SETDA issues broad action plan for U.S. schools, including specific recommendations for local, state, and federal decision makers
Primary Topic Channel: Tech Leadership
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Urging policy makers and school leaders "to take bold steps ... to improve education for America's 21st-century leaders," the State Educational Technology Directors Association (SETDA) has issued new guidance for reforming the nation's schools with the help of technology.
Hoping to reach the attention of a new administration and Congress, SETDA's "Class of 2020: Action Plan for Education" notes that every child entering kindergarten this year deserves a high-quality, 21st-century education. The plan includes several white papers, a Student Bill of Rights, and a set of 10 recommendations to improve teaching and learning using technology.
"There is a crisis in American education today, as evidenced in falling graduation rates, entrants unprepared to enter college and the workforce, fewer people seeking science and math degrees, costly teacher turnover, and poor retention rates," said Mary Ann Wolf, SETDA's executive director. "Our students deserve better. We know how the proper uses of technology in education can transform teaching and learning to improve student engagement and achievement."
The report cites several statistics to press home the need for swift action. For example, according to SETDA, the high school graduation rate is just barely over 70 percent, and fewer than 50 percent of graduates are prepared for the workforce or college. Among all U.S. industries, education ranks dead last in the use of technology.
Also, by 2010, more than 90 percent of all scientists will be living in Asia, and the United States ranks 20th in the world for graduate degrees in science, technology, engineering, and mathematics (STEM) fields.
With input from more than 100 national policy makers and all 50 state educational technology offices, SETDA's action plan sets forth the following 10 recommendations for national, state, and local education leaders:
1. Ensure that technology tools and resources are used continuously and seamlessly for instruction, collaboration, and assessment.
2. Expose all students (pre-K through 12th grade) to STEM fields and careers.
3. Make ongoing, sustainable professional development available to all teachers.
4. Use virtual learning opportunities for teachers to further their professional development, such as through online communities and education portals.
5. Incorporate innovative, consistent, and timely assessments into daily instruction.
6. Strengthen the home-school connection by using technology to communicate with parents on student progress.
7. Provide the necessary resources so that every community has the infrastructure to support learning with technology, including assessments and virtual learning.
8. Obtain societal support for education that uses technology from all stakeholders--students, parents, teachers, state and district administrators, business leaders, legislators, and local community members.
9. Provide federal leadership to support states and districts regarding technology's role in school reform by passing the ATTAIN Act.
10. Increase available funding for the e-Rate so that schools can acquire telecommunication services, internet access, internal connections, and maintenance of those connections.
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Teachers aren't going away
I find the comments regarding the end of the teacher as absurd. Most schools have done such a miserable job incorporating technology effectively, that it's ludicrous to think that technology will replace the teacher. I am not a ludite and I believe that technology will continue to play an ever-important role in education, but the teacher will be more important than ever, in an ongoing evolutionary role. With that said, a major change has to take place in the teaching profession. Generations ago, educators were faced with a choice of professionalism (as in law and medicine) or in unionism. Teachers have been so concerned about job protection, that they have forgotten about the benefits of professionalism. Had education chosen professionalism, teachers would have had higher salaries today, they would have social respect (instead of an occasional jar of marmalade), and they would have had job security, based on performance (what a concept!). Unions in education have to go away and that one thing will sustain the teacher in the classroom, right along with technology. The use of technology has to change and technology must not be defined by the lastest and greatest widget. Teachers have to begin using the tools that are used in the "real world" disciplines that they are teaching. If they teach science, they must use probeware. If they teach music, they must use midi. Each discipline has its own tools and those are the essentials. Too much educational expense is driven by the cool factor and it is no wonder that technology is not driving improved student performance. And if you think it is, I challenge you to prove it. David A. Paulson Deephaven, MN
Posted By: davidapaulson, 2008-11-24 12:39 PM
computers aren't teachers
I used to think teachers were a disappearing group of professionals. Then I had my own children, and realized what a hassle it was to arrange babysitters while I was at work. I realized then that teachers also do serve as our unofficial babysitters. We can not take our children to be at work with us, and they must be under the care of a human being. Unions are losing their power, and cannot and will not protect teachers who have not met job expectations for a period of time. Believe me, as a teacher's "union" building rep, I have seen how corporations are the models for our schools, and the treatment of many teachers is heinous--as it is with many corporate employees. And further, on the topic of technology, teachers need to be encouraged to use it, and given ample time to learn to teach with it. More and more we need to become faciliators of learning. But children need the human interaction, and our society needs real humans in the classroom.
