News and Trends
Data Goes Global
1/4/2011 By:
On the afternoon of November 17,
Tech & Learning attended the Global
Learning Resource Connection
Workshop in Houston, where managing
editor Christine Weiser sat down
to talk with many of these panelists
to discuss their thoughts on the
National Educational Technology
Plan, Common Core Standards, Web
3.0, the need for open systems, and
much more. Below are highlights from
these interviews (see the complete
video interviews on www.techlearning.com/Video):
Rob Abel, CEO, IMS Global
Learning Consortium
The reality of education is the world
is a diverse place and we’re all global
citizens. We can make the U.S. system
better by understanding that up front
and improve aspects of our system.
We are in the relatively early stages of
understanding how learning occurs,
the best way to do learning, and how
tech can support that learning. We’ve
had a lot of tech come in from outside
of education that has sometimes
helped and sometimes not helped. My
sense is the suppliers are really getting
it now—that they need to make
the lives of educators easier with tech in terms of how they want education
to occur. In particular, in the U.S., with
all the investment being made by
DOE , this is a very exciting time. Even
if your district doesn’t feel particularly resourced and you are struggling to
do what you need to do, I really do
think these investments that are coming
will help you, because eventually
this technology will not only help you
do your job but it will be more accessible
and easier to acquire.
John Wilson, Executive
Director, National Education
Association
[The NEA ] will work at the local and
state level to make sure teachers are
aware of the new national technology
plan, that policies are aligned with this plan, and that teachers will
utilize the recommendations of the
plan at the classroom level. We’ll
do a lot of stirring around imagination
and innovation to show teachers
some of the possibilities of the
future. At our national conference
this year, [we’re saying to] those
companies that exhibit, “don’t just
set up a booth. Come and teach the
participants about how your product
can help them in the classroom.” It’s
a great time to reclaim our role as
being innovators of the world.
Steve Midgley, Deputy Director,
US Department of Education
We know social media creates communities
of practices. It can improve
professional networking, break down
barriers, and broaden the educator’s expanse of work.
We think the new
Learning Registry
collaborative project
will be a start.
Federal, state, and
local governments
have been asking,
how do we make
resources for learning
more accessible? The Learning
Registry brings together resources
such as the National Archives, The
Smithsonian, the Department of
Education, the Library of Congress,
and uses these as a tech approach to
enable a social network for metadata.
Diny Golder, Executive
Director, Jes & Co.
By adopting more open standards,
K-12 schools can blend into the higher
education eportfolio scenario. With
an eportfolio, students can travel
across districts or states and bring
with them all of the accomplishments
and competencies they’ve met so far,
so the new teacher doesn’t have to
rely upon this new student sitting in
a corner and taking a lot of tests to
determine where to place that student.
Just like with our mobile medical
data, that teacher can electronically
know for sure where this new
student will fit into her classroom and
their studies.