Thursday, June 10, 2010

21st Century Readiness

21st Century Skills…now where have we heard this? It seems to be the new catch phrase in education…really this phrase is used in the workforce as well. Everyone across the U.S. is trying to gear up and prepare for our future as a nation and everyone as individuals. Now is the time to enhance our skills to keep up with the rest of the world.

You know this and we know this, so why is Texas ASCD writing a blog entry about 21st Century Skills? Well, one reason is the theme for the 2010 Texas ASCD conference is “Designing Boundless Futures for 21st Century Learners,” and secondly, do we really understand the skills and know how to prepare our youth to use these skills? Ken Kay with the Partnership for 21st Century Skills (P21) will be presenting a keynote session at the annual conference on “21st Century Readiness for Every Student.” So what are these 21st Century Skills he will be discussing? If you visit the P21 website: http://www.p21.org/index.php, you will be able to view framework that Ken Kay will be basing his session on. During this presentation he will be going into details on the 3 R’s (Readin’, writin’, and ‘rithmetic) and the 4 C’s (communication, collaboration, critical thinking and creativity) of these skills. The P21 group believes that it is very important for us to fuse these skills together to be able to compete globally.

While doing some research about 21st Century Skills on the Internet, I came across a blog entry titled, “21st Century Workforce Readiness.” (http://21stcenturylearning.typepad.com/blog/2009/02/newport-news-public-schools-is-moving-quickly-to-address--learning-in-the-21st-century-its-barriers-and-its-possibilities.html) The author of this blog participated in a focus group made up of business, education, political and community leaders. The reason I found this blog entry interesting is because, not only did they discuss skills and barriers of 21st century skills, but they also came up with recommendations on what we can do as educators to prepare the students and ourselves. I have highlighted a few of their suggestions below:
  • Put together on-line learning communities for leadership. This system can be used to discuss problems and barriers collaboratively. As a school or district you can address needs and how others are able to help (provide ideas). This community should be available for administrators, staff, teachers, students and business leaders.
  • Use technology whenever you can. Discuss global connections with current events.
  • Allow and teach educators how to build their own online personal learning networks. They should know the importance of this online community and how allowing students to communicate this way would prepare them for the workforce.
  • Look at the technology skills you have on your campuses/districts. Have teachers teach other teachers what they know and how they are using technology in their classrooms. Don’t reinvent the wheel; just modify it to address gaps in the curriculum.
  • Don’t be afraid to ask students to show you how they are using technology. Let them help you develop skills and tools they are familiar with.

Please feel free to respond to the questions below:

1. What do you think of the suggestions above?
2. Is your school/district doing something else to meet these needs?

Monday, May 17, 2010

Integration of Technology into Your Curriculum

Integrating technology into your curriculum seems to be the new buzz saying in education, but what does this really mean? We hear that students are spending countless hours on their cell phones, computers and iPods at home while multi-tasking but what are we doing in the classrooms to keep their attention and preparing them for the work of tomorrow? If you have not viewed the YouTube videos titled: A Vision of Students Today,” or “A Vision of K-12 Students Today,” please do so, you will find it very enlightening.

Integrating technology into your curriculum no longer means to have a separate classroom dedicated to typing and computer skills. This means you need to enhance the learning going on in the classroom by adding new ways to research, explore, engage, participate, interact, and assess your lessons. On Edutopia’s website,http://www.edutopia.org/technology-integration-introduction , it states; “Technology is ubiquitous, touching almost every part of our lives, our communities, our homes. Yet most schools lag far behind when it comes to integrating technology into classroom learning. Many are just beginning to explore the true potential tech offers for teaching and learning. Properly used, technology will help students acquire the skills they need to survive in a complex, highly technological knowledge-based economy.” Is your curriculum currently helping students to acquire these skills? Technology should not solely be your curriculum but it should contribute to the already great teaching and learning that is going on. A great website about integrating technology in curriculum is http://www.usask.ca/education/coursework/802papers/antifaiff/antifaiff.htm.

Texas ASCD is offering a new summer conference titled, Integration of 21st Century Skills Across the Curriculum, to be held in Dallas on June 28th-30th. We hope you can join us for 21st Century skills on the web, aligning technology to curriculum through rigorous and motivating assignments in core areas, and collaborative tools for sustainable improvement. To find out more information on our conference, visit our website at http://www.txascd.org/development/index.html.

In closing, I ask these questions:

Why not? What would technology do to our learning? What are we afraid of?

Friday, April 9, 2010

The Impact Texas Textbooks Have on America

Textbooks across the country:

America currently doesn’t have a nation-wide standard for what is taught in schools across the United States. For this reason, each state has its own set of curricula. In order for textbook companies to make the best profit possible, they do not make a different textbook for each individual state. Instead they base their books off of the curriculum their biggest clients are using. So the smaller clients (or states in this matter) purchase textbooks based off of the bigger states curriculum.