Posted By: helguy, 2008-11-19 5:55 AM
technology is the king
Sorry dlake If you still talk about teachers in five years from now, you never solce the education problem in the world. In five years from now, there will not be any teachers left . There will be facilitators to help design of online courses. ONLINE courses will adapt themselves according to the habits of the students. Course itself will adapt itself. Sure there is no more teachers union
Posted By: mgozaydin, 2008-11-18 2:19 PM
Can I add #11 and 12?
Homework help! And, homework help! The Internet levels the playing field for students. Homework is required for success (math is my subject, and many teachers have given up on getting homework submitted because students don't have the support they need at home, so the give up). There are many, many wonderful homework help websites where students can be directed, such as textbook publisher websites or Hotmath.com. I think Obama should end every speech he makes with, "and be sure to help your kidss with their homework tonight."
Posted By: evtogo, 2008-11-18 12:50 PM
The Classroom, The Teacher, and The Learner
The report brings up many important topics. But it doesn't give a concrete solution or step to take NOW. I would like to suggest the following actions to move the ideas into action: 1. Ask EVERY teacher to define his/her classroom Virtual Learning Environment NOW; 2. Ask EVERY teacher to define what that environment should be FIVE YEARS FROM NOW; and 3. Ask EVERY teacher how he/she will LEARN the tools and processes necessary to reach that environment by that time. Some of us remember Apple Computer's "Knowledge Navigator" movie clip, which was a concrete vision to help us understand a context for the future. We need such a clip updated now: Include Smart Boards, include the new Smart Desks, have them hooked to an online Virtual Learning Environment with the teacher and students interacting locally and Globally outside the physical environment. Build this to be a realistic vision for 2013. Distribute it widely. THEN discuss the topics in this article. THEN discuss the 21st Century Classroom when EVERY TEACHER has been challenged to understand it, envision it, and prepare for it. Maybe ask Edutopia Foundation folks to make this clip? Thanks. Dan
Posted By: dlake, 2008-11-18 12:19 PM
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Technology Needs to be a CORE subject for Kids
We need a National Mandate to provide children with the learning they need for the future. Expose all students (pre-K through 12th grade) to STEM fields and careers.. does not mean that children will LEARN any particular STEM skills, only that they will be exposed to their existence. One can Expose kids to a basketball game on TV but it does not mean they can participate in the sport. They need to practice and this takes many hours per week and many years to become a skilled professional. a Federal Mandate that Science, Technology, Engineering and Math are ALL required CORE subjects and that skills are articulated K-12 will actually require that this is taught in our schools. The National Math Advisory Panel just published a 120 page final report..on page 31 it says that "close to half of 17 year olds lack the reading and math skills to get a job at a modern automobile plant." Many of the core math concepts are reinforced in Computer Science where kids learn WHY the math concept is important and connected to the world around them. When they write a program they learn how to apply math concepts to create something instead of just doing a worksheet. Engineering can help kids apply science concepts to create working models and to develop their potential. In business you look at what your competition is doing.. India and China are preparing tens of millions of engineers, scientists and programmers who speak english and start learning computer science in elementary. In the US, we are preparing kids for 21st century jobs at McDonalds or WalMart.
Posted By: vicjaras, 2008-11-24 2:13 PM