Features
SCHOOLCIO Professional Development: Blended is better
11/1/2010 By:
By Pam Derringer
No matter what the topic, Texas just
isn’t a one-size-fits-all state. And professional
development is no exception.
Especially now, when there’s a new
math initiative and many curriculum
changes that require retraining.
To meet the Texas-size challenge,
the state recently launched Project
Share, a portal offering teachers online
professional development, Web 2.0
connectivity, and enriched classroom
resources through links to repositories
like the New York Times (retroactive
to 1851) and the Texas Education
site at iTunesU. In addition, the state
conducted several curriculum-specific
academies that were attended by more
than 45,000 teachers for live classroom
training last summer.
“We have 400,000 educators in the
state, and we can’t reach all of them
face-to-face, so we’re offering training
in many formats,” says Anita Givens,
the Texas Education Agency’s associate
commissioner of standards and
programs. The goal, she says, is for
teachers to have the option of faceto-
face training with online follow-up
or vice versa; both the online and the
in-person professional-development
initiatives will be expanded. Ultimately,
teachers will be able to take complete
professional-development modules
through the portal.
Project Share and the summer
academies, Givens says, have in turn
sparked the spontaneous growth of
informal learning communities in which
instructors collaborate with others who
teach the same grade or subject and
encourage one another to try new
strategies in the classroom. The portal
(whose use is at the discretion of
each of the state’s 1,265 school districts)
will include best practices in
teaching and resource dashboards to
help knowledge drive instruction (for
example, video interviews with scientists
and simulated science experiments).
Eventually it may even be
used to deliver digital textbooks and/
or courses.
In the classroom, Givens says, the
Project Share portal will function as a
secure platform for educational discussions
offering all the Web 2.0 tools,
such as calendars, email, blogs, and
wiki forums for academic purposes,
and the state will provide training in
responsible use. The portal has already
offered teachers an extraordinary
chance to communicate: A Texas-trivia
question on the site sparked an “exponential”
flow of photos, references,
and charts statewide. The increase in
networking and collaboration will be
particularly helpful for rural teachers,
who often work in isolation. “It really
levels the playing field,” Givens says.
Mass district opts for it’s
learning portal
Meanwhile, public schools in
Wayland, Massachusetts, recently
launched an unprecedented yearlong
professional-development program
that will integrate technology into the
curriculum. The Wayland Rises professional-
development initiative includes
seven consultant-written modules,
approximately one for each month
and a half, says Leisha Simon, director
of technology and accountability.
Each topic will be introduced by a live
lecture after which there will be online
reading and video lessons and collaboration
with colleagues.
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Renton (Washington) Public Schools technology facilitator Reinhart Earhart leads a
professional development class.
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The online segment of the professional
development is accessed
through it’s learning, an out-of-the-box
portal–education platform with Web
2.0 communication tools that facilitate
collaboration and individualized
project learning. Wayland chose the
it’s learning platform to teach students
21st-century skills, like collaboration,
communication, and critical thinking,
but will introduce the platform to the
teachers first, through professional
development, and then to the students
the following academic year.
“The teachers are the students this
year,” Simon says.
Wayland’s staff is using the it’s
learning platform to become familiar
with the curriculum-specific technology resources it will incorporate
into instruction next year and to collaborate
with colleagues and develop
courses. In the process, Simon
explains, this year’s Wayland Rises
professional development is modeling
the student-centered, collaborative
learning style that Wayland will adopt
in the classroom next year. “This is
huge and new,” she says. “I don’t know
of any districts offering this kind of
intense, sustained professional development,
focused on technology, for
an entire year. Usually it’s a one-day
event.”
From the perspective of a CIO, she
says, the Wayland Rises program is a
great way to ensure that technology
tools are not just purchased and sitting
on the shelf but also actively used in
the classroom. In addition, using the it’s
learning portal “takes the headaches
away. It’s in the cloud. If there’s a problem,
I just call the company.”
Videos a great
supplement
On the opposite coast, the
14,000-student Renton School District
in Washington State uses a combination
of face-to-face, blended, and
online professional development to
train its teachers. The 1,000-teacher
district has three full-time trainers
who lead large group sessions on
major professional-development initiatives,
according to Brooke Trisler,
director of instructional technology.
After the sessions, the trainers double back and work with teachers one-onone
to make sure they understand
the material and integrate it into their
lesson plans.
Some teachers, however, have afterschool
commitments and aren’t always
available for individual follow-up sessions
at the end of the day, so a year
ago Renton added another avenue,
online videos, with extra pay as incentive
to use them. Using local tech levy
funds, Renton bought a three-year subscription
to Atomic Learning’s library
of 50,000 training videos, which can
be viewed remotely and which cover a
broad range of topics from basics, such
as Excel, Windows 7, and Outlook, to
social media and more technical subjects,
like Photoshop. The videos have
been a “huge success,” Trisler says; to
date the staff has watched 45,000 of
them. “They’re top-notch. The teachers
love them.” And they offer another
enrichment opportunity for those who
cannot stay for follow-up training.
For the past five years Renton
has also been using SharePoint as
an informal professional-learning network.
Participation has varied, Trisler
says, with some teachers enthusiastic
and others resistant, but many have
been using it to post lesson plans,
supplemental materials, hyperlinks,
and images, whatever might be helpful
to others. Renton will soon upgrade
to Microsoft SharePoint 2010, which
will be much better, as it has a more
user-friendly interface and can interact
with the public and with teachers
from other districts. Smaller districts
have used Facebook to share materials,
but Renton is too large to monitor
the network’s use in school and is concerned
about Facebook’s commercial
solicitation of students. “I’d love to
see a robust free social-networking
site for public education,” Trisler says.
“Some have tried, but the sites haven’t
taken off.”
[PD options]
Argosy University
http://online.argosy.edu
Atomic Learning
www.atomiclearning.com
Blackboard
www.blackboard.com
Blossom Learning
www.blossomlearning.com
Custom Guide
www.customguide.com
Drexel University
www.drexel.com
Full Sail University
www.fullsail.edu/online
Knowledge Delivery
Systems
www.kdsi.org
LearnKey
www.learnkey.com
Lynda Online Training
Lynda.com
Northcentral University
www.ncu.edu
Nova Southeastern
University
www.nova.edu
PBS Teacherline
www.pbs.org/teacherline
PD 360
www.schoolimprovement.com
Pearson
www.mypearsontraining.com
Renaissance Learning
www.renlearn.com
Solution Tree
www.solution-tree.com
University of Maryland
University College
www.umuc.edu
University of Pennsylvania
Graduate School of
Education
www.gse.upenn.edu
Walden University Online
www.waldenulearning.com