Personal
- Try to not get distracted when I am performing a task. (personal and professional)
- Use Web 2.0 tools to connect, organize, and share with friends and family
- Find more tools to add music to my daily life
Teaching in a public school, we must always align to standards, thus clarifying and guiding my actions. Maryland has Teacher Technology Standards (2002), but I will use the ISTE National Standards for Teachers (2008).
1. Facilitate and Inspire Student Learning and Creativity through modelling and facilitating digital experiences that connect to real world experiences, and that utilize Web 2.0 collaboration tools. This step is crucial, and if we start with one or two tools, such as wikis and blogs, our digital native students will be ready for the challenge.
2. Design and Develop Digital-Age Learning Experiences and Assessments through use of technological ad digital tools that link students' outside world lives with schoolhouse experiences. Alignment of content standards with technology standards is an essential component of the plan. Students will be instrumental in sharing the tools they use to communicate, and to develop classroom goals that will enable them to be more engaged in and responsible for their learning. If we incorporate one new tool in each unit, the learning experiences will be remarkable.
3. Model Digital-Age Work and Learning, not only to students, but to staff as well. As a teacher leader, it is imperative to communicate and model the digital innovations with staff, administrators, students, parents, and community members if we are to excel in preparing our students for college and career readiness. In addition, we must find ways for students to integrate digital tools in ways that will enhance higher order thinking skills, such as analysis, evaluation, application, synthesis, and creativity, while promoting scholarly research. Many teachers in our building utilize social media to engage students, but we must remember that learning is not about being a "sage on the stage", but "guides on the side".
4. Promote and Model Digital Citizenship and Responsibility through collaboration with the Library Media Specialist and other staff, in order for our students to understand ethical implications and obligations in a digital world. Engage and collaborate with teachers in other regions of the world to promote global responsibility. [This summer I am a participant in an online professional development experience with educators around the world, through IEARN, where we are building plans for collaboration projects for our students.]
5. Engage in Professional Growth and Leadership that is meaningful, and ongoing. Too often when teachers are introduced to new ideas, it is done in a "drive-by" or "speed-dating" method. Teachers spend 30 minutes learning one tool, then either go back to the classroom with no follow-up, or try it with no support. If teachers participate in a PLN, and regularly discuss tools, share their knowledge, even invite other teachers to see the technology in action in classrooms, we will all learn and grow, making digital tools second nature to our lesson planning and delivery. We need our administrators to be leaders in this change as well. Too often faculty meetings are sit and take, rather than share and give. Our leaders must include "infusion of technology" in the improvement plans for our school, as well as input from teachers, students, parents, and the community, in the vision for change.
Your plan is very well thought-out and very detailed. With everything you said, I feel that you are ready to begin the school year on a positive note and offer your students a great wealth of information.
ReplyDeleteMoreover, the fact that you stated you believe that administrators should include technology in the school improvement plan with the input of teachers, students, parents, and the community would be a wonderful change in the way business as usual has been run. Just think of all of the changes that could take place.
While I use the Maryland Tech Standards for Teachers, I like the wording of the ISTE standards. It just makes more since to me.
ReplyDeleteI am an advocate for the efficient path to getting things done, but I find that sometimes the school system doesn't allow for that path. I can be held back by by other educators that don't understand the technology or the path itself.
I am going into my school next week to figure out what my principal wants from me in the new year. Hopefully this will work well with my plan.
I agree that professional development needs to be ongoing and that support needs to be in place. After meeting with other teachers learning the Common Core curriculum that is supposed to be implemented in a few years, there concern is that they are given so many things to learn and 90% of those things last two years or less. A lot of them meet new tools with reservations because they will not last long enough to measure the results. Something has to change in order for teachers to feel comfortable to implement what they learn with out reservation.
ReplyDeleteyou should have been an instructor for this course. I am really impressed by your use of 2.0, no 3.0 web tools. I am located at a neighboring high school. I would like for you to teach me how to improve my blog and wiki. I have many questions for you to answer. This course has exposed me to so many people doing incredible things with technology.
ReplyDelete