On Wednesday, Paula, Gayle, Jen, Laurie and I, went to Lilla G. Frederick Middle School in Dorchester to see their 1:1 wireless laptop program. The school, which opened in 2003, is in its second year with 1:1 laptops. Each of the 720 students has a laptop for use during the school day (they don't go home for safety reasons).
It was an incredible, inspiring environment where the passion and dedication to technology is really in the DNA of all who work there. Technology is in the culture top-down, bottom-up and everywhere in between. I think that's one crucial piece of what makes it work.
ADDITIONAL INFO ABOUT THE SCHOOL:
http://www.lgfnet.org - their internal website with student, parent, teacher and community resources. Includes teacher websites, "rules of the road", pd documents, "bagels and laptops" calendar.
http://www.lgfpms.org - the Lilla G. Frederick Middle School homepage
There are at least 1,000 other things to say about all that we saw yesterday. I just want to get this post out there to start the sharing and the dialog.
Deb
Wednesday, April 9, 2008
Wednesday, March 12, 2008
YOUR Classroom Experience with the Laptop Carts
We're gathering data about whether a laptop initiative makes sense for us. Please share your thoughts about your experiences using the laptop carts with your classes here at Pollard.
Here's what we're looking for:
1. Here's what I tried...
2. Here's how it went...
3. What I/we learned from this experience
Here's what we're looking for:
1. Here's what I tried...
2. Here's how it went...
3. What I/we learned from this experience
Monday, January 21, 2008
Next Step: Choose a Subtopic
We've moved from the "what and why laptops" to looking at the major issues and areas that need to be considered prior to making a recommendation about whether we should pilot a laptop program @ Pollard.
We will be gathering information about what other schools have done -- both by looking at data that is online and by visiting/contacting other schools. We will be looking at successes and failures because they both will provide us with valuable information and insight. I will be providing some of the guidelines and resources that you will need.
Following is a list of the subtopics and a sampling of the essential questions for each area. I'm asking each of you to read through this list of subtopics and then identify your top two choices. Let me know either by posting a response on the blog or by email. Contact me if you have any questions.
1. Classroom Management:
3. Implementation & Logistics:
a)Miscellaneous:
b) Network/Infrastructure -- a subtopic in its own right. It will be handled internally by Media & Technology Services department.
4. Professional Development:
5. Teaching & Learning:
We will be gathering information about what other schools have done -- both by looking at data that is online and by visiting/contacting other schools. We will be looking at successes and failures because they both will provide us with valuable information and insight. I will be providing some of the guidelines and resources that you will need.
Following is a list of the subtopics and a sampling of the essential questions for each area. I'm asking each of you to read through this list of subtopics and then identify your top two choices. Let me know either by posting a response on the blog or by email. Contact me if you have any questions.
1. Classroom Management:
- How should the classroom be set up?
- How should the laptops be stored/charged?
- What are the policies about students' acceptable use and time management?
- What are the policies, procedures and mechanisms for monitoring student use?
- What level of tech-support/triage is available when there are technical issues during class? What is the role of the teacher and how should he/she be positioned to promote learning?
- What are the different buying/leasing options?
- What are the implications of each?
- How is buying/leasing program administered?
- How do laptop programs impact the operational budget?
- What are the financial implications of hardware needs and personnel needs?
- What are the financial implications of implementation and logistics (network/infrastructure and miscellaneous)?
3. Implementation & Logistics:
a)Miscellaneous:
- What type of protective case should be required (and who should pay)?
- How are laptops insured?
- Where and how should laptops be stored (financial considerations as well)?
- Should extended warranties be purchased and if so, by whom? How can theft be prevented? What is an effective laptop program rollout/implementation timetable?
b) Network/Infrastructure -- a subtopic in its own right. It will be handled internally by Media & Technology Services department.
4. Professional Development:
- When should teachers receive their laptops -- i.e. how long before students?
- Who should be trained and by whom?
