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John Doherty, Ed.D. MassCUE/M.A.S.S. Conference Foxboro, Massachusetts

Planting the Seeds: Creating Sustainable Technology Professional Development in Your School and District. John Doherty, Ed.D. MassCUE/M.A.S.S. Conference Foxboro, Massachusetts. Contact Information. John F. Doherty, Ed.D. Acting Superintendent, Reading Public Schools 82 Oakland Road

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John Doherty, Ed.D. MassCUE/M.A.S.S. Conference Foxboro, Massachusetts

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  1. Planting the Seeds:Creating Sustainable Technology Professional Developmentin Your School and District John Doherty, Ed.D. MassCUE/M.A.S.S. Conference Foxboro, Massachusetts

  2. Contact Information John F. Doherty, Ed.D. Acting Superintendent, Reading Public Schools 82 Oakland Road Reading, MA 01867 Phone: 781-944-5800 Email: jdoherty@reading.k12.ma.us Presentation Link: http://expandingtheboundaries.wikispaces.com/MassCUE+MASS+Conference+Presentation

  3. Focus For Today • Why Change? • What are 21st Century Learners? • How will this get done? • Leadership is the Key • An example of how it is being done • 15 Step Process • Closure and Questions

  4. Why Change?

  5. Did You Know?Howie DiBlasi

  6. Three Fundamental Changes • The rapid evolution of the new global knowledge economy with profound effects on the world of work-all work • The sudden and dramatic shift from information that is limited in terms of amount and availability to information characterized by flux and glut • The increasing impact of media and technology on how young people learn and relate to the world and to each other

  7. The World Is Truly Flat When I was growing up, my parents told me, “Finish your dinner, People in India and China are starving.” I tell my daughters, “Finish your homework. People in India and China are starving for your job.” Thomas Friedman The World is Flat

  8. Learning How to Learn is Key “You actually want to become really adaptable. You want constantly to acquire new skills, knowledge, and expertise that enable you constantly to be able to create value….Being adaptable in a flat world, knowing how to “learn how to learn,” will be one of the most important assets any worker can have, because job churn will come faster, because innovation will happen faster.” Thomas Friedman The World is Flat

  9. “The fact is, our young people are woefully under prepared for the demands of today’s workplace” Ken Kay, President of the Partnership for 21st Century Skills

  10. We need to become more right brained to compete and survive “The future belongs to a very different kind of mind ─ creators and empathizers, pattern recognizers, and meaning makers. These people ─ artists, inventors, designers, storytellers, caregivers, consolers, big picture thinkers ─ will now reap society’s richest rewards and share its greatest joys.” Daniel Pink A Whole New Mind-Why Right-Brainers will Rule the Future

  11. Technology-The Equalizer “We should use technology funding to bolster new learning models and innovations, such as online learning environments, to level the playing field and allow students from all walks of life-from small rural communities to budget strapped urban schools-to access the rich variety that is now available only to children of wealthy suburban districts.” Clayton Christensen Disrupting Class

  12. What Are 21st Century Learning or Transferable Skills?

  13. Partnership for 21st Century Skills

  14. Seven Survival SkillsThe Global Achievement Gap (Wagner, 2008) • Critical Thinking and Problem Solving • Collaboration Across Networks and Leading by Influence • Agility and Adaptability • Initiative and Entrepreneurialism • Effective Oral and Written Communication • Accessing and Analyzing Information • Curiosity and Imagination

  15. All of Our Schools Are Obsolete “In today’s highly competitive global knowledge economy, all students need new skills for college, careers, and citizenship. The failure to give all students these new skills leaves today’s youth and our country, at an alarming competitive disadvantage. Schools haven’t changed; the world has. And so our schools are not failing. Rather, they are obsolete-even the ones that score the best on standardized tests.” Tony Wagner The Global Achievement Gap

  16. Here are the questions… • What changes must be made within the education system to prepare our nation’s students for both analytic and creative thinking? • What must teachers do differently to stimulate student’s imaginations? • What kinds of tests must be given to students to show whether we are making progress toward these ambitious goals? Tony Wagner (2008)

