All posts by Mark Hines

I am the director of our "Schools of the Future" pilot program called Mid-Pacific eXploratory (MPX) . this student directed, community and problem-based, integrated option for our students is for grades 9 and 12 currently. We have 60 students enrolled in it this year. We use this program both to challenge students with new models of education, as well as an opportunity for all of our staff to interact, observe, and learn new ways that educational environments can be designed. I am formerly the Technology Coordinator . I was been in this role for 15 years and led tremendous change in technology and how it is used in the classroom. I have been an educator for 32 years, and have taught Math, Science and Technology to grades 4-12. Our Weinberg Technology Plaza is a gymnasium sized technology library - open structure, multiple classes - and very high energy! Info about it here: http://www.midpac.edu/academics/technology.php our biggest technology initiative occurred in 2012 with the entire school receiving iPad 3's (1440 in all!) - info about this initiative is located here: http://midpac.edu/one-to-one My BS in Physics and I have a great passion for good science education. If you want to get me started, just start picking my brain about how students learn science! I received my Masters in Educational Technology from UH in 1997. I completed my PhD in Ed Tech in Summer 2014. Now...time for a little more sleep! I have 2 young sons - ages 12 and 17 and so am keenly interested in how they learn and use technology. When I am not behind the laptop screen, I can usually be found at the beach in Kailua or paddling and coaching offshore.

NECC Day 3 Monday June 30

Here are the presentations I attended today:

(reminder all important websites for the conference I am posting at
http://del.icio.us/mehines/necc2008

Chris Dede: Immersive Collaborative Simulations and Next Generation Assessments

Web site marked in delicious

he mentioned knowing what students know

cognition, understanding, interpretation

cognition is distributed across human mind, tools/media

marketing video from MicroSoft about distributed learning “unify your communications”

Types of rich datastreams

MUVE: immersion in virtual contexts with digital artifacts and avatar based identities

wikis and other forms of groupware
asynchronous discussions
intelligent tutoring
games
augmented reality

how do we make sense of these kinds of observations

formative assessment – provides more leverage for improvement than summative
particularly formative assessment – much more rich and more accurate than summative – need to use this one the fly to know what is going on.
potentially, formative , diagnostic assessment could take the place of summative!! (he believes this idea)

analogy/metaphor – barcodes on items allow formative assessment in stores so current inventory

new technologies to support this idea
his case for this – alice in wonderland interface

3 types of worlds

worlds to the desktop – accessing distance experts and archives for knowledge creation, sharing, an mastery

MUVE – *alice in wonderland)

ubiquitous computing (wearable always on – augmented reality)

His focus – MUVEs – his argument is that this provides the richest data stream to tap into (he refers this as alice in wonderland)

he is going to use rivercity as an example of assessment

he mentioned that they re still looking at implementation sites – if anyone is still interested

post testing – (traditional)
higher self efficacy on sci method, knowledge gains,

these instruments don’t tell you why, how they succeed

evidence of student work

assessment date – pre/post, embedded (formative) performance a(summative) (letter written to mayor)

contextual data: attendance, demographic, school data, observations, interviews

ACTIVE Data: team chat, notebook entries, tracking of activities, (data gathering, pathways, etc)

event logs provide time stamps on all activities (things like where, who they talked to , what objects they interacted,etc)

what makes this unique is students don’t have to stop for assessment so they don’t behave differently

this approach generates LOTS of data for analysis

he explains river city a little
work as team, keep track of clues, etc

examples of the new assessment info – how much time, range of data collection, saliency of data collected, clustering (grouping evidence)

how to make sense of all this data – ideally live feedback to teachers based on data to improve student learning
if you could get this it would empower student learning

examples – charts of data that show areas of sue tools use, etc

analysis – boys data orient, girls social orient

hand coding of the chat is powerful, but too time consuming?

three levels of diagnostics
Simple: how often to talk,
less simple: what sequence of interactions
complex = follow the pattern of knowledge building through the behavior and of the student

