Skip to main content

Home/ UNI Technolgy for School Leaders/ Group items tagged tools

Rss Feed Group items tagged

Jen Sigrist

WebTools4u2use - Finding the Right Tool - 3 views

  •  
    Great online graphic organizer that expands to show different tools to fit different needs. Also has a list of tools to use by different needs - by task, by product, by learning style...
Ryan Rydstrom

Getting Attention in the Laptop Classroom - 10 views

shared by Ryan Rydstrom on 23 Jun 13 - Cached
    • Ryan Rydstrom
       
      Many of the same observations from teachers this year with 1:1.
  • The class began with all seats facing forward. The teacher points to a chart on the white board showing fastest times for 8 different furniture arrangements in this class (list). She holds up a stopwatch.
  • While there is now software available to allow such monitoring from the teacher's computer, most teachers must rely upon a technique we will call eyeballing.
  • ...10 more annotations...
    • Ryan Rydstrom
       
      We have a system called Dyknow
  • when I need the full attention of the class for 5-10 minutes, I will ask them to swivel around and join me. They turn their eyes forward on me and the screen
  • A teacher who ignores landscape in laptop classrooms is likely to encounter difficulties with classroom management.
  • Attentio
    • Ryan Rydstrom
       
      Great set of norms
  • 2-3 year professional development offering that would focus on equipping all teachers with these moves, tactics and strategies
  • laptops as just one element within a complex array of tools that extends to mundane items such as blackout curtains and chair
  • were the most frequent uses of compu
  • online research, productivity tools, drill and practice, and eCommunications
  • teachers need opportunities to learn what instruction and assessment practices, curricular resources and classroom management skills work best in a 1:1 student to networked laptop classroom setting.
Deron Durflinger

7 Habits of Highly Effective Tech-leading Principals -- THE Journal - 2 views

  • Principals must effectively and consistently model the use of the same technology tools they expect teachers to use in their classrooms with the students. Principals must be consistent in their decisions and expectations about integrating learning technology in the school. The principal's communication about the pace and process of integrating learning technology needs to be clear and reasonable. The principal must provide appropriate professional development time and resources to support effective classroom implementation of technology. The principal must support early adopters and risk takers. The principal must do whatever it takes to ensure that all staff has early access to the very same digital tools that students will be using in their classrooms. As the educational leader, the principal must make it clear to the technology leader that all decisions relating to learning technology will be made by the educational leaders with input from the technology leaders, not the other way around. The principal must set and support the expectation that student work will be done and stored using technology. Principals must ensure that families and the public are kept informed about the school's goals and progress relating to its use of technology as a learning resource. The principal must be an active and public champion for all students, staff members, and the school in moving the vision of fully integrating learning technology for the second decade of the 21st century.
Deron Durflinger

The Five Dimensions of Learning-Agile Leaders - Forbes - 1 views

  • To succeed in our volatile, complex, ambiguous world, we have no choice but to master our ability to adapt and learn.
  • At the same time, we need to have the confidence to make decisions on the spot, even in the absence of compelling, complete data.  The qualities needed at the top—openness, authentic listening, adaptability—also indicate that leaders need to be comfortable with and able to embrace the “grayness” that comes from other people’s ideas or situations that arise.
  • Learning Agility is a reliable indicator of leadership potential because learning agile people “excel at absorbing information from their experience and then extrapolating from those to navigate unfamiliar situations.
  • ...8 more annotations...
  • In short, Learning Agility is the ability to learn, adapt, and apply ourselves in constantly morphing conditions.
  • Problem Solvers; Thought Leaders; Trailblazers; Champions; Pillars; Diplomats; and Energizers. The researchers wrote: “People who are learning agile: Seek out experiences to learn from; enjoy complex problems and challenges associated with new experiences because they have an interest in making sense of them; perform better because they incorporate new skills into their repertoire. A person who is learning agile has more lessons, more tools, and more solutions to draw on when faced with new business challenges.” (Hallenbeck, Swisher, and Orr, July 2011)
  • Mental Agility
  • People Agility
  • Change Agility
  • Results Agility:
  • Self-Awareness
  • The world of leadership belongs to the most learning agile
1 - 4 of 4
Showing 20 items per page