Associate Professor Vincent Cho explores the impacts of behavior management apps in the classroom to showcase the power of compassion
For the past two decades, Vincent Cho has dedicated his life and career to education. Returning to his alma mater to teach in 2011, much of Cho鈥檚 recent research focuses on how technology can either enhance or impede classroom learning. His findings influence the way he approaches teaching and shape the insights he shares with the next generation of the world鈥檚 education leaders at the Lynch School.
Early in my career, teachers and administrators relied on paper files to access student data, test scores, and other notes. Now, thanks to new technologies and a variety of recently captured data, we are better aware of student needs. With smartphones and tablets in the classroom, students can do more today鈥攁nd so can teachers. I鈥檝e come to believe that with technology, we can make a really positive impact on a student鈥檚 education. At the same time, technology opens ourselves up to inherent risks. From that notion came this idea of optimistic skepticism, where one approaches new technologies or ideas with an open but critical mind. This has led me to dig deeper and explore the various ways education and technology interact, remaining mindful of the potential pros and the cons.
I鈥檓 exploring how American schools currently use data collected by behavior management apps to generate merits, demerits, and suspensions. I want to better understand if schools are using classroom data to help improve what we're doing as adults and educators, or if schools are just using behavior data to punish students. I am especially tuned in to the disproportionate punishment of students of color and will be keeping an eye on how specific groups may be punished or reprimanded more consistently than others.
There are three primary benefits that these apps can offer. First, with good leadership and compassion, behavior management apps can pave the way for better support for individual students. They can allow a teacher or team of teachers to say, 鈥淲ow, Betty needs some more attention; not only are her grades slipping, but her behavior is slipping as well.鈥 And before it gets to the point of requiring punishment or suspension, educators can implement an intervention, where parents are involved and the root issues of these behaviors can be uncovered.
Behavior management apps can also help observe different groups and provide answers to questions like how are we serving boys versus girls or Black boys versus Black girls? Do we need to rethink our school behavior policies? I noticed that there is a tension between what's possible technologically and what people actually do. I think the key difference, aside from having enough diversity to compare demographic groups, is having leaders who care about addressing racial inequities and creating ways for teachers to pursue those aims.
The third benefit of behavior management apps involves providing a direct connection to parents. These apps have instant notifications; parents can log in and get immediate insight into how their child is doing.
By approaching new technologies and ideas with an open but critical mind, Associate Professor Vincent Cho鈥檚 research explores the various ways education and technology interact.
The short answer is: it depends, both on how the apps are used and who鈥檚 overseeing their use. One of the schools I鈥檝e been observing realized that they were, in fact, disproportionately punishing students of color. Thanks to the data collected, this school has rethought its discipline policies, revised its dress code and updated other requirements. They have reworked how they give out rewards to students, and a dialogue has started where administrators regularly email teachers and talk about how often students are being punished, making sure to shine a light on the 鈥榳ho鈥 and the 鈥榳hy鈥.聽
When behavior management apps fail, it鈥檚 because communications fail and a school loses sight of the goal of improving a student鈥檚 learning experience. In another school using behavior management apps, I noticed that administrators and teachers were failing to engage students鈥 parents in conversations about their child鈥檚 behavior. Even worse, the school did not inform students that their behavior was being tracked, which led to a disconnect between behavior and punishment. To get the most out of these apps, the staff at a school must take some responsibility for the behavior they鈥檙e witnessing. And they must not use this technology strictly as a means for doling out punishments.
One thing I do in my classroom at the Lynch School is encourage students to not only try new technologies but also, to be skeptical about them. This harkens back to that notion of optimistic skepticism; whether it鈥檚 a data collecting app or a new teaching methodology, educators should proceed with a positive wariness, which allows them to weigh potential advantages and drawbacks. As an education leader in the digital age, I remind my students that we must always consider what we can do to help teachers use technology better while remaining acutely aware of technology鈥檚 possible repercussions.
“We must always consider what we can do to help teachers use technology better while remaining acutely aware of technology鈥檚 possible repercussions. ”
One issue that seems more glaring than before is how teachers are using, or failing to use, praise in the remote classroom. And, related to that, I鈥檓 interested in how teachers approach 鈥榗amera on / camera off鈥 rules. I've also noticed issues of equity when it comes to technology access; even though all students at a school might be given iPads, laptops, or Chromebooks, it is not the case that every student has a parent helping with tech support, for example. Then, there鈥檚 the issue of privacy: some students just don鈥檛 want their peers seeing their messy room, or the grandparent who鈥檚 in the kitchen with them. It reminds you of the need for compassion in education, one of the core values at the Lynch School.
Enrolling at the Lynch School is not just an academic endeavor. You鈥檙e signing up for a personal and professional growth experience that results in more than a degree. It results in a more thoughtful approach to your career and leads you to bring your values into the world in a more deliberate way. Most individuals who come to the Lynch School already have heightened senses of compassion and empathy; our programs strive to enhance those values. By attending the Lynch School, students not only become more in touch with their values and goals, but they become more competent, as educators and as people.