Data-mining:
process of selecting exploring and modeling large amounts of data

Evolution over time

what about something other than second city

distribute learning course:
f2f
ivc
wireless/handheld device
small group collab –

Groupware: (like wikis)
small group discussions (google docs)
convenient access
students find voice
sharing and annotation

issues: master new rhetoric, collective time management, rapid reading and typing, recognition of time and effort, requires time and effort to install and master

chris reflected on past issues with group work – who is doing what work and how we know – now groupware allows better understanding

sociosemetic networking (social tagging) – generates an event log

summary – a huge amount of data is being generated – we have to learn how to mine data and make meaning of it – if a record is kept, this would allow time of involvement, knowledge build – etc – would allow

chris just got two more grants to develop more ideas on this

mark’s thoughts – there is a great area for research here about assessment and the use of data mining for formative assessment – need to share this with the etec group

Classroom 2.0: Exploring the Potential of Web 2.0 
(this was a panel discussion of 5 including vicki davis and Steve Hargadon)

first definitions of wen 2.0 (using O’Reilly as reference)
web as platform (amazon)
collective intelligence
wisdom of crowds (wikipedia)
data as the intelligence inside (amazon)
end of the software release cycle (google)
loosely couple systems – like netvibes
software beyond a single device (facebook)
rich user experience (swivel)

Active vs passive – “participatory web”, read/write web

problems? inappropriate content – concerns about safety
vicki – ‘first penguin off the rock’ – same in schools

one of the challenges to do this is to have assessment for students clear up front so they know what they are expected to do

where to begin to start – teacher needs to get connected to other people who are doing this (mark wonders how to connect some of our teachers)

these tools engage (content rich fun – mark’s definition)
teachers need to find something that will connect to your class
this drives working with students instead of talking at students – they will honor that

vicki ( and most of the rest of the board( use wikis with their classes and using ning)

vicki – wikis – knowledge building (structured information), ning first person conversation/sharing – evolving

great idea – hire IT from apple geniuses

there is a federal plan called dopa – to force fed funds to block social networking

i got the chat saved too- think about the collective wisdom idea – fantastic way to think of classroom learning and outside resources- yay!
Chat (pdf format) is located here:
http://pueo.midpac.edu/technology/classroom20.pdf

Web 2.0 meets Grade 2.0 Gail Lovely

zoho was running tool ppt like tool
280 slides

session – special requirements due to age – keep in mind population

look at some of same tools but with young chid lens

http://glovely.wetpaint.com/ – where se has it posted

wikis
showed insect wiki
just like kwl –

showed counting project – monster project

kids write for detail,other kids draw based on the descriptive writing

she distinguished wikis (collaborative) vs blogs (leader with responses) – not editable

blogs – showed and example of students gr 2 who wrote a blog and 388 people gave feedback – cool

mrs cassidy’s web site blog – very cool!

showed bubbl.us

very nicely layed out wiki of her presentation – I like that she made it model her thoughts, and opened it up for collaboration

again – worth goig to: http://glovely.wetpaint.com/

Live streaming video – will richardson

ustreamtv.com

example of use – stream live performance with archive capability password protection
classroom productions

NECC Day 2 (cont’d) Ian Jukes

This is the continued notes from Jukes presentation – was a lot to digest – some people find him a bit too much, but I attribute it to him all consuming passion to be well read and understand what is happening… any way, here goes:

What will kids need to know? In answer to question about how much is too much, he kept revisiting the idea of BALANCE – need to honor both the things that we know plus include new ways to thinking.

