April 24, 2007
A place for questions and answers related to the Enhanced Peer Coaching Grant project
Social Buttons: del.icio.us digg NewsVine YahooMyWeb Furl Fark Spurl TailRank Ma.gnolia blogmarks co.mments Reddit
icon date 09:49:28 | icon author Forrest J. Fisher
April 10, 2007
Each year the George Lucas Foundation through its "Edutopia" magazine does a "Reader's Survey" on a variety of technology issues, products and topics.  This is probably the largest survey of teachers of its kind and they present the results in a very interesting and fun way.   This year's results are a little special for me as well.
Social Buttons: del.icio.us digg NewsVine YahooMyWeb Furl Fark Spurl TailRank Ma.gnolia blogmarks co.mments Reddit
icon date 19:12:22 | icon author Forrest J. Fisher
This year's Northwest Council for Computers in Education conference was held in the new convention center in Spokane.  It is a very nice facility with more than enough space for the festivities.  The overall attendance was a little low though as it often is when in Spokane.
Social Buttons: del.icio.us digg NewsVine YahooMyWeb Furl Fark Spurl TailRank Ma.gnolia blogmarks co.mments Reddit
icon date 18:49:27 | icon author Forrest J. Fisher
March 17, 2007
Washington schools have three major efforts related to educational technology this year.  Each district will be developing a three-year technology plan, reporting on how educational technology is being integrated in classrooms and reporting on the technology literacy levels of 8th grade students.  The latter two items are NCLB requirements and are being conducted for the first time this year. 

The requirement for districts to have an approved technology plan was established many years ago.  Technology Plans are required for districts to receive federal funds through the E-Rate, Title IID and other programs.  All districts connected to the K-20 network are receiving E-Rate funds as K-20 rates are discounted due to the state's application and receiving E-Rate funds to pay for a significant portion of K-20 costs.    Therefore, a school district without an approved technology plan would see an immediate increase (doubling) of K-20 fees each year even if they (unwisely) are not applying for E-Rate discounts themselves.

Districts must include a goal for improving  teacher integration and a goal for improving and assessing 8th grade technology literacy in the upcoming and all future technology plans.

School buildings must include technology integration in their SIP (School improvement Plan).  This requirement was established in the RCW's by the State Board of Education four years ago.  Buildings that are in AYP status must use the OSPI online planning tool to develop and maintain their SIP.  This requirement to use the online tool is set by OSPI.   Other buildings are not required to use the online tool. 

School Districts are required to submit their Technology Plan using OSPI's online tool.  Each technology plan consists of elements provided/developed by districts and elements provided/developed by buildings.  The district elements MUST be entered in the tool online.  IF a building has used the online tool to develop their SIP and indicated which sections involve technology, then these sections will be automatically "included" in the overall district plan.  IF a building has developed their SIP in a paper -based format, the sections of the SIP that involve technology must be uploaded as a Word or PDF document into the online tool.  The district technology coordinator can do the uploading.  In either case, the entire technology plan will be stored online in OSPI's tool.

A district must also have successfully submitted their annual technology inventory, including their teacher integration and 8th grade student technology literacy results, as a prerequisite for technology plan approval.

Washington State uses the Classroom Use of Technology (Tiers) Model as the centerpiece for everything we do related to Educational Technology. The rubric for teacher integration and a similar rubric for the eighth grade literacy assessment was based on the Tiers model.
Social Buttons: del.icio.us digg NewsVine YahooMyWeb Furl Fark Spurl TailRank Ma.gnolia blogmarks co.mments Reddit
icon date 12:37:05 | icon author Forrest J. Fisher
October 3, 2006
This past spring I was able to attend three technology conferences:

NCCE - Northwest Council for Computers in Education @Portland
ACPE - Association of Computer Professionals in Education @Welches
NECC - National Educational Computing Conferences @San Diego

There are interesting tales to tell from each event:
NCCE - February, 2006
I keep pretty busy at NCCE because we (the statewide ETSC Directors) host a booth in the exhibit area and I gave two workshops and attended one.  The one I attended was led by Patrick Crispen who is one of my favorite people in educational technology.  The session he presented was his third of the day and covered a product called "Camtasia Studio".  Even though he was tired it was still a great session.  In part because it's an excellent product. 

