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PROFESSIONAL DEVELOPMENT IN ICT FOR SCHOOL LEADERS

PROFESSIONAL DEVELOPMENT IN ICT FOR SCHOOL LEADERS. Ken Walsh Associate Director Specialist Schools Trust. IcT’S ABOUT LEARNING NCSL Practitioner Enquiry, K Walsh 2002. Integrating ICT into a school involves a paradigm shift

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PROFESSIONAL DEVELOPMENT IN ICT FOR SCHOOL LEADERS

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  1. PROFESSIONAL DEVELOPMENT IN ICT FOR SCHOOL LEADERS Ken Walsh Associate Director Specialist Schools Trust

  2. IcT’S ABOUT LEARNINGNCSL Practitioner Enquiry, K Walsh 2002 • Integrating ICT into a school involves a paradigm shift • Integrating ICT implies an embedding in the school’s structures and the organisation of learning • ICT concerns puts the learning agenda firmly into the hands of the student

  3. “Technology is available to develop either independence and learning or bureaucracy and teaching” (Illich, Deschooling Society,1973) • Teacher students relationships cannot be the same again • Integrating ICT makes the headteacher the lead learner

  4. LESSONS FOR HEADS • “I think we need heads who are fascinated by ICT, who have some skills, but it is more important that the head knows what constitutes good teaching and learning” (Mike Woods, Cornwallis School, Maidenhead) Heads need to keep up to date, but… • “The real issue is the degree to which, after acquisition, ICT enhances learning and makes a difference to learning styles” (Tom Clark, George Spencer School, Nottingham) • “The Principal’s role is paramount. Everyone knows that I am totally committed to it. When we started in 1995 we tool an enormous risk, as a government school, going down this path (of asking parents to fund laptops).”(Ken Rowe, Frankston High School, Melbourne)

  5. WHAT IS DIFFERENT ABOUT LEADING ICT DEVELOPMENTS? “The head cannot, as a rule, do the work of the teachers any more than the conductor of an orchestra can play the tuba. In turn, the teacher is dependent on the head to give direction and, above all, to define what the ‘score’ is for the entire organisation” Peter Drucker; Management Challenges for the 21st Century

  6. DEVELOPING INDEPENDENT AND INTERDEPENDENT LEARNERS • The teacher’s role is one of learning designer and facilitator, a teacher of the essential skills needed by students to access, analyse and synthesise information in the search for knowledge and understanding. • The Head’s role is to enable teachers to develop the necessary skills to become learning facilitators and to back up the work of teachers with suitable resources, management and systems support structures.

  7. WHAT IS DIFFERENT ABOUT LEADING AND MANAGING ICT? Look at three areas: • People • Process • Resources

  8. THE KEY PERSONNEL ISSUE “Personnel redesign for organisational and classroom efficiency requires insightful leadership, skilful position analysis, reorganisation and training” (Bywaters and Watts, 2001)

  9. WHO LEADS AND WHO MANAGES? • The workforce re-modelling agenda • The leadership of adults other than teachers • Technical and learning support overlap

  10. CHANGING LEADERSHIP AND MANAGEMENT STRUCTURES • Learning-centered and transformational • Wider and flatter leadership teams • Leading from the middle • No IT departments: “The first thing I tell people about ICT is to get the nerds and the laboratories out of the system and hand the teaching and learning over to the educators” (Ken Rowe, Frankston High School, Melbourne)

  11. PROCESS “Developments such as the focus on Strategic Leadership in ICT have helped considerably, but the importance of supporting changes from the school level up, as well as from the centre, is vital if hearts, minds and behaviours are to change as radically as is required in these action areas.” (DfES e-Learning Think-TankDec.2003, E-Learning Foundation)

  12. RESPONSIBILITY FOR E-LEARNING “In some schools much of the ICT investment has been focussed on technology and resources, and there has yet been little development of teaching and learning, and new pedagogy. Provision of content and tools alone will not bridge the gap, and the amount of staff development and cultural shift remaining to be undertaken should not be underestimated.” (DfES Think Tank, Dec. 2003)

  13. TRAINING AND RE-TRAINING • Training on demand in school • Accreditation? • ECDL, Intel • Cisco • SST CPD Centres • Training teams

  14. PERSONALISATION “Transfer of responsibility down to learners, to schools, and other organisations is a vital part of developing a sustainable framework for e-learning, and a withdrawal of dependency culture.” (DfES Think Tank, Dec.2003)

  15. THE “E-CONFIDENT” SCHOOL 10 key features • High levels of staff confidence, competence and leadership • Re-engineered teaching, learning and assessment, integrating effective use • Leading and managing distributed and concurrent learning • Effective application within organisational and management processes

  16. THE “E-CONFIDENT” SCHOOL • Secure, informed professional judgement • Appropriate resource allocation to ensure sustainable development • Coherent personal learning development, support and access – for all leaders, teaching and non-teaching staff • Availability, access and technical support • Pupils/students with high ICT capability • School as the lead community learning and information hub

  17. CONFIDENCE TO TAKE RISKS The genie is out of the bottle. There is no turning back. • “This is not just a change from inputs (teaching) to outputs (learning). Rather it is a paradigm shift in the conceptualization of the school, where everyone is a learner and even the organization is allowed to make mistakes and be a learner” (David Loader, Principal, Wesley College, Melbourne in “The Inner Principal”, 1997

  18. RESOURCES - COLLABORATION “In the current situation there are a handful of schools racing ahead with a very long tail behind them. Collaboration with other schools, with other players in the local community and with industry is vital if we are to accelerate the process and avoid the huge levels of duplicationinherent in the way schools work.” (DfES E-Learning Think Tank, Dec. 2003)

  19. “It is known that knowledge transfer is best carried out not by an outstanding expert but by the person who has recently implemented the new practice and is therefore familiar with the obstacles to transfer, the “stickiness” that must be overcome through adaptation and learning during the transfer process… … By engaging peer-to peer self-organizing systems, the support mechanisms can be changed dramatically.” (David Hargreaves, Education Epidemic: Transforming secondary schools through innovation networks, Demos 2003)

  20. NATIONAL ICT REGISTERwww.ict-register.netLAUNCHING OCTOBER 2004Ken Walsh kenw@specialistschoolstrust.org.uk By Schools, For Schools

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