Mentioned a book he is planning on reading : turning it off (delicious link)

Another BIG idea – too many things happening – whether you are an experienced tech user of a beginner – take baby steps – just pick one thing and start incorporating it – don’t over immerse (just like training – if you go too hard, you will hurt yourself and not come back).

on the topic of Photonics: Gilder: Telecosm: The world after Bandwidth abundance (delicious link)

Talked about the emergence of wimax and wibro in the next few years

Art Costa’s habits of mind was a reference point for discussion of ways to work with whole person/whole brain (delicious link)

Talked a bit about how student brains are different – the have received different stimuli and therefore have developed different

When pushed about how to prepare classrooms and teachers he referred to two resources – pdf document “Getting it Right” – a resource for technology planning, and “No more cookie cutter schools” where he is going to talk about classroom deign with architect Frank Kelley: New High Schools: Strategies that Work for Teaching and Learning Using Technology

Talking about what technologies have transformational power – he talked about the new samsung smartphone that has voice to text capability of 80 wpm – with 90% accuracy – this is available this year.
Coming soon – interpretive telephony – language translation phones. Some discussion about how often when you talk into a computer system on a cell phone, they are recording your voice to use for dialect analysis.

{{lunch break}}

Recent Brain research focus
Term – Screenagers – what are new brain imaging technologies showing us about how teens brains are different? The amount of exposure to computer technology has made young brains different.
Kids that have been exposed to digital bombardment show different wiring in their brains than older adults – they have different capabilities – most focused around better visual recall and stimuli. Even when kids learn the same things as adults it is stored and accessed differently. MMORPG (Massive Multiple online role playing games) and other inputs are the main cause of this.

He talked about the human brain project (delicious link) that is trying to really understand how the brain is structured and learns. Neuroinfomatics is the field of study – a government and multi-university project

showed examples of brain imaging fMRI (functional magnetic resonance imaging) – shows digital learner brains activate different areas under the same stimuli
New imaging technique – harvard Brainbow (delicious link)

Scientific American Mind article the myths of the teen brain (pdf posted on delicious)

Interesting study on how adults and teens look at text on a page through this technique – adults scan in a relative z pattern – but teens start at bottom, look up the sides of the page and rarely focus on the bottom right. They basically read in an F pattern – that part of the text activates their brain.
Also – color of text – teen brains are more active if text is green, red or hot pink (think wired) – most teens dislike black on white and avoid it.
Mentions prensky’s work on understanding teens use and amount of media – how they have better mastery of CPA Continuous Partial attention (coined by Linda Stone) – which is different from multitasking – CPA is a particular teen feeling for always wanting to be “a live nide on the network”.” (this last part is marks notes from the Summer 08 edutopia article by prensky)

Talked about the difference between kids and adults and how they learn – images vs text, hyper ink vs linear, etc.

Important to state kid are NT the same as they were 25 years ago – especially in their private lives
Two books in this thread of how to engage – “Thinking in Future tense (Jennifer James) Wiggins and McTighe Understanding by Design

jukes: If *we’re* still teaching kids the same way, knowing they’re different, WHO HAS THE LEARNING PROBLEM?

Jukes talked about three ways that technology is used (studies by Hank Becker – link on delicious)

70% are Literacy – how it works
20% are integated/augmented – example word processing – if you took it away, kids would still be able to write
10% is transformational – new things and new ways – if you took it away, the classroom would not work

Balance on this should be equal (1:1:1) – Juke stresses over and over – not throwing out old cherished proven ideas, but finding balance – still ned to teach how to do things, BUT need to include more relevant uses

Any teacher who can be replaced by a computer, DESERVES to be.

Not surprising he makes the case technology use in classrooms is about headware, not hardware

Running out of time – Jukes lists 7 steps to change classroom practice:
1. Catch Up – commit to a digital diet – try new things – blogging, delicious, video streaming, play a MMORPG…etc – he has a link on his site (ianjukes.com for this)
2. Teach to both sides of the brain – he arges (correctly, I think) that success for teaches is usually measured by how the top third of class performs and he feels it should be the bottom 2/3. He argues the top third would have achieved anyhow – they are the survivors. Uses Pink as a source here
move from being consumers to prosumers of information and content
Technologic Fluency
Media Fluency
Information Fluency (5 steps):
* ask good questions
* access and acquire good resources
analyze and authenticate – weigh information for value
apply – context – real life problem
assess progress and product

Social Fluency – webkins, club penguin – start purposefully building an honoring this side of the brain

