Learning @ the Speed of Light

in a collaborative world

Archive for April, 2008

America-Asia Education Partnership Summit

Posted by achayefsky on April 15, 2008

Ni Hao – Today was the first day of the 3 day ‘America-Asia Education Partnership Summit‘, in Phoenix, AZ. I would like to thank Nan Williams, Director of Technology – Arizona Department of Education, for inviting me and my partner, Richard King – CAC Executive Director of Media Services – to be delegates and presenters at this incredible event. I am enriched after an amazing day of discussions, sharing and presentations and I will add more detail at my next writing.

There is a thirst for partnership and collaboration between the United States and China. Judging by so many of the amazing people I spoke with today, there are already rich and robust examples of exactly that. Tomorrow, Rich King (Central AZ College) and I hope to create dialog (through our presentation) that embraces videoconferencing technology as a means by which collaboration and community may be supported and facilitated.

International collaborations add a level of authenticity for students, teachers, administrators and community members, as they realize their role and responsibility as global citizens. Digital Citizenship and Digital Literacies offer unprecedented opportunities to create connections. (I must remember to write about the Chinese view ‘the rose’)

Xiexie,

From Your Maricopa America-Asia Delegate, Amy Chayefsky

Click Link for pictures

Other People’s Blogs

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Is it Web 2.0, Read/Write Web? We need a new name…

Posted by achayefsky on April 10, 2008

Is it Web 2.0, Read/Write Web? We need a new name…for user-created content.

This past Tuesday a group of educators and I met in the MUSD Board Room to discuss possibilities of Web 2.0 tools in education. I am greatly enamored of learning communities, collaborative tools and the potential for global interaction and what ‘global interaction’ could mean to student engagement and attention to detail in the outcomes they produce.

As we work to find ways to continually improve the authentic quality of education, Web 2.0 tools can provide unparalleled support. This meeting was prompted as a result of the bandwidth increase we will realize at the start of the 2008-2009 school year. As we move from virtually non-existent to virtually limitless bandwidth, it is imperative that our teachers and administrators are prepared to think and plan and strategize in ways that utilize this new opportunity, to its fullest.

We had a robust discussion about wiki’s for delivering content (extending classroom beyond classroom walls and school hours) and for collaboration. We discussed widgets and blogs, a variety Google apps (including Docs, Maps, Earth & Space) and social bookmarking sites like Del.icio.us and furl and sites like bubbl, for on-line mind mapping, storyboarding and brainstorming.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_A-ZVCjfWf8

You Tube Video – A Vision of Todays K-12 Learner

Another great video that helps educators to recognize the (re)volution taking place in todays learners and the shifts that educators might wish to embrace to help better influence and support their learners

We had an interesting discussion when a teacher asked how all of these ‘new’ things could be incorporated into an already busy and full day – this is a valid consideration. The teacher further expressed concern that technology would deny students the equally authentic experiences of writing and reading. While every circumstance has its unique challenges, I would ask each educator to try one new thing – for themselves – and as they become familiar with a new tool, they will begin to natural progress towards ways that these might positively impact their teaching and/or their students learning. Personally, I woudl like to see these tools in the hands of the students, as they need them, to accomplish their outcome – teachers DO NOT need to be proficient FIRST, they just need to try and then step back, be flexible, be creative and let the progress come – define, guide and support the process – let the students brains do the heavy lifting.

A few months back I heard Dr. Tim Tyson speak and he was relating that as a Principal, when evaluating a classroom, if the students were not busy and the teacher was, something was topsy-turvy in the machinations of that classroom. If you are frazzled (ouch) and the students are disinterested or disengaged, perhaps there is an ‘aha’ moment to be noted there! Make them busier (spell that ‘more engaged’).

Dr. Tyson’s New Web Presence – under development http://drtimtyson.com/
Mabry Middle School Film Festival – take a few moments to watch the AUTHENTIC and POWERFUL learning taking place as these stduents share their real-world learning through film – it is hard to believe, powerful, and REAL! http://mabryonline.org/ Click on Film Festival Picture, then scroll down to award winning films (on the way read about this amazing program and its global impact.

Want to hear Dr. Mabry Speak in person?

7th Way out West (WOW) – May 3, 2008, ASU West
The Hyper-Connected Classroom in the Age of Accountability
I hope to see you there!

I think herein lies ‘the rub’ and the crux of the on-going long held ‘belief’ and misunderstanding of what technolgoy IS. It is not (although it can be) students in a computer lab doing a project that has been wholly defined and limiting (example: You will no create a PowerPoint using this rubric and tell me about the circumstances leading up to the Civil War). Indeed, this example might be in place of the ‘traditional’ book report (typed or handwritten). I might suggest that the use of the PPT is the ‘traditional’, non-integrated way to utilize technology.

