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The Year in Review

A Fly on the Wall
Have you ever heard someone decide not to attend the big game because there was a better view on offer from home? This is the situation at a Bronx middle school, where the “big game” is being viewed with bated breath from afar thanks to the marvels of modern technology.
When Mr. Jason Levy, Principal of C.I.S. 339 School of Technology conjured up his vision of the school as an authentic 21st Century learning network, he took the brave move of continuing a professional development partnership with me, an Australian consultant, despite my impending return home with my family.
“How would you like to keep working for us from Australia?” Mr. Levy proposed. “Wouldn’t that be something!”
The Principal’s view was that schools today should reach beyond their walls. He is in the process now of achieving exactly that – thanks to his own passion for technology, and the drive of some brilliant teachers.
Many schools can probably boast of the use of technology somewhere, somehow in their curriculum, but C.I.S. 339 has adopted a whole school approach to technology-enhanced change. The wiki that was used for communication last year has now spawned not only a generation shift for some tech-fearing teachers, but also a more united, collaborative community.
Some school change experts have discovered that technology can increase the rate of change for a school, and that has definitely been the case here.
We started the year with a thematic “spider’s web”, encompassing not just online learning, but support structures and interconnectedness between teachers as colleagues, teachers and students, students and students, students and parents, and teachers and parents.
The explanation that accompanied the “spider’s web” was that if you get stuck, you’ll only end up in a bigger mess if you thrash about. If you help to create and maintain the paths of the web as a team though, you will be part of an awe-inspiring network.
The ‘threads of the network’ are really held together by the formation of teacher-led teams. Instead of coaches as instructional leaders, teachers facilitate their own meetings and record all agenda items, minutes and next steps. This was a daunting experience at first, but it has seen the emergence of teachers confident in their own abilities and decision-making, and teachers who are keen to exercise initative.
At the start of the school year we set up a communications network using gmail, Google Talk, blogs as professional development eportfolios, and Google Docs for shared planning and record-keeping.
Having a common platform of communication was essential, and this has paid huge dividends now, as information is shared and recorded more effectively.
This then progressed to the use of iGoogle for organization of online communication, and Google Groups for organization of resources. After surveying all teachers, we established a PD plan based on teachers’ own S.M.A.R.T. goals for professional development, student growth, and improved communication with parents, students and colleagues.
The school’s technology coach, Ms. Christina Jenkins has been instrumental in running after school professional development sessions for teachers, and now teachers are sharing their expertise by facilitating sessions themselves.
We started mapping initiatives across the school so that instead of isolated ‘pilot programs’, we had shared experience. Our Celebrations Pages are an ongoing record of these initatives.
So far this school year, I have taken on the varied roles of coach, cheerleader, commentator, critic, and cameraman. Teachers have engaged in online professional development through screencasts that I have created, but our intention is for learning to be more self-directed.
Some of the “players” are teaching me new tricks almost as quickly as I can formulate the next strategy, as teachers are teaching each other. One particular team has decided, on their own, to take turns in videoing their own lessons to enable peer review of their instructional methods. This is a startling breakthrough as it personifies both the spirit of sharing and the desire to keep on learning and improving.
Our next step is to draw in students and parents. I am very excited about the potential for us to keep parents more informed than ever before about their children’s education. Our dream is to set up “triads” and “transparency” – online learning relationships between teachers, students, and parents, which are visible beyond the boundaries of the classroom.
When the student work starts emerging online, I think we’ll have many interested ‘flies on the wall’.

Revisiting Favorites - Great Sites for Sore Eyes


Browsing through educational tech sites is a bit like being in the proverbial candy shop - so many temptations to sample. The danger, of course, is that many of these sweet sites get logged away in an ever expanding list of favorites.

So now is my chance to resurrect some of these older tags and relive some cherished discoveries. If you would like to join this voyage of rediscovery, just click along:

Read/Write Web - 20 Backpack Apps for Students

Video Conferencing not just for tycoons

teAchnology: the online resource for teachers

Podcasting 101

Videos demonstrating integration of technology at SJHS

Mind Tools: Essential Skills for an Excellent Career

Math lessons and project downloads

Web conferencing workspace

Lead differently: digitally informed school leadership for the 21st century

Site Meter Knowledge Base

Channel: KIS tech tutorials

Kis21learning: A “digital arts” menu for multiple intelligences

Beth’s Blog: How nonprofits can use social media

Cogdogroo: Story Tools

Middleweb: Science Resources

Interactive websites

gfatechnology: web 2.0 resources

National Geographic Explorer

The reading matrix

readwritethink: essay maps

SMART-created lesson activities

educational software and web 2.0

And the funny thing is that even after reminiscing with these sites, I’m still not quite prepared to let them go still. I guess the transience of site-hopping makes cyclical revisiting all the more important!

Check out the readability of your blog

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(Somehow I fear that this tool could be a little askew in its assessment.)