3. Shift the instructional Approach
4. Let them access info natively
5. Let kids collaborate (example – wikinomics – social wisdom)
6. Products that reflect content and process
7. Re-Evaluate evaluation

(as I was typing this up I found a live blog that ginger ? posted that follows many of my notes – posted here: http://www.plurk.com/p/utg6)
Ginger’s live blog posting is a good counterpoint to mine

NECC Day 2 Ian Jukes Workshop

Day 2 – Ian Jukes

Biggest, most important idea
Think the continuum – from where we are to where we will be in 10 years – need to set a small step goal for moving towards where you need to go…

websites and boks he showed here:

http://del.icio.us/mehines/jukes

One of the important ideas Ian kept stressing was that it is critical to understand the power of exponential thinking – we have tendency to treat where we are today as what we should implement, but like a quarterback that needs to throw where a receiver is going, we need to plan for where things are going and consider this rapid change in our thinking

awesome idea – book search feature in google. Many books (including the ones I bookmarked in delicious) have previews in books.google.com. Worth looking at.

For instance the one book that Ian recommended more than any was teaching for tomorrow (Ted McCain):
http://books.google.com/books?id=oDsvkqgj_NgC&pg=PR5&dq=teach+for+tomorrow&sig=ACfU3U1i9Hg38FeUIkAP-dhcCXmct1w9Cg

The Morning:
Ian went over the 4 major exponential trends that we need to consider as we think about preparing for planning:

Moore’s Law – the trend will contune for the foreseeable future – faster, small, cheaper
Photonics – the trend will continue to increase – bandwidth triple almost yearly for the foreseeable future

Internet – its tremendous growth will continue (he didn’t particularly talk about web 3.0, but I think this should matter – the evolution of intelligent agents will be a powerful new use of the web)

Ian made the point that most teachers have never left education – they have been in the system since they were 6 years old – they have paradigm paralysis – too close to the institution to see its needs through new eyes.

He talked about the TTWADI (That’s the way we’ve always done it) mentality – used a story of conditioning monkeys in a cage (shooting them down with a water hose if they tried to grab bananas – they stop trying and will actively prevent any new ones – even if they are new to the cage – it becomes accepted practice).

Story of railroad tracks – why? Roman Chariots – why are SRBs the width they are – had to fit in the tunnels built to accommodate tracks

We talked about what are our accepted practices which are part of the TTWADI mind set – school day, textbooks, class size, teacher training, school year, grouping by age, subjects to study, etc

He made the case that in 1937 the US had the longest school year in the world, in 2008 we are at or near the bottom – longest is singapore

“When the going gets tough, the tough get traditional”

Based on trends in Moores Law, In 2019, the typical computer specs:

Memory: 208,000 GB
Hard Drive: 40 TB
Processor Speed: 1.2 THz
Price: $1.37

What does that mean? ubiquitous computing

he quoted Marc Prensky quite a bit in the presentation (in delicious link above)
Makes the case that although most of us reember before the exponetial curve took off, our kids have always lived it – they expect it

Quoted Kurzweil quite a bit (just googled – he has a ted talk here:

The book the singularity is here – recommended in delicious inks above

What will kids need to know? In answer to question about how much is too much, he kept revisiting the idea of BALANCE – need to honor botht he things that we know plus include new ways to thinking.

Mentioned a book he is planning on reading : turn it off (delicious link above)

Another BIG idea – too many things happening – whether you are an experienced tech user of a beginner – take baby steps – just pick one thing and start incorporating it – don’t over immerse (just like training – if you go too hard, you will hurt yourself and not come back).

on the topic of Photonics: Gilder: Telecosm: The world after Bandwidth abundance (delicious link above)

Talked about the emergence of wimax and wibro in the next few years

gotta go to more sessions – will add to summary later…

NECC 2008 day 1 Sat June 28

NECC Day 1 (Saturday June 28)

Prelude…
Well, after getting in to town ok, I poked around San Antonio Friday afternoon: Convention Center, River Walk, Hemisphere park, Tower of the Americas, some of downtown. Found a great family mexican restaurant (Mexican Manhatan) celebrating their 50th year of family owned operation. Good food, great folks, clients were mostly local residents (unlike the Riverwalk which seemed to be mostly visitors).
Got back to the hotel and started catching up on email and looking at info online – ended up staying up until 2 am – set my alarm and promptly overslept. Woke with a start at 9am! My First session on Moodle and more was at 8:30, so I knew was late. By the time I got dressed, walked over and got my registration materials it was almost 10 am when I walked into the session (it was an 8:30-11:30 session).

