2020 Vision?

We’ve been focusing our efforts on imagining the future graduate for several months now.

In his blog, Weblogg-ed, which I was reading this evening, Will Richardson referred readers to Karl Fisch’s blog at Arapahoe High School in Colorado where they are pondering the same thing.  Karl Fisch created the following video describing his vision of the graduate of 2020.

It’s a thought-provoking 15 minute view of a fantastical and yet imaginable future.

http://thefischbowl.blogspot.com/  (see the November 27th post for more commentary after you watch the video below or for a link to the video)


What a great idea–to just brainstorm some “future worlds” our students may be living in!  

Any ideas or comments about your own 2020 vision?

Carolyn

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New Tube, new challenges.

I just read this fascinating article in Wired Magazine about Lonelygirl15. Lonelygirl15, if you aren’t familiar, was a “made for YouTube” video series–two guys(Mesh Flinders, and Miles Beckett) directed it and hired an actress to play what seemed to be a real girl.  They basically created episodes in her life as though they were a tv show, but because YouTube allows blogging and discussion, viewers could discuss what they were seeing and interact with “her” via email. (although they were really interacting with someone else who was writing as her). According to the article, they knew they were onto something when one of their episodes got 500,000 views.  (In comparison, a cable tv show needs 300,000-500,000 viewers to be considered successful.) Anyway, what interested me about all this (besides presenting something as real that was fictional), was that the two male directors are now being courted by the mainstream studio and network world, but they are frustrated because the studios don’t seem to get the interactive nature of the new medium they are working in. 

“…Their first sit-down with a major broadcaster was, [attorney]Goodfried says, an ‘exercise in futility.’ Beckett tried to explain to the executive that the central theme of online entertainment was interactivity, as opposed to the passivity of television.  He wanted to create shows in which the line between reality and fiction is blurred, where viewers can correspond with the characters and actually become involved in the story by posting their own videos.    The exec responded by walking them through his fall lineup and pointing out that the network’s Web site had great supplemental video material for the season’s upcoming shows. 

Beckett is clearly frustrated….”It’s a new medium…The way the networks look at the Internet now is like the early days of TV, when announcers would just read radio scripts on camera.  It was boring…”  (p. 239, December 2006 Wired)

His statement struck me on all sorts of levels–how easy it is for a lot of our students to “get” this but how hard it is for us sometimes.   And how the behometh will start responding once there is money to be made (YouTube being purchased by  Google for example), and tools like this will become much more mainstream.    It just seems that because everything is moving at lightening speed, we in “the school business” are going to find ways to be much more responsive, through our policies, and our practices.

There are so many fabulous topics to discuss related to this article for an educator– ethical issues relating to the video purporting to be real, psychological issues like the fact that some users didn’t seem to care when they found out she wasn’t and continued communicating with a fictional character, and economic issues about the financial model of television versus the web.  

So even if we don’t fully understand the technology there are so many issues we can discuss with our students and that they do need help with understanding.   To me that is our key role as educators in dealing with all these new mediums is bringing in the deeper level of thought and discussion.Comments?  thoughts on this?   Carolyn

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How can we better help teachers with technology?

My thoughts were here that we can brainstorm some ways to help better support teachers as they are learning new technologies.  Obviously a few of us cannot do it all ourselves, but can we think of some creative, ingenious or systematic processes to help us all as new “tools” come into play?

I just participated in the K12 Online conference, which was the first education conference held entirely online.    Although frankly I think teachers prefer more face-to-face trainings, I found it really interesting.  Each session was posted online as a video or powerpoint or screencast, and you could pick and choose among sessions.  Plus, each session is saved so if you didn’t have time to view it during the two weeks of the “conference,” it is still there to read later.

I participated in some online discussions that were held during the conference about helping teachers incorporate some of the new web 2.0 technologies into their classrooms.   Joel and I have started a weekly workshop and are sharing things on our blogs.

I have had several teachers request more face-to-face time.  How can we facilitate that–any ideas?   Should we talk to the Staff Development Committee?  (I’ve joined that to help be a liason if we need one).

 Any comments, ideas, etc?

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The changing internet world

I just returned from the Internet Librarian conference and there was a lot of talk about gaming technology and how “searching” may change in the next few years.   A company called Sirsi/Dynix is working on software which allows you to locate things in the library virtually–sort of a video game format, and you, the customer, are a character moving through the space.  

