Archive for the 'Uncategorized' Category

Nov 16 2008

Online Learning #2

Is online learning worthwhile? Why? Why not?

Since teaching is my third career, I’m a rather a newbie at this. The first time I had heard the phrase ‘life-long learner’ in context  was six years ago. It sound so bright and exciting and I could understand the lack of enthusiasm on the part of my colleagues who had been teachers for a while.

It wasn’t long until I realized that every district or school mission statement I came across contained that phrase. For my colleagues it had become a cliche. Worse, it was an empty cliche – No one ever explored or discussed what this meant and how it would be facilitated.

One of the paths that can be provided for people to be life-long learners is through online learning: Joining classes on the World Wide Web.

There are several places a prospective online learner can go to read enumerations and discussions of the pros and cons of online learning including:

http://www.edu-center.org/distance-learning-pros-cons.htm

http://www.learn-source.com/schools/pro_con_online.html

http://www.elearners.com/resources/elearning-faq5.asp

If you are out of school-either high school or college-online learning should be an option in continuing your own personal growtth and development.

One response so far

Jul 20 2008

Technology or Technology

Published by Skip Zalneraitis under Uncategorized

Just when you least expect it, smile….

We’re on Summer Vacation in the USA, but I work most of the year to stay up with my responsibilities as a teacher at Hinsdale High School in Hinsdale, New Hampshire. I just completed planning two new courses from top-to-bottom: Conflict Resolution and Non-Violent Communication, and The Rhetoric of Science Fiction. My wife, Jan, the school nurse, almost always comes over to school with me: not only to offer sage advice, but to copy, edit, proofread, etc. I received a couple of e-mails from our Assistant Principal the day before, “needing to talk about something” so that was another reason to go to the office this fine Thursday morning. Jan and I chatted as we walked from the parking lot.

“Now, that you have your new courses planned and repreps done for your standing courses, you’re going to get a job offer”, she said, almost laughing out loud. Since earning an MS Ed in Integrating Technology in the Classroom, I had been looking for a job as either a teacher or integrator, especially along the coast in Maine or New Hampshire. She was referring to this effort.

I was invited, first, by the Assistant Superintendent, to sit down in the Assistant Principal’s office. “**** has accepted a new job at ****, so we know longer have a Comprehensive Educational Technology (CET) teacher. Would you be interested in the position, if you could qualify for it?” I would be minimizing my surprise by saying, I asked myself if I was on Candid Camera. This was such an ‘outside the box’ solution to this staffing dilemma, I was amazed.

For those of you who don’t know, CET is the 21st century progeny of Industrial Arts. The administrators in the district/building felt my training and abilities were being underutilized as a face-to-face English teacher, and they believe this job would allow everyone to benefit. “Qualify?”

The State of New Hampshire has various Alternatives, I to V, to qualify to be an educator in the state. We will submit my portfolio, if no qualified teacher answers the district’s ad for the position, to see if I could qualify under Alt IV, a pathway allowed because there is a ‘critical shortage’ of qualified candidates. The job was posted in the Saturday newspapers and online. So, now we wait. Well, not just wait.

In the meantime, the Administrators and the Superintendent were going to sit down to firm up a focus in the short and a vision for the long term of CET. I decided to do some investigating myself.

I trawled the search engines for a while and then I remembered that because of the several conversation I had with **** over the years I had already done some legwork trying to support him in this very process. I went back to visit some of those ‘old’ links and among them was Project Lead The Way.

I have been blogging for a while, and, over the last several months, I have been micro-blogging on Twitter and Plurk. I told the community on Plurk about the job possibility, and they were all supportive and excited without reserve. This is where the process takes a Twilight Zone turn.

I asked them about whether they knew of or had any experience with Project Lead The Way. My question was met with a resounding silence. I tried the out-of-the-blue question on Twitter, and I received no repsonses there, either.

This is a program has units in all fifty states, 3000 schools, 7000 teachers, 5000 counselors, and, currently, 250,000 students. I only have about 400 professionals I follow or are ‘friends’ with on Twitter and Plurk, so it’s not unexpected that no one may have heard of it or have it in their district or school. On the other hand, I may have stumbled against a significant and unnecessary bulkhead in our society: The difference between technology and technology.

The effort to integrate technology – Information and Communication Technology – in our educational institutions, communities, families, and individuals; As online education grows like mushrooms after the rain – even virtual Phys ed; that we’re still overlooking a significant group of people in our society.

Over the last generation, the percentage of people working on farms and in manufacturing has shrunk from 60% to 6%. That is almost 2 million people currently working and needing successors and helpers in farming and manufacturing. If we had a workforce that was enabled as 21st century citizens we might be able to regenerate some of our last capacity in these sectors-food imports have grown 78% since the year 2000, for instance.

I think those of us who are early adapters (I still consider this VERY early) in the Information/digital revolution have to take a very careful look at what we are about and how we can serve all the individuals, families and schools in our world and not even just the USA.

Just think, one of our School Committee members has been taking classes required by his company management to master digital machining equipment. Suppose our children were getting a jump on that in school?

2 responses so far

Jun 08 2008

How about student reading in the Summer?

Published by Skip Zalneraitis under Uncategorized

I have found a great deal of informative, dedicated educators in the last couple of months. Two of the most enjoyable and creative are Dan and Jeff from Wicked Decent Learning.

Click their license plate to take a look-


If you can’t take the time to listen right now, here’s a tip: During the Episode 22 podcast, Jeff reviewed some sites to spur student summer reading:

www.guysread.com

www.bookmooch.com

www.whatshouldireadnext.com

www.anobii.com

www.goodreads.com

www.digitalbooktalk.com

www.shelfari.com

No responses yet

Mar 05 2008

Uggghhh

Are you sick of it – you North Americans in the Northern Tier? Winter? Ice? Snow? I need to write just to say – I AM SICK OF IT!! I have stopped using full spectrum bulbs – too expensive. I have stopped ‘going tanning’ for the Winter blues – I’m too busy, too busy, too busy, too busy - but, am I really?

-Skip 

No responses yet

Feb 10 2008

How long it’s been….

Hi-

I can’t believe it’s been so long since I posted. School is soooooooooo busy. I have to fall back on our trusty friends at the ISTE Myspace to break this drought:

Here’s a blog on the state of things in public school in North Carolina – Reality Bytes .

 Here is some really great online presentation software – www.zohoshow.com .

For you Librarians/Media Specialist and Generalists and Tech Coordinators setting up literacy curricula, Doug Johnson as Vis Org’ed the standards for ISTE and th the AASL – Standards Comparison by Doug Johnson .

One response so far

Nov 03 2007

Welcome

Published by Skip Zalneraitis under Uncategorized

Welcome to itlc – the virtually space to discuss virtually anything. It includes, but is not limited to, technology.

 If you have the patience, please read my page on the meaning of ‘itlc’.

In the history of humankind, technology is the third great leap, after the phonetic alphabet and the italic typeface and cheap bookbinding. I learned this in my study of the futurist David Thornburgh. We have just touched cyber technology with one nanometer of one whorl of one finger tip. I am in awe of the destiny I see ahead of us.

2 responses so far

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