Hello and happy Tuesday!
Well, as the school year winds down, I wanted to get in at least one more “Teacher Talk Tuesday” for the year.

…via…Talking About it Tuesdays with Joanne.

This was a WordPress prompt a while back, and it had me taking a trip down memory lane…

Look at me in 2002 in my classroom my first year teaching…that’s a big ol’ computer, printer, and floppy disk holder!

Through the years, technology has really changed how we teach. All of my classrooms from my first fifteen years of teaching still had an overhead projector.
My first few years, the kids mostly learned a from textbooks and worksheets.
My previous school was in a smaller district, and they did incorporate more technology before a lot of the larger districts. After my first couple of years at that school, they added on to their building, and my classroom was in the new wing. My classroom had an electronic (Smart) whiteboard that I used pretty often. Also, students had chromebooks before the Covid days.
Now, I’m in a larger district, and through the years, most of the classrooms had the Smart boards, and then last year, we all got interactive flat panels, and it’s another thing to learn!


I still love my regular white board, and still write on it most days.

During Covid, most (all?) districts became 1:1 with technology, and we all became acquainted with Zoom.

We still have some meetings and professional development opportunities on Zoom. Today, I actually have a PD on our new textbooks via Zoom.
Because of their computers, students have easy access to be able to type their papers, do research, and turn in assignments.
Many online resources include:
- Canvas
- Google: classroom, docs, and slides
- Online textbook (I still have a class set in my room which is my preferred method. That being said, at least online is available for students who are absent or who didn’t finish a class assignment) Another thing I appreciate about online textbooks is that students can use the “read” feature to have the text read to them. Honestly, as a teacher, I appreciate that feature…especially when reading Shakespeare!!
- No Red Ink – checks for plagarism
- Students can easily access and check their grades (even though they don’t do that often)
- Email to correspond with teachers
There are so many benefits to what we have thanks to technology that help keep our kids engaged.
Unfortunately, students feel like they have to be entertained all the time. As a teacher, we can plan engaging lessons thanks to sites like:
- IXL
- Blooket
- Newsela
- Kahoot
- Nearpod
- Flipgrid
- Quizlet
There are also downfalls to technology, and students being off task because of chromebooks. Don’t even get me started on AI!
Post Covid, many teachers still relied on online learning, but now I’m seeing most teachers split the difference and have some online assignments and some paper assignments.
Overall, teachers do spend less time having to make copies these days which is nice.
I’m still “old school” when it comes to planning. I look forward to buying my new desk calendar and lesson plan book every year. The past couple of years I’ve used Happy Planner stickers to spruce up my calendar pages.

Looking back on my 22 years in education, many things have changed. I think I started teaching right as technology (computers, anyway) started being classrooms.
My first couple of years teaching, I still received a phone call via the phone tree for a snow day. Of course, for years, that information has been on the news, but now we all receive automated phone calls and texts…even the students.
We now have digital hall and tardy passes, there are cameras all throughout the building, we can document parent contacts easily, submit paperwork and so much more now that we have greater technology. As teachers, we can share resources easier as well.
Students now take the ACT and other standardized tests online.
I run my school’s after school tutoring, and just this month, stipends became electronic. I used to lose about thirty minutes every other Friday tracking down paper stipends, getting them signed, scanned and submitted. Now, I can approve everything in a few clicks.
Honestly, most everything I listed is just the “tip of the technology in education iceberg.”
I do think that technology has many benefits in education and technology sure has changed my job. In some ways it’s made it easier, and in other ways, we have other battles now because of it. (Like AI, don’t even get me started on cellphones). I have at least eight more years left in education, and I’m sure more changes in technology will come. They’ll have to continue to “teach this old dog new tricks!”
I like when topics turn in to a “stroll down memory lane.”


So, I started in 1994 and I believe Woodford County still had one mimeograph that had the purple ink? You might remember that from your school days? I remember WOFO getting the internet! The business teachers were my friends and they called me in to see what could be looked up. I am pretty good with tech and have embraced what works for me but I have kept old school methods that I think are better. I like that at my age I have the tools to do both. I love Google Classroom and all the Google products. I do try to be thoughtful about when it helps and when it hurts. After Covid, my students said go back to making copies for many things! We still keep a physical binder in my classes. I hate to waste paper, but I don’t think it’s a waste to have them take guided notes in a subject like Spanish. I think all subjects are different and it’s not one size fits all.
LikeLike
Yes—mimeograph…hadn’t thought about those in ages, but I never had to use one. I do think kids need paper most of the time. I am going to have a couple of English 1 classes next year, and plan on being “old school” at least most of the time. I like Canvas as a way to have access to everything for students, but I still want a class set of textbooks, etc.
LikeLike
When I left teaching at our local district around a dozen or so years ago our schools up here were sadly lacking in technology. My friend who worked at the other end of the state already had Chromebook for all students from middle school on and we didn’t even have enough computers in our computer lab for a whole class of kids to each have their own computer without doubling up! We were told that all state testing was going to move digital and we honestly had no idea what we were going to do. As far as I know they have since “caught” up (I hope!).
LikeLike
It has been interesting to see the transition for testing to go online. I do actually prefer that because students can’t skip ahead on the next section of a test without a new code.
LikeLike
This post is so interesting! My teaching days were 1992-2002, so I was just beginning to see technology when I left. I have really mixed feelings about how much technology was used, especially after covid. It would definitely be hard to find the right balance as a teacher.
LikeLike
it really can be such a distraction…but then I know technology is what keeps so kids engaged.
LikeLike
This was so interesting to read- technology can certainly be your best friend and worst nightmare right? Give you so much credit for hanging in there over the years-especially during COVID!
LikeLike
It’s been a ride!…with a few more years to go. haha
LikeLike