NewEngland

#edtech for #edleaders: On-boarding and IT

There are some tools educators should not be expected to use without direct instruction and IT managers must plan for these needs when newly hired educators are “on-boarded” and to support educators during major transitions. The IT systems that require direct instruction include: • Procedures and credentials for logging on to all systems that are Read More

NewEngland

Assessment in Education

I am not a fan of the current fixation of educators on assessment. My criticism is based on a couple of points. First, we are so caught up in the work of assessing (work which includes differentiating formative and summative which is a meaningless differentiation) we are reducing our capacity to provide meaningful feedback and Read More

NewEngland

#edtech for #edleaders: Reporting, Ticketing, and Triage

The web service for managing repair requests that is web-based are often called “ticketing systems,” because one submits a “help ticket” that summarizes a problem; the ticket is assigned to someone with the skill and network credentials to fix the problem, and notes regarding steps that are taken are added to the ticket. Once the Read More

NewEngland

#edtech for #edleaders: Fundamental Concepts of Networking

Fundamentally, computer networks are simple systems. To build a network, one provides a pathway to move data from one node to another (through electrical signals transmitted over wires or radio signals that travel through the air), gives every node a unique address (so the network “knows” where to deliver packets), and then keeps track of Read More

NewEngland

Connectionism Makes Sense

For most of human history, communication was an aural or gestural activity. We spoke and we made gestures, other heard and saw our movements. In both cases, the communication was ephemeral. Unheard words and unseen gestures are lost. There is evidence of humans creating painting and other artifacts which presumably were intended for meaningful communication, Read More

NewEngland

#edtech for #edleaders: Measuring Technology Acceptance

Several years ago, I was asked to gather some “data” regarding “how our school technology is doing.” I was familiar with technology acceptance model, and intended to ground my answers to the inquiry in data collected with a valid and reliable instrument. Turing to the literature, I found there were instruments for measuring Unified Acceptance of Read More