Another POV – Perhaps students are charged with crafting their own ‘essential question’ regarding the content (in this example, Civil War) and utilizing tools available to design how they will provide an outcome that they also craft. A friend of mine cringes when he hears ‘Sage on the Stage, Guide on the Side’, so I try never to say it. BUT, it is very concise and serves to remind that the teachers role IS evolving (ready or not) into a facilitator versus deliverer of content. We are taking the teacher out of the realm of teaching knowledge (the lowest form of learning according to Bloom’s Taxonomy and moving students into becoming more responsible for and conscious of their own learning. (Future Talk – Authentic Assessments – The challenges and value of authentic assessment, and how we incorporate this into our data-driven environment. How can we capture authentic assessment in a meaningful way that can be added traditional data calibrations? How, as a nation, do we create sufficient value for this type of assessment, so that teachers are empowered to add it to their repertoire of measurement? Want to talk about this? Me too! Email me at achayefsky@musd20.org!)

In this way we educators best serve our students in preparing them for (as the videos say) jobs that don’t exist, in a future we cannot imagine. We are preparing them for the Global Economy that IS here, that is the economy in which they will seek to create a life for themselves. technology is not the only answer, but it is certainly one of the crucial and accessible ways to develop digital learners and digital citizens for the digital world!

Thanks to all who attended, next class will be HANDS-ON at Santa Cruz Elementary Lab, Monday, May5th (Cinco De Mayo) from 3:00 – 4:00. Due ot the interest in wiki’s and collaborative tools, this time will be focused on … wiki’s and Google Docs. My hope is that teachers will collaborate with their peers over the summer, using these tools to facilitate the dialog and organization of information.

Here’s link to one of my wiki’s that covers the array of topics we flew thorough during this one and a half hour session. (Click on Link to ‘WEB 2.0′ on the Navigation Bar)

We were so engaged in the discussion together, we stayed long and didn’t even notice! =)
THAT is a beautiful thing!

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Alot of water under the bridge

Posted by achayefsky on April 8, 2008

I can’t believe I have not posted since February. It has been an incredibly busy spring, and the lack of blog time attests to that fact. In February and March we participated in Read Around the Planet class-to-class videoconferences. This year we had many experienced teachers who participate every year and many new teachers. The addition of the new equipment at Maricopa Elementary School this past summer – courtesy Pinal County ITv Consortium – helped MES teachers to experience videoconferencing from the comfort of their own library – no muss, no fuss, no bus!

Teachers still bussed in from Santa Cruz, Santa Rosa and Pima Butte, and as always is the case, both the Middle School and High School participated again this year. BIG THANKS to our fabulous transportation Department – Charlie Hatt, Director for their support and great flexibility in scheduling! Watch for pictures to get posted int he near future!

Here’s a wonderful article by Rob Nessler, CopaNews.com, about our first international conference, dialed from an MUSD site with Katie Honeycutt’s first grade class! http://copanews.com/?c=137&a=1584

Several months ago the State Department of Education put out a call for persons interested in joining committees to (a) revise the State Technology Plan and (b) revise the Az State Technology Standards. I am delighted to have been selected as a member of the State Technology Standards Revision Task Force. As is appropriate for such an important undertaking, some of our meetings are face-to-face, some are virtual, using a variety of web-based collaborative software (Web 2.0 tools!). As we update standards intended for 21st Century Students, we are utilizing 21st Century Tools!!!

I was invited to teach blogging classes at Casa Grande Union High School and at their District Office. I held two really interesting classes, I was honored to have the opportunity to work with CG teachers. Some participants remained after the scheduled blog session so that we could have a mini-session on wiki’s. I am happy to say that some really robust math class wiki’s have already been rolled out – the teachers are using them for on-line content delivery!

Tomorrow I am holding an information session at the Board Room at 3:30 pm. Topic: Web 2.0 Tools. If you have not RSVP’s yet, there is still room. This is an informal presentation designed to share with teachers and other staff a wide array of FREE, web-based products that will be available for the picking next school year. At the beginning of the 08-09 school year, MUSD will have an amazing increase in bandwidth that will permit our students and teachers to fully realize the user-created-content and collaborative environments that have been just beyond our ‘bandwidth’ reach. Join us as we preview a wide variety of tools and discuss how they might apply to our educational environment.

Next week, Rich King, Executive Director – Media Services, Central Arizona College and I will be presenting at the America-Asia Educational Summit in Phoenix. Our topic: Building Sustainable Educational Communities through Videoconferencing. This is the only Summit conference to be held in the United States and translators will be on hand to translate our presentation into Mandarin!

Xie xie (Mandarin for Thank You)

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