Other mind blowing topics–a lcd projector the size of a sugar cube, a credit card sized palm pilot device, virtual DVD instead of a physical dvd, etc.

One thing the speaker, Stephen Abrams talked about is how we need to teach kids to wade through information–and that is a vital need right now.  They are already inundated and will be even more so as information continues to grow exponentially.

He presented the characteristics of a Millenial student which is defined by Richard Sweeney in this chart

(see the powerpoint slide link here — http://www.sirsi.com/Pdfs/Company/Abram/StephenAbram_KidsAreAlright4.ppt#19 .

Another good slide showing characteristics of our “future” graduates–

http://www.sirsi.com/Pdfs/Company/Abram/StephenAbram_KidsAreAlright4.ppt#43

Lots of food for thought here–Carolyn

 

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News from Internet Librarian

I heard a very interesting session today by Stephen Abrams (who Ian Jukes recommended).   His blog is Stephen’s Lighthouse, by the way, if any of you are interested.

He talked a lot about current brain research, video games and how we can utilize them for student learning, and the importance of students having real life experiences on the internet.

He pointed out that we don’t train them to cross the street with a fake street in a classroom–we teach them on the real street and that we should be doing the same with the internet.

He talked about the importance of students’ publishing on the web and all the ways the new 2.0 web allows for that.  He also strongly felt that the trend is toward “virtual” search environments–that is, a library catalog that is like a virtual experience or game that the student would move through, or a course designed that way. 

What he said had interesting implications for our committee and I am eager to read his blog.  http://stephenslighthouse.sirsi.com/

I am also definitely feeling techno overwhelm, which is definitely a good reminder to me of how teachers and students can feel sometimes.  

I do think, though, that all these tools will become a part of our experiences and then the learning curve will not be the way it is right now.  Stephen Abrams pointed out that our knowledge base has been in a resting period while the web was “sorted out” but now we are entering a stage where things are growing exponentially and so it will be a time of revolutionary change for our students.     I guess our job will be to help them balance all of this.

Time to go walk outside and listen to the ocean and clear my mind a little bit….

Carolyn

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Hello from Internet Librarian conference

I’m on my way to the Internet Librarian conference in San Jose, sitting next to a supply-chain manager for Cisco who lives in California, manages an operation in Austin, and also one in Malaysia, while I look through subjects at the conference in the program.

And by the way, she’s reading The World is Flat!

So far, in looking through the conference program, I have already found sessions on using ipods, blogs, RSS, wikis, and ebooks in schools and libraries, a website about teaching global issues, a tour of social networking sites(i.e. myspace and facebook), and sessions on how to improve webpage design.    Engineers from Google and Microsoft are  part of a panel speaking in an evening session about “academic search” (i.e. searching for scholarly articles) and how that area is being completely transformed because of Google, etc,, and what are the changes ahead for libraries and publishers because of that.    And that’s all only the first day!   I’m going to be learning a lot.

I’ll share what I’m learning as I have time by posting to the blog! –Carolyn

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Technology and Overwhelm?

In listening to everyone at the last committee meeting, I think we do have a strike a balance between our excitement about future (and present) technologies and overwhelm.

This article in Technology and Learning is a good example–http://www.techlearning.com/showArticle.jhtml?articleID=193200296

It provides a lot of ideas and a vision for what a technology-transformed campus could be like, but reading it seems overwhelming even to me!

How do we find that balance?

On another note, I was excited that our plan to bring something out of this committee to reality–our mini-workshops for teachers–is already happening!

We had our first one yesterday.  I do think “mini” approaches may be a good way to gradually bring in some of these technology tools to our teachers, so maybe that is one way to avoid overwhelm?  (I really didn’t plan to answer my own question–that just occurred to me as I was writing this!)

What are other ways we can help keep that overwhelm balanced as we move to a more technology rich classroom?

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The near future

I’m sure all of us have run across a lot of articles, websites, etc, about technologies on the near horizon, so I thought I would create a thread for us to share some of them.

This is a blog called Ideas and Thoughts from an Ed Tech. Lots of musings.  http://ideasandthoughts.org/

Another favorite:  http://www.weblogg-ed.com/   A lot of ideas about reading and writing on the web and how it will affect students.

