Features
SCHOOL CIO: Follow the Leader
5/1/2011 By:
By Ellen Ullman
Two years ago, Eric Sheninger was no
fan of social media. “Like most principals,
I felt that YouTube, Facebook,
and Twitter had no place in education
and were a distraction from learning,”
says the principal of New Jersey’s New
Milford High School. Then Sheninger
read an article about Twitter and learned
that it let people send free messages to
anyone. “I thought, What a great way
to get information to my stakeholders!”
He began tweeting about student
achievements, meeting times, schedule
changes, and athletic events and found
a vibrant community of educators in the
Twittersphere. “As I watched my colleagues,
I had an epiphany: Why was I
restricting the use of these wonderful
tools and depriving my students of an
education that would prepare them for
the world?”
Eventually, Sheninger dedicated one
Twitter account to high school and
created another for professional learning.
Soon the National Association of
Secondary School Principals came calling.
“They’d noticed my professionallearning
tweets. I had 8,000 followers;
they had 1,000.” The NASSP is now
collaborating with Sheninger to show
other school leaders how social media
and Web 2.0 tools can be integrated
into schools and how principals can use
them to promote their schools, enhance
communication, engage students, and
explore opportunities.
Sea Change
In the past few years, national and state
school administrator associations have
stepped up to help their members, especially
superintendents, understand and
expand the role of technology in district
operations. They have assumed this
responsibility in many ways, from sponsoring
tech-focused seminars to offering
online professional development.
“We’re engaged in helping our members
take full advantage of technology on
a number of levels,” says Dan Domenech,
executive director of the American
Association of School Administrators.
“First and foremost we focus on how
technology can be an effective tool to
supplement instruction.” AASA’s summer
2009 leadership conference was
dedicated to technology. Recently the
organization asked Alan November to
lead a series of technology events.

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With the encouragement of the Minnesota Association
of School Administrators, the state’s superintendents
meet regionally to discuss ways to significantly change
the way learning is delivered to students, including
promoting online learning and converting textbook
budgets into large-scale purchases of iPads.
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“We do more than just propose the
belief,” Domenech says. “We’re engaged
in a full-scale professional-development
strategy for our members and are supportive
of technology as a communication,
public relations, publishing, and
marketing tool.” AASA uses Twitter,
blogs, and Facebook and is helping
members figure out how to handle
cyberbullying and sexting without shutting
the door on technology’s benefits.
In a practice-what-you-preach move,
AASA held a Webinar for the governing
board in March 2011 during which the
board reviewed the budget and voted
on it electronically. “When we begin to
model some of these things, others try
them as well,” says C.J. Reid, associate
executive director of governance, membership,
and affiliate services. This fall
AASA will hold its executive committee
meeting electronically. The meeting will
be recorded and posted online for anyone
who misses it, and Reid estimates a
savings of at least $25,000 by doing this.
Tech Focus Pays Off
Reid has noticed a large number of
AASA’s 49 state affiliates tweeting
about meetings with governors and
posting updates on Facebook. “Most
of our organizations are advocacy oriented,”
he says. “If you can let members
know in real time what you’re
doing for them, it enhances the value
and reminds them of why they want to
belong [to an association]. Technology
allows us to do that in a way that
wasn’t possible before.”
Social-networking tools have allowed
Sheninger to connect with companies
and educators. He’s working with the
NASSP and the New Jersey Principals
and Supervisors Association to educate
administrators about using Web 2.0
tools effectively. “We’re dealing with the
preconceived notions about Facebook,
YouTube, and the rest and helping them
figure out how to find a balance,” he says.
Organizations like NASSP and NJPS A
understand the ways social media can
help administrators network, Sheninger
says. Through these groups he connects
with other principals, with whom he has
engaging online discussions. On a jog at
a conference earlier this year, he and a
principal from Ohio decided to hold a
joint student-government meeting over
Skype.
Educating the Masses
Since the late 1990s, the Wisconsin
Association of School District Administrators
has held workshops on
computer instruction for its members.
It also started the School Leaders
Advancing Leading Technology in
Education (SL ATE ) conference,
which had more than 800 attendees
last year.

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Sheninger (in green) collaborates with other
administrators at the 2011 Google Academy for
Administrators in San Antonio, Texas.
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“We’ve believed for a long
time that operations and technology
are the keys to making public
schools more efficient and effective,”
says Miles Turner, executive
director. Seven years ago, Turner’s
office went paper-free. Everything,
including registration, newsletters,
e-blasts, information, and video
blasts, is on the Web site, which
also has an archive of hundreds of
professional-development videos.
WASD A’s members appreciate the
focus on technology, Turner says. “Our
members would say we’ve pushed them
to learn about technology,” he adds. “I
know I need to have the latest products
at my fingertips so I can demonstrate
that we believe in it. I just did a presentation
to 40 superintendents in northern
Wisconsin using my iPad 2.”
