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.
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.
Categories:
Educational Technology















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