because one point we're saying out of this side of our mouth that Gen Z and Gen Alpha aren't engaged.

It's really hard to engage them. They're checked out of learning. And the other side of our mouth we're saying, "Oh, gamification is terrible and never use it." Right Super ironic because if you do it right, gamification is a really powerful way to engage Gen Z and Gen Alpha learners in my experience. And I do think Short Answer is doing that right. And I'm not just saying that 'cause Adam is on the podcast here.

Believe me, if anybody knows me, they know that I speak my mind and I tell it how it is, even if people don't want to hear the truth. So I wouldn't be saying that if I didn't really think that. Well thank you and I also think this generation of kids For that matter millennials and yeah Gen Z and anyone that was raised in this like tech era th-there's a desp desperation maybe is a strong word but there's a strong desire for social connection Yes.

patterns in society And I think really good ed tech going forward will be tech that finds ways to sort of human interaction in the classroom and I'm I'm hoping that's what Short Answer can be Yep.

example we have an activity where okay kids submit writing get feedback Did the class hit a score goal together That's kind of the gamification elements team-based But then there's an option the teacher can click that's like reflect together and it pulls up names on the board and it's like Go sit Adam go sit with Lindy and you know Jimbo go sit with Kearney the kids have to go then sit together then they they together go through a structured reflection where

they're talking through what they wrote about why they wrote about it the feedback they got if they agreed with the feedback that's finding a way to use technology to like get kids sitting together talking to each other socially i-in a structured way that supports learning through this like think pair share model So I wanna really lean into that as we continue to build and and scale Short Answer and that's gonna be part of the updates that you'll see later this summer I keep teasing those Yay.

I'm excited. I'm excited to see them. You know, Short Answer, if you're one of those that are in the camp of you think AI is the end of humanity and it's getting rid of critical thinking and, you know, all the terrible things, that, that end of the AI spectrum If you're at that end, you should go check out Short Answer because it is developed in a way that it pulls the very great powerful parts of the technology.

And not just AI in general, but if you are on the spectrum of ed tech where you do think that tech is like, you know, ruining the neurons in our brain and there's nothing good about it, as well as AI is the end of humanity, Sh- my Short Answer is a great example of how you can pull the really powerful parts of the technology to do things like anonymous peer feedback that would-- That super powerful engagement element that would be very hard to do without the technology. So there you go.

I was just getting th that you've you've identified an affordance like w w going back to this larger conversation about ed tech It does have unique affordances that that enable it to improve learning in unique ways One of them is anonymity when it comes to writing It's Yeah.

for stuff to be anonymous which can be obviously also has has some downsides But in the context of providing peer feedback on writing that anonymity is much easier to pull off digitally which is partly why we've built Short Answer the way it is So just wanna double-click on that Two more questions that I know teachers, educators listening probably have if they're interested in trying it. Number one, go to myshortanswer.com. Is this only for English teachers?

I feel like you already kind of answered this, but I wanna specifically hit that point. Yeah and that's why we called it Short Answer is cause we we didn't wanna call it like The Writing Tool Yes.

Yes. wh when when a when a science teacher sees The Writing Tool they're like Ah it's not for me we were like Ah Short Answer that's kind of something that is everybody uses but yeah no it's not just for English teachers In fact it's it's built from the ground up to And for for English it does work in math works in math with specific use cases the best being like error analysis tasks where it's like teacher uploads picture of incorrectly worked equation and using writing kids explain Oh, and

okay. It's not great I'll just be transparent It's not great for writing if you're trying to get kids to like work through a problem because it's made for text and Yep. have a digital whiteboard functionality I could see it being used for word problems though in math.

100 Yeah for concepts and and and for like definitions and yeah No it it definitely can be used in math I'm just being transparent Like of the use cases I would say generally it goes English and then social studies science is the next most common use case and then down into the electives and that's probably just a product of there's teachers th in in the electives than there are in the the core content area and then math So um that's kind of the flow and but

we've we've built it from the ground up to work across the curriculum and sorry to keep doing this but we have some features coming this summer that are gonna help even more to embed it in your content area So I'm excited to roll those out and stop teasing them like this When I was teaching career and tech ed, I would 100% used Short Answer. I taught personal finance, and my students told me that they wrote more in their personal finance class than they did in English.

