How to use Technology to support Active Experiential Learning

How to use Technology to support Active Experiential Learning

In view of the current global crisis in education and the widespread implementation of online learning, early childhood and primary educators are facing unprecedented challenges. As a result, many of them struggle to support children’s holistic growth and their well-being – which are the most important pillars of Early Childhood Education. 

Is technology-based learning a suitable solution for the early years sector?

ECE and Early Primary teachers are aware that at this stage of education everything should be hands-on and based on children’s direct interaction with the world –  essentially this is how children learn best. Direct experience is also the only way children can develop their gross motor and fine motor skills, their overall bodily coordination, their hand-eye coordination, their sense of safety, and their balance – and all these provide solid foundations for other skillsets to emerge. And this leaves many ECE teachers wondering how such education can be offered using technology, if at all. 

examples of technology uses to support experiential learning at school and early childhood

One thing is certain – no amount of online learning or worksheets will ever be enough to satisfy children’s natural curiosity to explore the world hands-on. The implementation of online learning is almost everywhere now, but unfortunately the way it’s delivered is mostly based on passive learning, extended screen time, and fails to support the fundamental developmental needs of early childhood and early primary children. 

This, however, doesn’t mean all is lost. 

Technology CAN be our ally to meet ECE goals – provided that educators learn how to use technology to offer education the way children naturally learn. In current times such skillset is needed more than ever before. 

examples of passive learning and active learning

What should be the role of technology in today’s education?

We can use technology to our advantage and as a powerful tool to supporting children’s HOLISTIC LEARNING, but it should never be treated a stand-alone approach. In fact, the real power of technology for education is about teachers being able to maximise opportunities for hands-on experiential learning for their students, especially at ECE and primary levels. In this case it means that the less screen time students get, the better the teacher is utilising technology to EMPOWER their students. 

Technology in education can help:

  • inspire children to experiment and create in the REAL world
  • raise their interest in certain topics or themes
  • explore beyond tangible results
  • provoke children to master certain skills
  • foster their natural talents and gifts
  • go beyond the things that can be seen and touched, explore the unseen and untouchable, and bring children’s dream creations to life.

If you use technology this way, you can be sure that your students will be inspired to explore the real world, and that their hands-on exploration will lead to further investigation, very often through the use of technology again.

infographic image describing how technology in education should support experiential holistic learning

How to use technology to support Experiential Holistic Learning?

Technology is so much more than Edtech – it’s also microscopes, scooters, 3D pens and printers, drawing pads, etc. Whatever technology you use, think about how it can inspire your students to explore the REAL world – build, draw, create, read, dance, cook, use their whole body, design, rearrange, role play, do research.

Even a simple mobile app or a short video clip about construction play can inspire your children to build castles, bridges or houses in the real world – keeping them busy for hours and giving them Holistic Experiential Learning they really need in these times.

Children may want to build something that they’ve just seen on a screen, and test it in real life. Or they may wish to find out more information about a bug they’ve just spotted in a garden or a park. Lots of hands-on experiences, deducting, reasoning, child-led discovery, and taking ownership of their own learning. As a matter of fact, no worksheets and very little screen time is needed to achieve all this.

Our role as Educators is to offer cues and guidance, assign exciting project work, raise interest by offering inspiring contexts and resources, ask children to do some research in the real world, and offer feedback once they share the results of their work with you. 

example of passive learning with use of technology and active holistic learning going beyond technology

This is how world’s top educators use technology to their advantage. You can easily do this too and incorporate technology into Active Experiential Holistic Learning on a daily basis. The first and the most important thing, however, is developing an understanding of what Experiential Holistic Learning is, and why it’s the key approach for Future-Oriented Education.  

How can Educators develop their skillset to be able to offer Experiential Holistic Learning more often?

To help Educators with their professional development, Natural Born Leaders created a new teacher training program “ACTIVE LEARNING BOOSTER“. It’s the first self-paced online course for Early Childhood and Early Primary Teachers who are ready to offer Future-Oriented Education based on the Active Experiential Holistic Learning approach that works for every child and for every educator, regardless of the curriculum framework and the country of origin.

The entire program ends with a Certificate of Completion outlining the developed skillset in detail.

Click the button below to access the ACTIVE LEARNING BOOSTER program webpage with full information on the content and instant access to FREE Module with free video training materials.

To access this Free Module you will need to sign up first.

Experiential Learning Future Oriented Education Teacher Training

FREE ACCESS

Magdalena Matulewicz Witold Matulewicz Natural Born Leaders
Authors: Magdalena Matulewicz & Witold Matulewicz – Teacher Trainers, Assessors

Magdalena Matulewicz and Witold Matulewicz, Founders of Natural Born Leaders, have been applying Active Experiential Holistic Learning for over 20 years – both in early childhood and primary education. They have trained and inspected many nurseries and schools where dedicated teachers successfully use this approach on a daily basis. They both are UK-qualified Assessors in Early Childhood Education and School Playwork. In private life, they’ve been world-schooling their own children for over 15 years. 

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