I’ve been trying to figure out how to keep up with all the articles I’ve been finding also, and been experimenting with a few websites that might be helpful if you haven’t tried them.

Furl, Delicious, and Google all have capabilities to store your links online, so no matter what computer you are using, you can add websites to your lists and organize them.

Google’s is called Google Notebook and is probably the most traditional looking.  You can create sections or subjects so you can visually organize your links.  (You can find Google notebook under the “more” button under Google Labs.)

Del.icio.us also allows you to save your links online, but it organizes them by “tags” or subjects that you designate and group together.   It’s a little more nontraditional, but the “tags” allow you to set up keyword type searching for your articles.  You can install a button on your Internet Explorer toolbar, and just click on it to add a site to your list of links.  www.del.icio.us

I haven’t experimented with Furl yet, but the idea is similar.  http://www.furl.net/

One unique advantage to these is that you can keep your links “private” or make them “public” or parts of them, and share with others.  So you could compile a list of links and share it with the whole committee.  Food for thought!

So share any articles here that have struck your fancy lately…and let’s talk!

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The future graduate

My mind is still racing with thoughts from our discussion last night, so I wanted to create a couple of new posts to help us sort our thoughts.  This first one is the “Future Graduate” so we can start discussing that and finding articles and links to share, and the second post is going to be “How do we get there?”

(Actually—a warning—I spent 45 minutes typing my post and when I went to publish it,edublogs had lost it.  (then when I went back later, it reappeared! So a word to the wise, if you think it’s going to take you a while, work in Word and post it later!) 

One thread we talked a lot about last night was the future graduate from the college perspective.  Hearing Dr. Chang’s perspective really drives home the value of the vertical teaming aspect that we were talking about—and I think if we have both the college perspective and bring in the perspective from the elementary school level in our own district that would really give us a lot of insights.

We talked a lot about the future science/math/computer science trends, which were fascinating.  I was surprised to hear that the projections are that U.S. colleges will turn out only ¼ of the graduates needed in computer science by the year 2014.   We also talked a lot about other math/science graduation trends.

Having more idea of future trends really would inform our discussion better, so I thought I would start out by listing a few links to some “trend” statistics.

The Occupational Outlook handbook has many helpful links, but for a quick glance, here is their projection of the fastest growing occupations from 2004-2014.

http://www.bls.gov/emp/mlrtab2.pdf

(and if you really want to peruse more of their projections, here is a link to more.http://www.bls.gov/emp/home.htm#outlook

America’s Career InfoNet  is sponsored by the U.S. Department of Labor.  This link allows you to manipulate occupational data for Texas.  It shows the growth rate in actual jobs, and then in percentage growth–very interesting trends there in health sciences and computer sciences, for example.

http://www.acinet.org/acinet/state1.asp?next=state1&id=11&nodeid=12&soccode=&stfips=48&x=47&y=13

The Texas Workforce Commission allows you to manipulate projections of data for different regions of Texas.  So if you pick Central Texas in the category “Industry Projections,” it creates a chart showing the growth rates of particular fields.

I was really astonished to see that the field with the highest growth rate in central Texas was Education, actually, which topped out at 54% projected growth rate.  The second fastest growing field in central Texas is Health and Social Sciences, according to this projection.

Here is the link so we can explore these charts:

http://www.tracer2.com/?PAGEID=67&SUBID=114

Anyway, that is some information to start us off…

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How can we help teachers?

I’d like to brainstorm some creative ways we could help teachers learn or experience new technologies.   We have to be creative because obviously one or two people can’t work with every teacher on campus.  What are some creative, ingenious, time efficient, or streamlined ways we can get teachers to engage with new technology when we bring it into the school? 

One idea I think would be great was if we had some sort of process in place–like “mini workshops” and then longer workshops, and we had a “name” for the different types.

I think having a routine, like brown bag lunch, or whatever, would get people interested and make it more of a process.

We could have a continuous schedule and a rotation of people teaching them too, so one person wouldn’t have to bear the brunt of it.

Some tools are online and aren’t really things we have to purchase, so its just a matter of helping people spend time with them.  Of course time is always the problem, isn’t it?

Anyway, ideas anyone??

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