News and Trends
Teachers Teaching Teachers
2/1/2011 By:
By Sascha Zuger
When Jana Hambruch of Lee County
School District in Fort Myers, Florida,
learned that despite the district’s
having secured state grant funds
to cover teacher certifications, no
funds would be available to cover
travel costs, the industry-certifications
coordinator realized that Lee
County SD had a logistical and financial
nightmare on its hands.
Fortunately, Hambruch’s previous
job had involved running an industrycertification
technical training program.
Keeping IT Local
Hambruch felt strongly that success
relied on the program’s being
overseen by someone who could handpick suitable instructors, provide
a set curriculum with online
resources, and devise a practice
exam to act as a solid measurement
for the teachers.

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Jana Hambruch
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When Hambruch paired highly
knowledgeable instructors and their
newer counterparts so they could
help each other during the courses,
she found “confirmation of how
this could work in the classroom.”
Staying within the district changed
the whole platform to true collaboration,
permitting shared lesson plans,
brainstorming of the
best grading methods,
and determining
which projects were
most successful and
engaging. “We have
13 high schools and
two tech centers, and
every school has its
own environment, so
they don’t normally see each other.
This is a great opportunity for them
to unite and share resources.”
The community soon took notice
of this wealth of skill and talent.
“Local businesses began to call the
schools, asking, ‘Can you guys create
something?’” Hambruch says.
Sometimes standout students are
paid by the hour to design Web sites
or create digital brochures. Some
communities, impressed by the students,
devised mentoring programs.
“They have a solid skill set with
specific certifications and knowledge
behind them,” Hambruch says.
How It Makes Cents
Not only do students earn cost-free
industry certifications in programs like
Adobe and Microsoft, but Florida’s
Department of Education recognized
that industry certification can be equal
to IB programs and AP courses.
Students can earn college credits
in their senior year, and with Adobe
products as a platform (and a proactive
Hambruch ensuring that teachers
are already being trained for the
2011 upgrade to CS 5 certifications), a
district-wide contest offers the opportunity
for every high
school student to
be noticed for what
they are creating
while competing for a
variety of prizes and
scholarship dollars.
Hambruch has
kept costs far below
those of all other
grant-funded training courses while
recognizing that teachers’ time is
of value, by offering a $15-per-hour
stipend for time spent pursuing certifications
(in addition to points earned
for service that count toward professional
development).
To this end, great interest and
increased enrollment in the program
(69 percent in the first year) has
earned many Lee County schools Cape
Academy status, which not only nets
them a stipend amounting to an additional
$1,200 per student but also brings
schools that may previously have been
rated D schools up to the A level.