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Professional Development for Instructional Technology

This resource provides guidance on planning, implementing, and integrating instructional technology professional development. It discusses the importance of aligning technology with curriculum goals and offers strategies for creating a technology plan, establishing a vision, and setting goals. The resource also explores different professional development strategies, such as workshops, immersion, collaborative work, and curriculum development. Key topics include assessing needs, maximizing workshops, and implementing learning teams.

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Professional Development for Instructional Technology

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  1. Planning into PracticeResources for Planning, Implementing and Integrating Instructional Technology Professional Development for Instructional Technology

  2. Introductions • Regional Technology in Education Consortium serving the SE states, PR, and the US Virgin Islands • Jeff Sun, consultant service provider for SEIR*TEC and author of Planning into Practice • jsun@sun-associates.com

  3. Objectives • To understand what constitutes an effective technology plan • To examine the specific case of technology professional development • To consider various professional development strategies in light of levels of teacher awareness

  4. Focus on Curriculum • Technology is of little value if not linked with your curriculum and curriculum goals. • Curriculum, not the technology itself, must drive your planning process

  5. Skeletal Plan Format

  6. Overview of Technology Plan Elements • Executive Summary • Vision • Current Status • Goals and Objectives • Curriculum Integration • Professional Development • Administration • Infrastructure • Other? • Infrastructure Design • Staffing • Action Plan (follows goals and objectives) • Budget • Evaluation Plan

  7. Establishing Vision • Vision establishes the purpose of the plan, and more importantly, the purpose behind bringing technology into your schools. • Guides the planning process • Firmly establishes the value you place upon technology

  8. Creating Goals • Goals are statements of particular ways in which you intend to actualize your vision. • Goals break down the vision into manageable (and measurable) pieces. • Most plans have groups of goals around various elements of the vision...

  9. Types of Goals • Curriculum Integration • Professional Development • Administration • Community Involvement and other areas that are critically important to your vision

  10. Professional Development • Let’s talk about technology professional development as a specific area in your strategic technology plan. • How do you decide what professional development to offer? • Particularly now that your plan is in operation?

  11. A Framework for Review

  12. Types of PD Strategies • Immersion • Curriculum • Examining Practice • Collaborative Work • Vehicles and Mechanisms (page 4-24 of Planning into Practice)

  13. The basic idea is that different strategies are appropriate for addressing and developing different levels of teacher awareness • A = Developing Awareness • B= Building Knowledge • T = Translating into Practice • P = Practicing Teaching • R = Reflection • Because integrating technology is all about teaching and learning!

  14. The New Yorker, 2/22 and 3/1/99

  15. For Example... • Workshops, Institutes, Courses, etc. • B -- Building Knowledge (primary) • A -- Developing Awareness (secondary) • T -- Translating into Practice (secondary) • Curriculum Development and Adaptation • T -- Translating into Practice (primary) • B -- Building Knowledge (secondary) • Also see the ACOT research on stages of teacher awareness visa vis technology

  16. Assess Your Needs • In your strategic technology plan, you needed to assess needs and create the mechanisms for on-going assessment and review. • Use this knowledge to inform your choice of appropriate professional development strategies.

  17. What’s Your Current Strategy? • Workshops! • But what about those people who aren’t reached by workshops? • How do you know whether workshops are a sound strategy given your needs?

  18. Maximizing Workshops • Schedule dedicated staff development days and time • Pay stipends for anything that goes beyond scheduled days • Create your schedule way in advance • Use a combination of outside and in-house trainers • Use new faces to build upon known expertise • Assign follow-up tasks

  19. So, What Else Might Work? • Walk the Talk! • Workshops are like teacher-centered classrooms • Can you adopt a collaborative an constructivist approach to technology staff development?

  20. Learning Teams • Teachers team in collaborative groups with a common goal to develop technology integration skills • Fits “Study Groups” and “Coaching and Mentoring” strategies • Primary P and R strategies • Kansas and Beyond • http://lps.lexingtonma.org/Tech/Kansas

  21. Advantages... • Spreads the technical support burden • Professional development becomes authentic • Develops a learning community useful well beyond technology skills development • Disadvantages... • Huge time commitment • Homogenous vs. heterogeneous groups

  22. Other Benefits... • Study groups, Learning Teams, provide time to develop deep understanding of both technology and curriculum (reflection) • Ultimately encourages creation of cross-disciplinary and integrated curriculum units (practice teaching) • Although don’t be surprised if in the beginning, you spend less time on these higher order purposes and more time “mousing around.”

  23. Pilot Projects • Groups or individuals are chosen to develop technology-enriched projects • Fit into the Curriculum strategies on our chart • Primary P and T strategies • The Crucible Project • http://www.shawsheen.tec.ma.us:90/crucible/index-2.html

  24. Rewards for participation • They get the technology first • They receive dedicated professional development • “Costs” of participation -- accountability • They have to produce! • You require that they become trainers

  25. Remember... • Professional development activities should always produce concrete products! • Sample/Outlined lessons • Templates • Examples of actual student or teacher work • Distribute the products • Produce a guidebook or facilitators guide • Publish materials on the web

  26. Think about your range of strategies • Maximize your strategies...one approach doesn’t fit all needs • Workshops work best as “B” (building knowledge) strategies • Learning teams -- Practicing and Reflecting • Pilot projects -- Translating and Practicing

  27. Create rewards and responsibilities • Accountability is the key! • All staff development needs to... • Have anticipated follow up • Produce tangible products

  28. So Let’s Try One • Using the Professional Development Idea worksheets, and perhaps some of the ideas on pages 4-14 through 16, fully map out a PD idea for your school/district • Think about... • What awareness level you are addressing • How you will know that your strategy has had impact

  29. Evaluation • A good technology plan provides a logical framework for the evaluation of your technology implementation. • Goals show you what you are looking for • Progress towards fulfillment of goals and objectives can be measured • Activities can be recorded

  30. Summary • A strong educational technology plan is rooted in a strong vision for technology’s role in education • This role needs to be centered around the anticipated and desired student impacts • Training must be adapted to the various needs of your staff at different stages in their technology “development.” • One size will not fit all! • Understand the stages, and then pick the appropriate strategy

  31. Eventually, evaluation will become the emphasis of your district’s technology efforts. • Take the time to write a strong evaluation component for your plan • Evaluate -- review and reflect -- on a regular basis so that you can formatively assess your progress and fine tune your strategy

  32. For More Information • On-line resources (including this presentation) • www.sun-associates.com/resources/stuff.html • Email or Call • jsun@sun-associates.com • 978.449.0200

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