Yeah ' Cause I-- that's a great that's a great thing Yeah. No, they, I literally had students tell me that multiple times. Like, "We write..." And of course, they're like, "We write more in this class than we do in English class." But that's a perfect example, like career and tech ed. Hey, no, 100% would've, would've used Short Answer a lot actually, and it works really great if you're like an exit ticket person, really great for that.

I think you can really use it as that anticipatory set at the beginning of the lesson. Second question that I'm sure people have is pricing to use Short Answer.

It's interesting that you asked that question today Just last Friday we changed some things So straightforward response beginning June 15th we will no longer offer individual teacher licenses We used to offer individual teacher licenses for $75 per year We just announced last Friday that in the upcoming month we're gonna get rid of that option was a controversial decision and not an easy one and it was frustrating for a lot of our teachers if I'm happy to talk

about why we chose to make that decision if we wanna get into it and in fact I would kinda like to cause it gives me a Yeah, go for it But j-j-just quickly to answer your question So otherwise it's we do site-wide licenses or district-wide licenses We price that per student it.

depends on the size of your district but right now we tend to charge anywhere between $2 to $4 per student depending on the size and level of adoption so that's general pricing and pricing structure we're happy to do some pilots of the premium version of our tool in a structured way to to try it out before you buy it I think that's a healthy process in edtech adoption said we also have a free plan So if you're just like Dude I don't have budget but this sounds cool and I

wanna use it fine we still have a really robust free plan that in-includes many of the all the el in fact all the elements that you and I have talked about on this podcast like the the peer-to-peer feedback all those things So we do have a free plan and that will continue to be available It's just that literally last Friday we announced that we're removing individual purchases of licenses I'm happy to talk about why but that's the pricing structure

We could've done a whole episode just on, like, research and efficacy and the screen time debate, and then we could've done a whole episode on short answer, and then we could also have done a whole episode on writing instruction in the age of AI, because obviously you are a expert in that area. I was lucky to get to go to your workshop at TCA this year, yeah. to have you It was cool to see you there all right, k- chef's kiss to the Matthew McConaughey reference there.

It was fantastic, seriously, I am very critical of my PD time, especially conference sessions. A, A, don't have a lot of time to go to conference sessions, 'cause I'm always presenting and doing a million other things, and B, I'm always very careful at the conference sessions that I do choose to go to, 'cause I have such little time. It was very, very good. I actually have gone back and referenced your slide deck several times, Yeah which I also would say that I, I rarely do.

It was very helpful for me, 'cause I get tons of questions on Yeah The writing in the age of AI debate. A few things to hit on here. You said that you think that writing instruction in the age of advanced AI, generative AI, agentic AI that we're in right now, does need to change. You hit on that a little bit. What else would you add to that for teachers?

Yeah no We lead four-hour workshops on this so I want to preface it that know not I know, not we're not Oh, justice And all right, Oh go all right.

I All I right know, Yeah exactly It was funny at the beginning of that session to say like How many people are here just for the McConaughey pun And like half the people raised their hands so But I was glad they were there okay quickly I'll just rattle them off Don't use AI detection software It doesn't work that's not gonna be a solution unfortunately especially in a world of agentic AI even revision tracking tools which I would have suggested even just six months ago

moving forward it's not gonna be reliable necessarily because you can use AI agents to autonomously write a paper for you and kind of simulate a revision history We're pretty much already in that world Yep.