  17. Here is what is at stake… • The future of our economy • The strength of our democracy • The health of the planet’s ecosystem • Our current and future generations of students

  18. It’s Time—Kaplan Video

  19. The bottom line… Our classrooms of today are still using methods that we used over 30 years ago..

  20. How will this get done?

  21. To shift you need to change the culture “…all school cultures are incredibly resistant to change, which makes school improvement--from within or from without--usually futile. Unless teachers and administrators act to change the culture of a school, all innovations, high standards, and high-stakes tests will have to fit in and around existing elements of the culture. They will remain superficial window dressing, incapable of making much of a difference.” Roland Barth Educational Leadership May, 2002

  22. The Key is Transformational Leadership

  23. Transformational LeadershipDeep Change (Quinn, 1996) • Realize the vision at all costs • The vision is far more important than individuals • Organization is viewed as a moral system • Values and principles outweigh political interests • Transformational leaders will develop a plan of action, mobilize the workforce, and unleash power by vocalizing the core values of the system

  24. Transformational Leadership • Leader must walk the walk and talk the talk • Every action is consistent with the vision • People watch the leader’s actions towards the vision and respond • Risk taking is encouraged and welcome • Symbolic communication is important • Leader’s actions are beyond normal expectations and outside the rules of self-interest

  25. Transformational Leadership • Transformational leadership requires looking at educational change systemically instead of a narrow focus. • Transformational leadership aims to foster capacity development and higher levels of personal commitment to organizational goals, mission, and vision.

  26. Nine Specific Practices of Transformational LeadershipLeithwood, 2007 • Setting Directions • Building school vision • Developing specific goals and practices • Holding high performance expectations

  27. Nine Specific Practices of Transformational LeadershipLeithwood, 2007 • Developing People • Providing intellectual stimulation • Offering individualized support • Modeling desirable professional practices and values

  28. Nine Specific Practices of Transformational LeadershipLeithwood, 2007 • Redesigning the Organization • Developing a collaborative school culture • Creating structures to foster participation in school decisions • Creating productive community relationships

  29. How can you transform schools and districts?

  30. On or off the bus???“Good to Great: (Collins, 2001) How to change and transform a good school/district into a great school or district. 1. Get the right people on the bus. 2. Get them in the right seats- Put the right people in the right place in the bus 3. Get the wrong people off the bus. One way to find out who the wrong people are: If  you have to actively manage the people they are the wrong people.

  31. How we are transforming our district

  32. Five Years Ago… • 8 Schools Going in 8 Different Directions • No District Improvement Plan or Vision • No Wide Area Network • No Wireless Internet Access • Student to Computer Ratio High • No laptops • Minimal SMART Boards in District • Inadequate Technology Staffing • Direct Instruction was the Norm • Minimal Project Based Learning • 21st Century Skills was just a phrase

  33. Today • Schools Moving Forward Together Toward a Common Vision while Keeping Their Own Identity • District Improvement Plan based on Research Based Standards • A vision developed by the stakeholders • Adequate Technology Staff • 90% of Classrooms Have SMART Boards • Job Embedded Professional Development in Technology • Mobile Computer Carts • 60% of the District is Wireless • WAN • Student to Computer Ratio in District 3:1 • Hands on, Project Based Learning • Sharing of lessons on WAN • Collaboration of lessons and skills

  34. The Key is Changing the CultureIt is not going to happen overnight

  35. Here is one way to do it…Some steps can happen simultaneously

  36. Step 1Work with Community to Develop a (or Change Your Current) Mission and Vision

  37. Develop the Process • Use a school wide assessment (i.e. Blueprint for Success) • Work with stakeholders to develop mission and vision for school and district • Develop a district improvement plan and school improvement plans

  38. Mission of the Reading Public Schools The Reading Public Schools strives to ensure that all students will have common challenging meaningful learning experiences in the academics, health and wellness, the arts, community service, co-curricular activities and athletics. We will lead and manage our school community to reflect the values and culture of the Reading Community, and guide and support our students to develop the appropriate skills, strategies, creativity and knowledge necessary to be productive informed independent citizens in a global society.

