I find myself struggling with the technology question, how much is too much. Or, more realistically, how much is the right amount.

I am a stickler for working out a problem yourself, but there are some problems I like to assign that are too time consuming, or the student does not have adequate knowledge, to be done without technology. It seems that once I show how to use the technology, the student uses it for everything.

My dilemma; is this a problem? When I was learning mathematics 30 years ago there was no technology and so we could not do really difficult problems. We were not able to “see” what was going on and had to trust more in formulas. Some classes I teach today are nothing like the classes I took because technology has changed them. Students today get to experience the mathematics in ways I never dreamed of and that gives them a better experience and a better understanding.

I have to be honest, though, I am distressed when a calculus student has to use a calculator to draw a simple y = x2 graph or a simple sine or cosine curve. I want this student to have a full calculus experience and when he struggles with basic skills he cannot get to the meat of the course and have the full experience.

The same exact thing is happening in our developmental courses. Their basic skills are multiplication facts, division, and fractions. These students struggle so much with these basic skills that it is difficult for them to learn algebra. They have to put so much energy into figuring out something that should be second nature, that there is no energy left to understand the next level. I sometimes find myself telling that student, “Just use your calculator.” But this is only a temporary fix.

So then I begin to wonder, what is the important thing? I know the most important thing is to understand the problem at hand and to be able to figure out a strategy to solve it. Is the actual solving of the problem important? Technology can do those tedious calculations if I only know what calculations to ask it to do.  So thus is my dilemma.