- What types of training are needed? (adult learning theory is a consideration)
- What is the learning curve?
- When does training happen?
5. Teaching & Learning:
- What is the role of the teacher? What is the role of students?
- How does curriculum need to change?
- What does a model less plan look like?
- How do you assess learning?
- What types of technologies are being used?
Tuesday, November 27, 2007
11/27/07 Meeting: Enhancing Student Learning
During today's meeting we watched video clips authored by schools and districts that have implemented 1:1 initiatives. In these videos, students, teachers, and administrators shared their thoughts on how their 1:1 laptop environments have enhanced and transformed student learning. Here are some of the recurring ideas we encountered about how 1:1 laptop environments enhance student learning:
Do you want to share more information about one of these ideas based on the video clip you watched? Does one of these ideas strike you as most important for enhancing student learning? Other? What are your thoughts?
- student-centered classrooms;
- teacher as coach/facilitator;
- students engaged in producing knowledge; ownership of knowledge -- not just the information;
- real learning, real-world connections;
- enables differentiated instruction;
- immediate exploration and development of understanding result in deeper understanding;
- students have pride of ownership of laptops;
- students have their own workspace, studios;
- empowering for students
Do you want to share more information about one of these ideas based on the video clip you watched? Does one of these ideas strike you as most important for enhancing student learning? Other? What are your thoughts?
Tuesday, November 20, 2007
Why a 1:1 Laptop Program @ Pollard?
One of the things that I have learned so far in my study of 1:1 is that schools must first have a clear idea of the rationale and goals of a 1:1 program. With that in mind, I would really like us to focus on WHY we want a 1:1 program. What do we want and hope students will gain from a 1:1 program?
Think about the articles we have read so far as well as the discussions we have had and then post an entry of what you think is important for Pollard students to gain. Start your entry with the statement:
A 1:1 laptop program is important for Pollard students because....
Our thinking around this issue will continue to develop and evolve over the course of the year. I look forward to your comments.
Think about the articles we have read so far as well as the discussions we have had and then post an entry of what you think is important for Pollard students to gain. Start your entry with the statement:
A 1:1 laptop program is important for Pollard students because....
Our thinking around this issue will continue to develop and evolve over the course of the year. I look forward to your comments.
Thursday, November 8, 2007
Readings for November 8th Meeting
After reading the introduction to Pamela Livingston's book 1-TO-1 Learning: Laptop Programs That Work, these are some ideas/statements that stood out as "jumping off points" for comment.
- Digital assistants (computers, PDAs) are different than "tools". Tools typically support one activity whereas digital assistants support broader thinking and learning.
- Digital assistants have more functionality than a Swiss Army knife.
- The world requires flexible, adaptable synthesizers of information to solve problems, connect ideas, make decisions, etc.
- Today's students are innately multi-taskers ("Millenials" - born between 1982 and 2000) and teachers are unitaskers. Should we hold students back and make them learn as we did?
- If we recognize and accept that students learn at their own pace, why are we asking them to wait for/share computers when we wouldn't think of asking them to share other resources/tools such as pencils, paper, books, etc.?
- Does genuine technology integration require 1:1 access?
- The two examples of "getting to thinking" faster mentioned by using digital assistants: Maine students studying the ships used by Christopher Columbus on his voyage to America and gathering and charting temperature data and getting to the "what ifs" of an increased temperature change.
Wednesday, October 24, 2007
Our First 1:1 Meeting
Last week we had a fabulous kick-off meeting for our 1:1 study group! After talking about the purpose of the study group and some logistics, we had a great discussion about the two articles we read and 1:1 in general. The energy was great and people touched on many of the key issues for 1:1 laptop programs -- planning, professional development, tech. support, classroom management as well as specific examples of how laptops can be used in various classes. All of these topics will be things we discuss and/or blog about as we go forward.
Our next steps:
Our next steps:
- Group members will continue to check through resources on the web
- People can comment about what they're reading/doing on our blog
- Next meeting: November 8th
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