  39. Step 2Develop and Maintain the Infrastructure • Hire outstanding network managers and other technical staff • Determine Equipment Needs and Purchase • Servers • Wireless Access • Internet Connectivity in every classroom • Wide Area Network/Local Area Network • Phone Systems (VOIP) • Maintain a replacement cycle

  40. Step 3 Identify Tech Gurus in Your District and Develop a Plan • Create a visionary group that can give you input on a plan • Develop a realistic technology plan that is a working document • Integrate curriculum maps with 21st Century Skills, DESE, and ISTE Standards • Get input on the plan from all stakeholders

  41. Step 4Identify Resources to Upgrade and Maintain • Federal and State Grant Funding • Businesses • Parents and Alumni • PTO • Fundraisers • Local Budget • Building Projects • Educational Foundations and Grants • http://www.donorschoose.org/

  42. Step 5Put the technology tools in the hands of the right people • Identify who has the willingness and capacity to use the technology effectively • Provide them with three tools • Laptop • Projector • Internet Access • Let them go… • Eventually, it will get contagious

  43. Step 6Provide Access Outside of School Time • For Community • For Teachers • For Students

  44. Step 7District Leaders Model the Use of Technology • Start a Blog • Join Social Networks • Have a twitter, google and facebook account • Join and develop Ning Communities • Subscribe to blogs and podcasts using google reader or rss • Identify Someone to Design and Maintain the District Web Page • Make a Video Podcast

  45. Step 7District Leaders Model the Use of Technology(continued) • Use technology (i.e. Google Docs, Skype) in your administrative meetings • Start a Discussion about 1:1 Computing in Your District • Start a Weekly Audio Podcast • Encourage teachers to engage students in learning • Go see how other school districts are using technology • Use Blue Ribbon Schools of Excellence and ISTE Standards

  46. Step 8Get Building Administrators on Board • Give them laptops and wireless access • Use applications at administrator meetings (i.e. google docs) • Have them attend professional development workshops with their staff • Run workshops for administrators only • Develop an administrator evaluation tool that has standards that include leading and modeling technology use • Run an Administrative Book Group • World is Flat (Friedman, 2006) • A Whole New Mind-Why Right Brainers Rule the World (Pink, 2007) • The Global Achievement Gap (Wagner, 2008) • Have them visit schools and districts that use technology effectively

  47. Wikispaces Blogs Google Gcast Jing iShowU Camtasia Skype Zamzar You Tube Internet Grammar Ustream Facebook RSS Twitter Wikipedia Del.icio.us Google Maps Audacity Mousepose ProfCast Voice Thread Photo Story And more… Do You and Your Administrators Know and Use These Tools?

  48. I.S.T.E…NETS for administrators Visionary Leadership Digital Age Learning Culture Excellence in Professional Practice Systemic Improvement Digital Citizenship

  49. 4 Main Points from I.S.T.E. Educational leaders inspire a shared vision for comprehensive integration of technology and foster a culture conducive to the realization of that vision. Educational leaders ensure that curricular design, instructional strategies and learning environments integrate appropriate technologies to maximize learning and teaching. Educational leaders ensure the integration of technology to support productive systems for learning and administration. Educational leaders use technology to plan and implement comprehensive systems of effective assessment and evaluation.

  50. Educational leaders apply technology to enhance their professional practice and to increase their own productivity and that of others. Educational leaders… model the routine, intentional, and effective use of technology. employ technology for communication and collaboration among colleagues, staff, parents, students, and the larger community. create and participate in learning communities that stimulate, nurture, and support faculty and staff in using technology for improved productivity. engage in sustained, job-related professional learning using technology resources. maintain awareness of emerging technologies and their potential uses in education.

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