How can we help to develop great teaching?

We are in the midst of planning an online Instructional Needs Survey as a guide to professional development “hot spots” that we can address. To this end, Mr. Prinstein (Dean of Instruction)and I have started to grapple with the question of what constitutes quality teaching.

We have developed a draft copy of possible survey questions, but it has struck me that we have covered ‘routines’ and ‘rigor’ reasonably well, yet have neglected ‘relationships’.

I believe that self-assessment is an under-rated tool, as it can return usable results, and of course deep reflection if administered at the right moment and under appropriate conditions.

The value of assessment with student laptop use

I just had an amazing Google Talk conversation with an incredibly insightful educator (who happens to know a thing or two about technology issues). We were discussing successes within the school and we got to talking about student laptop use, and how this was still a work in progress.

The observations were that students tended to be distracted with the laptops and were succumbing to temptations, but they were no more distracted than they would have been without the laptops.

What we realized was that teachers - although improving rapidly with their use of technology for instruction - were still not well versed in the capabilities of technology in monitoring students’ online reading and writing.

In other words, whenever students open the laptops there should always be a mode of assessment for the teacher - the same as in any good lesson.

How will the teacher know how much the students have done (quantity), and the depth and accuracy of the students’ thinking (quality)?

This is where a well-planned writing lesson will involve the ongoing use of gmail, Google Docs, blogs or wikis as evidence of student input. This might be in the form of a short or extended prose response or the completion of a graphic organizer (and Bubbl.us is great for this). Alternatively, students might be using an online application such as mathscore.com, which will provide automatic feedback to both students and teacher. Either way, students should be held accountable for laptop usage, in the same way that their work with pen and paper should be monitored.

It’s important though, to have an easy method of collection of student work, even if you have a system of sampling so that you’re not necessarily looking at everyone’s work every day. Then you need to let ALL of the students know that you are watching and that you care about their work.

This all comes down to increased knowledge of the capabilities of the technology, improved lesson planning, and most importantly FOLLOW UP.

As for the reading or web browsing, some might wonder how this can be monitored. There are many ways. Responses to reading can be demanded in the same forum as the writing lessons just mentioned, or teachers can be a little more imaginative and progressive.

Diigo is an application that allows you to leave a trail of notes on web sites that you have visited. It takes a little bit of getting used to, but it’s definitely worth exploring as teachers’ confidence grows. We haven’t even scratched the surface yet with tags, social bookmarking and RSS, but we’ll get there.

The bottom line is that we must know not only what our students are doing, but also be aware of the quality of their work. Ideally, we will have structures in place to give valuable feedback to students, as noone wants to work if what they produce isn’t appreciated or noticed.

This should not be perceived as a criticism of the teachers as they have done an amazing job embracing the use of technology and managing their own learning. The Google Talk conversation just helped to clarify my thinking about necessary next steps.

It’s so great working for a school that has teachers who think constantly about ways that we can improve.

EduCon 2.0 Conference

I’m really looking forward to attending and presenting at the EduCon 2.0 conference.

Isn’t it great that we have people prepared to put in the massive amount of work to organize such events.

I’ll be talking about the power of networking within the context of CIS 339, and how this Bronx middle school is emerging as a result of online teamwork.

PD Reflections in Blogs


The reflective quality of blogs surely makes them ideal for reflections (and feedback and evaluation) at the end of a professional development session. In a weird sort of way, the blog provides the perfect thinking cap.

On the one hand, the blogger gets the opportunity of being reflective and introspective, or letting some creative thoughts run wild. On the other hand, the facilitator of the PD gains some sense of the level of impact that the PD might have had.

As teachers, we rarely do such writing - except maybe on a PD feedback form, which doesn’t have the same depth or direction as a blog.

This takes some effort, as most us aren’t used to spilling our thoughts via keyboard. The cumulative product at the end of a year though, should be something to behold. Gradually, our writing flow should loosen up, maybe lighten up, and in the end it will add up - to a great record of our growth as an educator.

Great educational software site

Surely one of the best sites on the web is http://educationalsoftware.wikispaces.com/. It is not only informative, but also put together simply and attractively. It sets a benchmark for others to try to emulate!

Avatars, alter egos and online adventure


With all of these new avatars coming out (including the Make your Own Simpsons character above), it makes one wonder just how far we’ll be able to go with creating alter egos online.
The soaring popularity of Second Life lends credit to the notion that students could one day be creating their own characters or own worlds to demonstrate understanding of ‘real life’ problems.
It’s only fun and games at the moment, but so were blogs and social networking spaces not so long ago.

Edublog Awards

If you’re looking for great educational blogs that are worth subscribing to, just check out the finalists for the 2007 Edublog Awards.

Subscribe to your favorites using an RSS feed, and you’ll keep up to date with some great work being done around the globe.

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