Camtasia is a product that will "capture" what you do on your screen and save it as a movie.  You can narrate while you are demonstating software/website features.  Simply put, Camtasia is a great tool for creating training movies.  I've used it in the past but this new version allows you to save the movie as a Flash movie, have an interactive quiz at the end and even show your face up in the corner as you're talking.

Overall, NCCE is a great conference and at the top of the list for teachers and educators in the Northwest.  This year's conference will be held in the new facility in Spokane.   "007 - Agents of Change"

ACPE - May, 2006.
This was my second time attending this conference in Welches, OR.  The last time was 12 years ago and the conference has really grown since then.  In fact, that's the most important point I can make about it:  If you want to attend this conference register immediately when it is announced.  You might want to reserve a hotel room now as they ran out of rooms last year.

Overall, ACPE is a great conference for "OT" (Operational Technology or what you probably think of as IT) issues.  There is a high degree of vendor involvement and the sessions involve networking, firewalls, network management, security, etc.    This is not much ET here so if you are a teacher looking for information about classroom-based technology NCCE would be a better choice.

NECC
I've been to this conference several times and it's always great!  The exhibit hall is the size of 6+ football fields and the speakers are excellent.  There are usually about 30 simultaneous things to do throughout the conference so one of the challenges is decided what to choose! 

I focused on several things:
High-Tech High School
Open Source Software
Marzano's Classroom Instruction that Works
Video Conferencing

The High Tech High School in San Diego consistently receives the highest rating possible within California's system.  (A "10/10" school)   The school is actually not that "high-tech" but rather uses a project-based curriculum almost exclusively.  In other words they are Tier 3 school.  Students use Dreamweaver/Fireworks to create an online digital protfolio and teachers use a classroom website throughout the educational experience.  Almost all teaching is done using project-based, Inquiry-based learning.   Students are drawn from all areas of San Diego and it's not a "rich/prep" school at all.  The model is currently being "exported" to other areas of the country including Philadelphia.

There was a session on an open source software and an OSS lab available all the time.  Two of the most prevalent products include Edubuntu and Moodle.  Edubuntu is a desktop version of Linux that's designed for education.  It's free, easy to use and works very well.  I've been using it (and I am now) since NECC and am very happy with it.  It's not perfect yet but it is in the neighborhood.   Moodle is a free tool like Blackboard or WebCT that allows teachers to conduct educational/instructional activities online.

Marzano's work on effective classroom instruction has always interested me and it was nice to see several sessions involving the use of technology with his nine strategies.  The use of Inspiration software connects directly to four of the nine for example.

There were several examples of video-conferencing projects including open-heart and knee-replacement surgeries.  What a powerful tool.  I think it's time for the "no bus, no-fuss" field trip to become a more common activity in schools.   I've recently collected video conferencing resources and projects on this page.

So, what are your thoughts about conferences?
Social Buttons: del.icio.us digg NewsVine YahooMyWeb Furl Fark Spurl TailRank Ma.gnolia blogmarks co.mments Reddit
icon date 16:00:25 | icon author Forrest J. Fisher
April 13, 2006
In the beginning Steve Jobs said "Let there be a computer that ordinary people would enjoy using" and he created the Macintosh then he said "It is good".    Twenty-five years later the concept of personal computing has gone far beyond what Bill Gates, Paul Allen, Steve and others envisioned.    The use of technology in school districts has also changed substanially over the years.  Initially technology use was championed by trend setting teachers who could see the potential for this tool in the classroom.  Often these teachers served as District Technology Coordinators, developed technology plans, wrote grants, wired classrooms, managed servers, installed software and were involved in all aspects of technology use.
Social Buttons: del.icio.us digg NewsVine YahooMyWeb Furl Fark Spurl TailRank Ma.gnolia blogmarks co.mments Reddit
icon date 00:11:16 | icon author Forrest Fisher
subscribe Blog
search

 
Recent posts
Enhanced Peer Coaching Assistance
(24 Apr 2007 09:49:28)
I'm in the Reader's Survey!
(10 Apr 2007 19:12:22)
NCCE and ACPE
(10 Apr 2007 18:49:27)
ET and OT
(13 Apr 2006 00:11:16)
FEED
[RSS][ATOM] All
[RSS][ATOM] Educational Technology
[RSS][ATOM] Operating Systems
Mailing list