Current Uproar in Texas (and across the country):

At the beginning of March, the Texas State Board of Education met to vote on what curriculum would be for the Social Studies Textbooks. The criteria that was discussed during the March meeting passed in a vote 10 to 5 in favor of all the changes. A final vote will take place in May. Many newspapers and news sources have eluted to what was discussed in the sessions.

To find out more, visit:

MSMBC - http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/35839979/:

“Hostilities flared and prompted a walkout Thursday by one of the board's most prominent Democrats, Mary Helen Berlanga of Corpus Christi, who accused her colleagues of "whitewashing" curriculum standards.

By late Thursday night, three other Democrats seemed to sense their futility and left, leaving Republicans to easily push through amendments heralding "American exceptionalism" and the U.S. free enterprise system, suggesting it thrives best absent excessive government intervention.

"Some board members themselves acknowledged this morning that the process for revising curriculum standards in Texas is seriously broken, with politics and personal agendas dominating just about every decision," said Kathy Miller, president of the Texas Freedom Network, which advocates for religious freedom."

Click the link above to read more.

New York Times - http://www.nytimes.com/2010/03/13/education/13texas.html:

“After three days of turbulent meetings, the Texas Board of Education on Friday approved a social studies curriculum that will put a conservative stamp on history and economics textbooks, stressing the superiority of American capitalism, questioning the Founding Fathers’ commitment to a purely secular government and presenting Republican political philosophies in a more positive light.”

Click the link above to read more.

If you are interested in influencing the Texas State Board of Education, contact them at http://www.tea.state.tx.us/index3.aspx?id=1156 or contact your district State Board of Education Representative. Let your voice be heard.

Please feel free to respond to these questions:
1. Is your school or district using textbooks as a resource for your curriculum or are you working with curriculum on the web?
2. How will the new state standards affect your school or district?

Wednesday, March 10, 2010

Advocacy and You

A presentation was given to the Texas ASCD Board of Directors last week about The New Advocacy: Technical & Adaptive Approaches. During this presentation, we were given some legislative basics/guidelines to follow when advocating. Below are informal notes taken at the meeting, which we would like to share with you:

Knowledge:
  • Know the process - know how committee meetings and legislative meetings are run, and how a bill becomes law.
  • Know key players - know your legislators, their staff, and what committees the legislator is a member of.
  • Know your message - know how your message is perceived, know the facts, and who else supports/rejects your cause.
Relationships:
  • Get to know your legislator. Make those connections early, so they will turn to your for your opinions in times of need. Going by and visiting your legislator’s staff is also a good idea. They are the key to getting the information you are interested in relaying to the proper person.
  • When your legislator does something you like or supports you, let them know what that means to you and thank them for what they do.
  • Relate your cause to a story. Don’t just set-up a meeting with your legislator and go over facts and figures. Relate the data to stories. They need to remember what you are telling them and be able to convince others to join your cause. The best way is to relate your issues to a story they will remember.
Time Frame:
  • The best time to contact your legislator is during their non-legislative season, which is now. If you wait until the legislative session, then it is too late. Legislators are in and out of their offices at this time, and there are many people trying to get in touch with them. If you start your relationship with them early-on and an issue comes up during the session, they are more willing to hear what you have to say and even call you up to ask your opinion.
  • Re-election time is very vital to legislators. If you can spare some time to help with their re-elections, then legislators are more willing to build that relationship with you.
Attend:
  • Before you go to testify at a hearing, you need to attend the committee meetings first, so you will be apprised of the protocol. These meetings are very different than what one would expect.
  • Pay attention to the meetings and look for, distractions, verbal attacks and any additional tactics they can use to get what they want accomplished during the meeting. Be aware of these.
Above are just a few basics in advocating. For more information on advocating and stimulus money updates, come to the Critical Issues Influence Institute in Austin. Contact the Texas ASCD office for more information and to RSVP.

Presentation by Dr. Dawson Orr, February 24, 2010

Please feel free to answer the following questions:
  1. Are you currently involved in advocating? If so, what do you do to connect with your legislator?
  2. What other useful information would you give to educators who are interested in having their voice heard from our governmental officials?

Friday, February 12, 2010

Designing Boundless Futures for 21st Century Learners

The Texas ASCD’s Local Arrangements Committee for the 2010 conference met in December to begin planning for the annual conference. After much discussion on expectations, wants and needs of the conference, the committee came up with the following theme:

Designing Boundless Futures for 21st Century Learners.

What does this mean to you?

