leadership conference 2011

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Media and Techn0logy Update August 3-4, 2011

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Page 1: Leadership conference 2011

Media and Techn0logy Update

August 3-4, 2011

Page 3: Leadership conference 2011

Source: Pew Internet & American Life Project: The Online Mom

68% of children under two will use a screen media on average 2 hours per day.

Digital Learners

Today’s average college grads have spent less than5,000 hours of their lives reading, but over 10,000 hours playing

video games (not to mention 20,000 hours watching TV).

“Whenever I go to school, I have to power down.”

High School Student

“Compared with students' technology-infused lives outside of school, the traditional classroom is a somber place.”

Page 4: Leadership conference 2011

Digital Learners

“We hear teachers complain so often about the Digital Natives’ attention spans that the phrase ‘the attention span of a gnat’ has become a cliché. But is it really true?

‘Sure they have short attention spans—for the old ways of learning,’ says a professor. Their attention spans are not short for games, for example, or for anything else that actually interests them. As a result of their experiences Digital Natives crave interactivity—an immediate response to their each and every action. Traditional schooling provides very little of this compared to the rest of their world (one study showed that students in class get to ask a question every 10 hours). So it generally isn’t that Digital Natives can’t pay attention, it’s that they choose not to.”

From Marc Prensky: Digital Natives, Digital Immigrants, Part II

Page 5: Leadership conference 2011

A Few Thoughts… “Class size matters only if the teacher does everything” –Marc

Prensky

“If we believe all children can learn, but they are not learning the way WE teach, then we must teach the way THEY learn!” –Jennifer Byrd

Is it our jobs as educators to make learning meaningful to US or meaningful to our STUDENTS?

“Which world are we preparing our students for – the one that is most convenient to us or the one that is right for the kids?” -Lisa Nielsen

Are we asking our students what is important to THEM?

Page 6: Leadership conference 2011

A Few Thoughts… “The digital divide, once seen as a factor of wealth, is

now seen as a factor of education...”

“Digital literacy is less about tools and more about thinking.”

“Increasingly, technology skills are also critical to success in almost every arena…”

“It has become clear that one-size-fits-all teaching methods are neither effective nor acceptable for today’s diverse students.”

*From the NMC Horizon Report 2011 K-12 Edition

Page 7: Leadership conference 2011

How to “Turn on the Lights” Give students the opportunity to use technology in

school.

Find out how students want to be taught.

Connect students to the world.

Understand where kids are going – the future – and help them get there.

From Marc Prensky: Turning on the Lights, 2008

“29 of my students have computers at home, but one doesn’t. So I don’t assign computer homework, because it wouldn’t be fair to that student.”

What about the other 29 students? Do we deprive 29 to be fair to one? Or do we find another solution for the one?

Page 8: Leadership conference 2011

Personal Access to Mobile Devices

Personal Access to Mobile Devices

Device K-2 Gr. 3-5 Gr. 6-8 Gr. 9-12

Cell Phone (without internet access) 21% 29% 51% 56%

Smart Phone 16% 19% 34% 44%

Laptop 37% 42% 60% 67%

MP3 37% 55% 79% 85%

Tablet Device (iPad) 10% 8% 13% 10%

*From the Project Tomorrow “Speak Up!” Survey – April, 2011

Page 9: Leadership conference 2011

*From the Project Tomorrow “Speak Up!” Survey – April, 2011

Page 10: Leadership conference 2011

K-12 Technology Trends

Migration to the Cloud

“BYOD”

Page 11: Leadership conference 2011

HCS Technology Initiatives Migration to Google Apps for Education

Isolated 1:1 Deployments

Building-Level 1:1 Deployment

“BYOD” Initiative

Page 12: Leadership conference 2011

Google Apps for Education