Act 1:
The session was run by Carmalita Bieniek and Jeanne Myers. Even though I was late, the nice thing was that since they were using moodle to teach the sessions their entire outline and resources were within the moodle course they had set up.

Sections I missed but I will be able to go back to in their site:

What is online learning?
Some nice resources here – youtube video on What it means http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=a32eDsxDfjY
They then had participants participate in a forum they posted asking for reflections on the video, participants could respond to other’s postings.
Had a link to reserach study by Babson and Olin College “Making the Grade: Online Education in the United States, 2006” I have that resource now.

What do teachers need?
Link to outside questionairre: http://users.chariot.net.au/~michaelc/olfac.html#lecturers
Link to teaching style survey: http://www.longleaf.net/teachingstyle.html
Online learing: Do you have what it takes?
http://members.shaw.ca/mdde615/index.htm
Quiz: do you have what it takes?
http://www.emporia.edu/lifelong/geninfo/newskills.htm
They then had participats get into groups for a chat about teacher readiness

This Where I came in at 10 am

What is moodle anyway?
One nice link is the moodle plugins and modules:
http://moodle.org/mod/data/view.php?id=6009

We need to look this over some more to see what things we might be missing from our current moodle use. The version we were using in the workshop was v 1.9.1 but our current classroom revolution version is 1.8.4. I need to find out why we haven’t upgraded to v 1.9.1 yet. here were some nice additions to layout and design in te newest version.

Using Delicious
This was a very cool section – even though I have used delicious for years, I really hadn’t realized i have only scratched the surface of this – both as a standalone web 2.0 app, as well as how to use it wthin moodle.

This was the most powerful thing I got out of our time in the session – that it is important to bring Web 2.0 tools into your moodle site.

We spent some time using delicious, including how to use well. One of th things I had not done much is utilize the tag features in delicious – now I get it! Once you accrue hundreds of websites, you absolutely need to use tags, as these allow sorting by tags. For instance, if you use the tag distancelearning then when you want to see your distae learning sites, you just select that tag and only those sites will show. Powerful!
I uploaded all my bookmarks from Safari into my new site I made (del.icio.us/mehines) and now I have a delicious site with 1234 sites. Of course, they are not tagged well, but it is a start.

The cool thing is that in the settings of delicious, you can create both tag clouds and tag rolls and these can be imbedded into moodle – both into a specific section or on the side windows. Since this is a dynamic feature, when you update your delicious site, it will update in the moodle window! Here is an example of a tag roll for delicious for my necc2008 sites:


necc2008 link roll

They also showed a nice youtube on delicious that is worth sharing from the folks that make ***in plain english
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=x66lV7GOcNU

We also talked a bit about how twitter can be imbedded into moodle as well

The last 30 minutes was spent letting us play with a class they set up for us. A few of their recommendations:

If you require passwords and don’t allow guests, then you are covered by fair use legislation for your class. teachers can post and use resources the same as regular classroom.

First thing when setting up a new course is to turn off all the windows other an the administrative window. Then only turn on the windows you want to have. Just because they come in by default doesn’t mean you want them.

The most important thing I got out of the workshop was that I should be using moodle for my next generation pueo web server for teachers. Because Moodle has great built in resources (discussions, forums, wikis, blogs, etc) and allows sorting by topics, it should be a natural fit for my needs for our teachers.