The National Association of Secondary
School Principals, the group that
works with Sheninger, has featured a
strand dedicated to technology leadership
at its last three annual conferences.
The association has also invited principals
and others to present on all the major
tech topics. “When I launched the strand,
in 2007 or 2008, we did not have a
huge response,” says Bob Farrace, senior
director of communications and development.
“But at our national conference
this February, the room was full for a lot
of those sessions. There is an appetite for
learning about social media, instructional
technology, and how principals can use it
for their own work.”
NASSP has a fairly strong socialmedia
presence; the number of followers
of its Twitter account doubled,
to 2,500, over the past year. The association
is converting its resources to
an online platform on which members
can take courses virtually and network.
“We have robust online communities,”
says Farrace, who has watched
these groups grow since their debut,
in 2002. “We just passed 1,000 members
for our school-leadership network
and have smaller communities
dedicated to teacher evaluation and
other topics on edWeb.net.”
NASSP has to encourage principals
to make networking and outreach a priority,
Farrace says. “They are discovering
that it’s not ‘one more thing to do,’” he
continues, “and once they see what’s out
there, they are hooked. Today we have
principals who use Twitter as a primary
means of professional development,
sharing resources, and connecting.”
NASSP is developing courses that
will help educators learn how to begin
integrating mobile and social technology
at their schools. “We see the
potential for what technology can
do,” Farrace says, “and we want our
folks to be a part of it and embrace
it with an eye to improving learning.”
Improving
Communication
Charlie Kyte, executive director
of the Minnesota Association of
School Administrators, has also
pushed to increase technology use
in his state. A few years back he
began doing audio podcasts, then
upped the ante to video podcasts.
Every week or two, Kyte creates a legislative
report or an on-the-road blog
and records it to video and audio. His
staff emails it, with a video attachment,
to MASA members, education lobbyists,
the governor, legislators, and the
media. Because of Kyte, a number of
Minnesota superintendents are generating
video and audio blogs regularly,
and Kyte recently decided to hold
an online course on how to produce
video and audio blogs. As soon as he
announced it, 20 people signed up.
Like Kyte, Sheninger believes we
need to help people appreciate technology’s
value. “I thought that simply
having the technology meant I was tech
savvy, but I’ve learned that if I want my
staff to embrace technology, see its
value, and be inspired, I have to be modeling
it, and on the front line,” he says.
How do we get more administrators
to want to create these kinds of environments?
The first step, Sheninger says, is
to give up control and change the way
you communicate. “The role of state
organizations is to provide more relevant
professional development from practitioners.
That’s the most powerful way to
initiate change. I’ve learned from people
using the tools, in the trenches, and now
people are learning from me. The best
way to learn is from our colleagues.”
Back-office business: How Schools GET IT DONE
A Texas High School “Goes HD”
Challenge: A high school in
Texas wanted to expand its videoproduction
courses to include high
definition.
Solution: By purchasing four
GY -HM790U ProHD camcorders
from JVC Professional Products
Company, the career and technical
education department at
Belton (Texas) High School was
able to significantly improve its production department.
Already the student production group, Tiger
Productions, is using camcorders to record football
games, elementary-school performances, and a few
commercial productions.
High-End Projectors Head to Cambridge,
Mass.
Challenge: The innovative Cambridge
Rindge and Latin School recently decided
to upgrade its presentation facilities with
video projectors.
Solution: The school purchased 90 Hitachi CP-DW10N 3LCD projectors,
and every classroom received one. One of the projectors’ most useful features,
according to a technician at CRLS, is the audio pass-through function, which
lets you listen to audio through external speakers.
Turning Walls into Interactive Learning
Spaces
Challenge: Schools want to transform walls,
whiteboards, and tables into interactive learning
areas.
Solution: The Epson BrightLink
455Wi interactive projector offers
advanced connectivity options for
projecting onto a whiteboard, wall,
or table or another smooth, light-colored,
hard surface.
Let’s Go Digital
Challenge: For the past five years,
Santa Rosa County School District in
Milton, Florida, has worked to integrate
digital content into the curriculum
more fully.
Solution: The district expanded its
relationship with Discovery Education,
taking advantage of the company’s
curriculum-alignment services. In the
next four years, Discovery Education
will embed digital content from
streaming Plus and its science modules
into curriculum guides for math,
science, English-language arts, and
the Common Core State Standards.
Teachers will receive professional
development and be able to launch
digital content aligned to state standards
just by clicking.
Engaging Interest
with Engage
Challenge: Teachers at Belle Haven
Elementary School in Menlo Park,
California, wanted to reach more students
through technology without paying
a bundle or losing instruction time.
Solution: Luidia, Inc.’s interactive
multimedia system, eBeam Engage, fit
the bill. A second-grade teacher calls it
convenient, saying he spends less time
fumbling with technology and reaches
his students more easily. Educators
also appreciate that eBeam Engage
can be used on any existing surface.