Texas Bluebonnet Writing Project Blog

Thursday, March 22, 2007

PD or not PD

Geoffrey Fletcher's commentary in the March, 2007 issue of THE Journal is a great read. His article focuses on professional development offered for technology integration, or the lack thereof. "Educators give lip service to professional development, but they don't spend money on it," one vendor is quoted as saying. Her thought as a vendor is that schools want the training for free like they do with textbooks. "They said textbook publishers give free training, [so] the technology guys should do the same," says one tech coordinator.

According to Fletcher's research from Market Data Retrieval, PD spending in the United States classrooms hovers between 5 to 8 cents for every dollar spent on technology. Recently, after increasing the demands on schools for improving student technology literacy, the federal government turned around and cut the educational technology budget in a huge way. So where are our priorities as a world power? In technology preparation and funding, I would say we have become a developing country.

Why do I bring this up? As educators we all know there is never enough PD on technology, and cost is but one of the factors. Time is another. Then again, for us to have time, it costs money to either offer stipends, comp time, or quality subs in the classroom to allow us to attend. No, the reason I bring this up is that the Long Range Plan for Technology adopted by TEA says that 30% of the total district budget on technology needs to be spent on professional development. That means thirty cents for every dollar spent on technology in your district will go toward offering (hopefully) quality PD with technology topics. The focus is a 24/7 PD offering to allow educators and administrators the chance to learn when it is convenient. What I see is districts either creating new positions for curriculum developers or stipends for tech savvy staff to develop it after hours.

Have you tried taking PD with this type of presentation? Maybe it is downloadable modules or online coursework with an asynchronous discussion setting. Or it could be a video online where you answer some questions at the end and then print out a certificate. ATPE has piloted a program on their site where you read articles online and then answer questions and then print a certificate. This is great for those who have to renew their certification every five years and need alternative ways for PD credits.

David Warlick and others have discussed a personal learning network (PLN). It is your own design in your area of interest where you challenge yourself through reading and interacting with your peers. You choose the sources as well as the times you interact. Blogs, RSS aggregators, and podcasts are important in this area to help you out. While there is no proof of your work here other than your improved performance as a professional, TEA still allows this style of PD to count toward your PD requirements for certificate renewal. While I have a lifetime certificate, I still choose to have a vast PLN made up of great educational thinkers like Will Richardson, Miguel Guhlin, David Warlick, Jennifer Wagner, Wes Fryer, Eddie, BWP bloggers, ..

I guess I am posting on this to flesh out my thoughts as to what is already going on as well as hopefully get feedback from others about their learning preferences in this arena. BWP offers top notch, in-person professional development. We are in the process of designing online PD offerings. How would you prefer to receive it? Do you need the deadlines of a time length, syllabus-based course offering? Or do you prefer the ability to log-in and out when it is convenient, work at your own pace, do some type of summative activity for proof, and then print your certificate of completion?

The one thing we cannot create for educators is time. We can make any PD offering you need. We can even offer it in differing formats. We just need to know what you find the most convenient and purposeful to you and how you would like to access it.

Be thankful Texas is finally taking the lead in long range planning in technology. The forethought to mandate funds (albeit not new money) toward professional development will only serve to benefit educators as a whole. If we are benefiting the teachers, the kids are going to reap the rewards. That is what this is all about, right?

Technology is a great tool. But, like most of the tools in my garage, if they are not used they are useless. We must provide the training necessary for teachers to efficiently and effectively utilize what the district is providing (and a few things you can get for free on the Internet).

By the way, with our move toward digital and online textbooks, are the tech companies going to change their feelings on providing free training to accompany adoptions? Or will they just jack their cost of the product and act like the training is free (like textbook companies do). Either way, it needs to be offered. I recently had this same thing happen with a new technology my district adopted. While it was provided free through the state technology materials adoption list, the company wanted $1500 a day for training. In a district my size (needing only 8 staff members trained) and limited funds anyway, I told them thanks but no thanks. Our district did not have that budgeted. I would do the best I could to figure it all out and train our staff. Is that the best method? No way. It is financial survival. But in the end common sense prevailed. The company realized that for us to get the full potential of the technology to be able to brag about it to others, they needed to provide the training using their own folks. So they did. For free. Just saying.

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Tuesday, February 06, 2007

TCEA 2007 - David Warlick and Navigating the Digital Information Age

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I had the distinct pleasure of hearing David Warlick live for the first time today. I also had the opportunity to freak him out about half way through his presentation (more on this later).

David was discussing (and for me, clarifying) his belief that we need to quit discussing technology integration and begin discussing information literacy. You see, information literacy done right automatically draws in the technology based on the student need. Once again, it becomes student driven instead of teacher directed. For example:
Marco Torres is an innovative teacher. One day a student comes to him asking why her brother insists on speaking out against the global economy. She wants to know what is so important about the global economy that he is that worked up while in college. Marco says it would be a good idea for her to find out, and being a good teacher, he wants her to report her findings back to him. So she does. Boy does she ever. Watch this digital story about her findings (click on the video titled "Sweatshops"). Do you think she could have gotten her point across in an essay? Did he say go read a book and write a report?

There was enough NEW information created in 2003 to fill 37,000 Libraries of Congress buildings. Yes, we must teach our students to actively and effectively manipulate, navigate, and dissect this information.

As if our jobs are not hard enough, David points out a very interesting observation: “For the first time in history, our job as educators is to prepare our children for a future we cannot clearly describe.” Can we do that using the same methods we have been using for decades? And by "that" I mean PREPARE.

Another interesting observation David pointed out was that when the science community announced we are now one less planet, it took ONE minute for wikipedia to reflect the change. How long will it be before your textbooks reflect it? To steal a line from a chili company, "Well, that's too long."

How do the three R's fit into this information age? David suggests:
reading expands into exposing the truth
arithmetic expands into employing information
writing expands into expressing ideas compellingly

My overall views of this presentation are very high. I wish my admin had been there to hear it so they can see the dire importance of us making positive, affective changes in our ISD. I only hope they see my passion for improving the opportunities for our students through my actions.

Oh, and the freaking out David story. Well, I decided not to carry anything but my MacBook with me walking around so much. Since I was on the front row (Yes, I was a bow head) and David kept walking about ten feet in front of me, I decided I wanted a picture. Only camera I had was on the MacBook. So I loaded Photobooth and spun the laptop around and hit the mouse button. David was not quite ready for seeing himself live on a computer screen (I also read on his blog that he is not big on cameras anyway). He stopped cold mid-sentence and had to announce to the entire group that "this guy just threw me." (Sorry David. Thanks for taking it so well.) I talked to him after the presentation to say hi and thanks for the Class Blogmeister. He asked if I was going to be at the edublogger meet-up. I am not sure if it was nice small talk or he was plotting revenge for my laptop photo attempt. Either way, it will be nice to talk more with him. It was a learning experience, though. It was the first time I realized the iSight takes pics backwards. The TCEA logo was in reverse on my screen. Bummer. I am sure there is a trick to fix this somewhere.

I get to hear David again at the TEC-SIG luncheon Thursday, I think it is. Maybe I will have new batteries in my digital voice recorder by then. I saw Will Richardson sitting in on this session today. No, I didn't flip open the laptop and snag a photo. Maybe I can borrow one from one of my district buddies here. I can't wait to sit in on Will's keynote as well.

Now if I could just find Wesley Fryer around here somewhere to complete the trifecta...

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