First as educators, we need to focus on the student. This aspect was glaringly obvious. When a student leaves high school there are many paths they can choose from. Wouldn’t it behoove us, not only as educators but also as citizens, to prepare each student for whichever path they may want to select? The committee then decided that we needed not only to focus on the student, but to also focus on the educator. To be successful in the 21st Century, we all need to be learners. With the world changing constantly, where will we all be if we don’t move and change with it? With this said, the committee choose the focus (or strands) of the conference. The strands of the 2010 conference will be:
  • Curriculum and Technology Integration
  • Curriculum Design
  • Addressing Challenges and Change
  • Multiple Measures of Assessment
  • Instructional Coaching and Leadership
  • Building Community
  • College and Career Readiness

Please feel free to comment/answer the questions below:
  1. What does designing boundless futures mean to you?
  2. What kinds of 21st Century skills have you learned as an educator in the past 10 years?
Texas ASCD would like to invite you to join us October 24-26, 2010 at the Westin Galleria in Houston, for three days of learning.

Friday, January 8, 2010

Are you ready for the next technology leap?

Texas Instruments (TI) is a global analog and digital semiconductor IC design and manufacturing company. TI develops analog, digital signal processing, RF and DLP® semiconductor technologies that help customers deliver consumer and industrial electronics products with greater performance, increased power efficiency, higher precision, more mobility and better quality.

You are probably telling yourself: “I thought this was an education blog.” Well it is. Texas Instruments invited the Texas ASCD Board of Directors to do a site tour of its latest display technology to enhance the learning environment in the classroom. Basically, TI wanted to show us the DLP 3-D ready projectors, along with many of their other inventions. The main focus of the tour was the use of 3-D ready projectors, and staying up with technology that is soon to be released. (If there is such a thing as staying up with technology.)

For many of us, technology and those developing the equipment for technology are always one step ahead of us. Once we decide what we need, we have to get bids, approval and finally apply for a purchase order. Once this process is completed, the technology guru’s have already developed the next new item we need. Well TI, is trying to help us. 3-D ready products are just now starting to come out and will be the state-of-the-art for now.

You can get a LCD projector for approximately the same price as a 3-D ready projector. The only difference is that the LCD projector will soon be outdated. TI uses tiny digital mirrors, microscopes, and light to create these images. The new 3-D ready projectors can be used for regular projection (just like the Infocus projectors) and when/if you get the software for 3-D the projectors will be set and ready to go. One only has to see the 3-D projected software to know that students can receive so much more in their learning experience. This same technology is starting to be used in televisions. Soon all of our home TV’s will have the ability to do 3-D images.

For more information on this type of projector, please visit: http://www.dlp.com/projectors/find_dlp_3d_projector.aspx

Also, Texas Instruments is doing a pilot program with these projectors with a few different schools around the country. To view a blog from one of these programs visit: http://bvsd.org/iteach/BlogCentral/Lists/Categories/Category.aspx?Name=Future%20Talk
Len Scrogan with Boulder ISD gives a lot of definitions and explanations on the different aspects of the 3-D projectors. He also writes about the future of these projectors along with the content. If you are interested at all in these new projectors, make sure you visit this blog.

Please feel free to answer the following questions:
1. Does your school/district have 3-D ready projectors?
2. Is there any other technology updates that you know of that are about to hit the market?
3. What kinds of new technologies are you using in the schools?

Friday, December 11, 2009

Critical Issues Influence Institute

Are you up-to-date on reforming your district? The Obama Administration has laid out reform priorities for education:
  • Higher standards and better assessment;
  • More effective teachers and more equitable teacher distribution;
  • Enhanced data systems and improved collection and use of data; and
  • Turning around low-performing schools.
Many of these reform efforts have been included in stimulus packages and funds that have been set-up for school districts.

Texas ASCD hosted its first of 5 one-day institutes, at the beginning of December, focusing on critical issues for influence. Are you taking advantage of the funds available through stimulus money? In this session we discussed:
  • Who is leading the U.S. Department of Education – their roles and priorities
  • ARRA – American Recovery and Reinvestment Act – to help with state budgets and to prevent teacher layoffs
  • Elementary and Secondary Education Act (ESEA) – known as No Child Left Behind during the Bush Administration
  • Stimulus dollars - where they are going
  • The Race to the Top Fund – to help promote state reform programs based on the reform priorities that the Obama Administration has laid out
  • and the Innovation and Improvement Fund (i3) – promising and innovative practices in the reform priorities.
So what are these acts/funds saying? We need to start reforming our schools to address these standards. After a presentation of all this information, we had discussions with representatives from legislative aides, Superintendents, Assistant/Deputy Superintendents, the State Board and central office staff on what to do with this information and how to distribute this information in our districts so that Texas Districts can apply for these fundings.

This influence institute is a new program Texas ASCD is doing to help districts get the information they need. To find out more about these funds, please visit the U.S. Department of Education website at http://www.ed.gov/programs/racetothetop/index.html. Texas ASCD is trying to help you lead the way in influence. Stay up-to-date on critical issues and to be notified of legislative issues. Join the Texas ASCD’s Educator Advocates Action Center: http://capwiz.com/ascd/tx/home/.