So I think that the healthiest forward addition to more writing in class and more writing across the curriculum more layered assessment And I talked about this in the the TCA presentation This is from Philip Dawson and his interpretation of Dr Kiara Rundle's research But it's basically thinking about any layer of assessment that you come up with to measure how well a kid can write or do anything really is gonna have holes in it that AI plagiarism can easily get

through cause AI can do just about any task you throw at a kid where one layer might have a hole another layer might not It's called the Swiss cheese model sometimes you wanna stack the layers of Swiss cheese you know where one has a hole another might not you're gonna eventually block that AI plagiarism for example an example I talk about in writing is like okay if it's a five-page research paper it's big summative for my eighth graders let's say or freshmen I don't know we'll

do more in-class writing but then we're also gonna do peer conferencing That's gonna be a layer where they have to bring their writing into class and and defend what they wrote to small groups let's say then maybe while they do that another layer is gonna be I'm gonna go around and have a one-on-one conversation with students and talk to them while they're doing the peer conferencing where they walk me through what they've written And then maybe we're also gonna use revision

tracking That can be a layer too Like it's it's flawed but there's some potential there Like it's still kinda helpful cause a lot of kids don't have access to agentic AI quite yet maybe if it's a big summative big enough summative assessment maybe we're gonna do an in-class presentation of your paper where you walk the class through your process and talk through Why you structured it the way you did or what your thesis was or you know defend what you wrote so you're adding like multiple

different layers to this assessment such that plagiarism might get through one or two of them but it's not gonna get through all of them how you go about structuring those layers depends on the assignment It depends on what you're teaching like your content area I mean what age group you're working with a lot of different things but I think that lens is a really healthy one of assessment layering cause that's just kind of general good practice in formative assessment a-anyway so we have this

whole resource and if people reach out to me my email is adam@myshortanswer.com I can share it about like what might a layer look like and like do layers look like before writing during writing after writing There's a lot of different things we can do But just that lens of layering assessment I would say to keep my response as succinct as I can that would be my answer to like structural reform that needs to happen to continue to accurately and effectively teach and assess writing

in a world where machines can do it for us I love that answer from multiple perspectives. One, because I 100% agree. There is no silver bullet answer Yeah and I know that's super frustrating for educators, and that's not what you wanna hear. And you want to hear that, "Oh, I can use revision tracking or AI content detectors, and that'll just solve this problem." Silver bullet. But the evidence is huge It just does not work.

And exactly what Adam said, the more advanced, especially the more we're getting into agentic AI, even that tracking revision history, it, it just is not gonna work. It could be one teeny, teeny little tool in your layers. One, one teeny little layer in your layers maybe, but it can't be the only thing that you're doing. I also love that answer because I loved that you introduced that Swiss cheese model.

That, I think that's actually what I've gone back and referenced a few times in the slide deck because I have the same analogy, but I use puzzle pieces instead when I'm talking to teachers about assessing in the age of AI, and this idea that if you only have one puzzle piece, even two puzzle pieces, that's not a puzzle. You've gotta have at least three puzzle pieces. And ideally, the more puzzle pieces you have, the harder the puzzle.

A 1,000-piece puzzle is a lot harder than a 500-piece puzzle to do. So it's the same idea, like layering Swiss cheese and covering the holes, adding more puzzle pieces. It has to be a multi-layered approach. And that is not just writing, by the way. It's essential to writing because that's what AI large language models in particular are best at right now is writing. It's also, I think, what we have to do across really all assessment is take this really multi-layered approach.

I will link to, of course, myshortanswer.com in the show notes. We'll link to your Substack. Uh, I linked to it in a couple episodes ago, the specific article you wrote. It was a two-part article on, you know, edtech is worth saving or something like that. But we'll link to your Substack. I haven't read the one you just put out. I'll have to go back and read that. I'll put your email in there as well so people will have all of that.

Wrapping up here, Anything else you wanna share with listeners in terms of how they can connect with you? I mean my email's adam@myshortanswer Anybody can reach out to me I'm happy to chat I genuinely enjoyed this conversation and could continue having it for hours because I'm Same.

work and I think we're in a really important moment for education but also educational technology specifically And the decisions we make in the next six to 12 months feel like they're gonna reverberate for the next five to 10 years So it it feels like a really important moment and I appreciate you giving me a chance to share my voice on this I hope that you will and I know you do cause you're a rock star w will continue to lift up the voices

of educators cause I think their voices are kind of being lost in this Yes. There's just like this assumption of like No one ever wanted technology and we never we There's no Why did we ever even adopt it to begin with I'm like Well you should go talk to the 10,000 teachers that I see every year at ed tech conferences Yep.

this stuff because of the positive impact it's having in their classroom So please keep doing what you do and please keep lifting up those voices cause I think they're really important Yeah, absolutely. I might have to have you back on to dig more into writing instruction, especially in the age of AI, 'cause that is such a hot button topic. And you said it, but I know y- you guys do, like, four-hour workshops specifically focused on this. Do you have that on the Short Answer website?