The rest of the day, I volunteered as a greeter for 3 hours – got to meet a bunch of great folks. I was greeting with a woman Elizabeth from Puerto Rico. I need to find her – I didn’t get her contact info, but she was interested in linking up with a Hawaiian school for a classroom blogging project, or maybe ivc as well.

Enough for now…

Ruminations on Kamehameha Conference

Well, the Kamehameha Conference was last week here and was fantastic. The only bummer was not being able to attend all the sessions due to my schedule. I missed Mark Standley, which is a disappointment – he was wonderful when i saw him a couple of years ago.

Here’s my thought of the day. One of the sessions I attended was David Warlick’s “Build your own Personal Learning network” which cut to a very important issue for me in my role on our campus – how to get teachers to be more connected to information, resources, & others. I was really impressed with the resources that David shared – most I know, but it was affirming to see that the idea that I have been struggling with had merit. On of my goals this fall on campus is to spend more time helping teachers utilize this kind of capability of the web. It fits nicely in with my goal of building more professional learning communities – more on that idea later…

Time to get to business

Well – it is time to start keeping a real blog here. One of the things that drives this is the Doctoral Program I am in at University of Hawaii and the need to be more “out there” writing and sharing what is going on.

Here is my tool of the day: Jing (which I found on this web site). Easy to use screen capture software. Crossplatform. Free. Comes with free screencast.com storage and easy upload interface. Easy to embed videos. Example here:

2008-05-26_2313

Ok I am not why it would not embed properly ( I suspect it was too large) but at least the link is active.

Aloha for now!

ETEC 750 – The Future: Literature Review

First: an aside 😉
As we use tools that are more in line with web 2.0, I find that I am still working on my comfort level. This blog is an example. I am used to the more full drafting capability that a word processor seems to offer, so I have to fight the urge to draft postings first in a Wp, before cutting and pasting to a blog. Is that just because I am ‘old school’?

I have chosen edublogs because I have recently set up this site for creating a space that I can use both for on and off campus as a means to see how a blogging forum can provide a means for communication and sharing. I have not kept a blog before, so this is my foray into this technology.

A brief reflection n the readings.

Wikipedia:
This article was interesting from two levels: As a better mathematical/logical understanding of how social networks can be diagrammed and understood, as well as the dynamics of them.

It mentions that shape of a social network matters: connections made to a network that goes to outside worlds enables greater access to information. Schools typically work as a closed network – at most students might share information within the class walls. This is a limiting factor in the ability of classrooms o provide the best possible environment for real learning. Teachers absolutely need to recognize and use this ability of social networks to empower their learners.

I also thought he terminology of “Mechanical Solidarity” vs “Oragnic Solidarity” was powerful – traditional schools are mechanical and web 2.0 learning is much more organic (think ‘viral’ and how that term has become so relevant).

Primary Psychiatry:
This article did not particularly inspire a lot of deep though in me. As I was reading it, I thought the target audience of medical professionals and how they might consider use of social networking to build community, but the main thrust seemed to be analyzing current tools and advocating for one that he was interested in. As always, I take a lens toward education when I read these articles. Our students are deeply involved in the social networking side of the internet. Is it even an option any more for educators to sit on the sidelines while our students become deeply involved in a technology that captivates, challenges and builds knowledge. Can schools continue to stay relevant if they don’t?

ASBJ: Social Networking can work for K-12 educators
Brief, but relevant. The quick review of how to start a school community thinking about how to understand and use the social side of the web is well taken. The real interesting part of this article is the secondary article titled “21st Century Attitudes”. I think this summary mirrors how many educators feel about how the web (both 1.0 and 2.0). Although many educators are aware of what learners are doing on the web, there is not a real sense of either urgency or understanding of how the social side of learning can be a real compliment to the face to face, bricks and mortar establishments we have made. On our campus we are discussing the kinds of tools that might make the evolution of school as a place to go some of the time a reality. This does not diminish the role of te educator, but it does change it – from center stage to facilitator. Most expert/master teachers did not go into this field thinking this however, so a continued development of their skills needs to happen.

Wired Article: Facebook is open for business
This article mimicked some of the themes covered in “Wikinomics” about opening up the developing platform for greater community use. How might we use this idea in education. Think about the word ‘viral’. The notion that our students would take a content platform and create around seems silly, but if the content were open, students would be able to create, synthesize, develop in new ways. An example: this past summer in our technology class, our students played with “Squeak” – an open ended animation story telling tool developed by MIT Media labs. Our spanish teacher assigned a project this fall that was a story telling assignment using Comic Life. Two groups asked if they could instead use Squeak to tell the story. How is this viral? As they developed their project, other groups were watching and got quickly that the tool their friends were using was more powerful for telling stories and other started looking at it as a means to use. The more educators open the power of using ‘viral’ tools, the beter insght they will have on their learners (market data), which will make their ability to effect learning (sell their wares).

(to see the projects, go here)

Journal Article:
Graf, S, Viola, S.R., Leo, T., & Kinshuk (2007). In-Depth Analysis of the Felder-Silverman Learning Style Dimensions. Journal or research on Technlogy in Education, 40(1), 79-93.

This article first explains what the Felder-Silverman Learning Style Model (FSLSM) is, then investigates a survey that measures it. Lastly, and most importantly, the authors try to develop a more detailed view of the learning styles measured in the instrument. The FSLSM has 4 dimensions: active/reflective, sensing/intuitive, visual/verbal, sequential/global. The 44 question survey is designed to show learning styles and is widely used to look at how learning styles relate to technology enhanced learning. The authors delve into a statistical model to glean how even more exact characteristics of learners can be shown to effect their success in technology rich experiences. For example, they took questions in the active learning dimension and investigated whether trying something new or social orientation mattered more for learners and found that trying something new had a stronger impact than the social nature of the task.

The implications of this kind of instrument are directly applicable to both teachers and students in technology environments. the one area the authors do not mention, but I am specifically interested in is whether there is a match between staff adoptance of technology and learning preference. Specifically in web 2.0 technologies, if a teacher is reflective, sensing, verbal and sequential does that affect their decision making in technology use.

Planning, Forecasting, and Inventing Your Computers-in-Education Future
Moursund, D
The background information (Moores Law, predicting events, adoption curves, etc) is pretty basic stuff, but when he gets into Delphi method of predicting change the chapter picks up a much higher tome of urgency. The notion that school as a social system is resistant to change is well born out by both studies of reform efforts as well as anecdotal data. When Moursund goes into his own prognostication of the future it reminded me a lot of the old ACOT Apple Classroom of Tomorrow videos. The documents (many dated 1994 or so) paint a picture of teacher as facilitator, student as active, and information as ‘smart’. I was recently reading an article about semantic web – web 3.0 by Tim Berners-Lee. It was striking that the predictions in what will be web 3.0 and eventually 4.0 fall into line with many of Moursund’s primary ideas in his view of learning in 2015. The interesting tidbit is that the evolution of the web will get there long before 2015, as will the capabilty of devices.
As a technology leader on my campus we are looking at new models of teaching and learning to move our institution into the future – to keep it relevant in the face of these emerging trends. Some of our teachers are embracing technology and all its power and ability to excite and challenge students. Other are struggling with their evolving role in this new world. A few are even hoping to retire before they have to change with the times. Our ability to predict change in technology is a small part, but our ability to redefine what school should be in an age of this technologic wave is a greater challenge. Huan nature is a tougher system to change than technology is to predict.

Semantic Web

Ok, so i have been doing a little reading this weekend – trying to get a better sense of where the web is going. Came across Tim Berners-Lee and RadarNetwroks and Nova Spivack. Very excited with the direction of the web 3.0. There was a nice little summary/graphics on radarnetworks site that seems to be a leader. There is a nice link toa quick explanation here

MPI Technology Blog

Where should we be in 3-5 years with Technology? What tools should be available to teachers and students? Software? Hardware? What infrastructure will we need? What will classrooms need in order to best reach their students? How should staffing change to accommodate this?
Think and dream BIG!