Yeah yeah If you go to our at the top there's like a Getting Started button and then there'll be an option for like professional development and workshops and that'll give you the information Okay.

Okay. We will be leading it Oh man what's the next conference We lead a a lot with school districts but the next conference I think we're leading it at is will be Dakota Teachers of English Conference Huge conference that I'm sure all your listeners will be at Just kidding and Where's that at, by the way? Is that in Rapid City or Sioux Falls No it's in Sioux Falls? It's Sioux Falls. Okay, yeah, that's a long ways from me. that's a long way for you Yeah.

But we'll be in we'll be in Philadelphia for the National Council of Teachers of English Conference and we're Okay.

the workshop It's it's gonna be the full four-hour workshop and we're gonna lead it with one of our schools Kimberly Sosbe who's an awesome director of secondary ELA at Grand Prairie ISD in Texas her and I are gonna lead it together if you've got English teachers that are on the East and Seaboard or who are members of the National Council of Teachers of English we'll be in Philadelphia leading it this this fall any conference we go to we try to lead

a version of it So yeah please reach out I'm happy to talk about that or anything Okay. technology efficacy short answer writing whatever I will put a link to the writing workshops in the show notes as well, if there's any teachers that are specifically interested in that. I wanna try to go-- I got your 50-minute version of your four hours. I would love to, to get the full four hours myself.

For real wrapping up, we end every episode with a Make a Tech100 Moment, which is like what is your final thoughts of what you want to leave listeners with? Oh man We covered a lot of ground in this episode.

so much ground If you're an educator listening to this you probably like educational technology because you're you know what you do Lindy and you're really good at it So I guess my thing to share would be share your voice and when I say share your voice I just mean share your experience share how you use technology and how it has positively improved outcomes in your classroom in this But I think those stories are being lost in our current echo chamber around

how awful technology is and we're losing sight of the really positive use cases and affordances in education And the most important voices we need to hear those from are teachers like the people that might be listening to this podcast So I'd just say your voice share your stories on social media on Substack with your with your principal with your school board with your parents like any audience to sort of help com I don't wanna say combat but just to help put some balm

on the the the current moment that would be my my I would leave with I guess 100% agree. The naysayers are loud, so we have to be loud in response to show the other end of the spectrum. By the way, I loved in your workshop the, I think you called it radical cen-centrism. What did you call it? Radical centrism so radical centrism this idea of there's a spectrum on one end of the other. One spectrum is, you know, it's great and everything's great. Like right now, AI.

AI's gonna save humanity, da, da, da, da. And then the other end of the spectrum is it's all terrible, it's ruining our brains, AI's the end of humanity, right? And your argument was be a radical centrist in the middle. I love that for multiple reasons. One of the reasons is that's exactly what I tell teachers, especially when it comes to the AI debate right now. I always say- You wanna be in the center.

You wanna pull the powerful parts of the technology and leverage the powerful parts and mitigate the bad parts. So Agreed I loved... I've been using your radical centrist terminology ever since then. Be a radical centrist. now but yeah Yeah Is there? Okay. Yeah Yeah Okay, awesome. Love it. All right. Thank you so much, Adam. Great conversation, and like I said, we might have to have you back on the podcast Anytime. Thank you for having me Thanks for joining Make EdTech 100.

I know educator time is valuable, and I'm honored you choose to spend yours with me. For more edtech strategies you can use tomorrow and ways to bring me to your school or event, head to lindyhock.com. If this episode resonated, hit Subscribe so you don't miss the next one. I'm LindyHoc. Go forth and Make EdTech 100

Transcript source: Provided by creator in RSS feed: download file
For the best experience, listen in Metacast app for iOS or Android