Mardis/Fontichiaro Lecture 2/5/2008

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t1 • t2 • t3 • y = P

Technology, You, and Power

Marcia Mardis (mmardis@umich.edu) Kristin Fontichiaro (font@umich.edu)

February 5, 2008School of Information

Links for Today

http://del.icio.us/marciam/webhttp://www.ia.usu.edu/

Today’s Agenda

Overview of technology, power, and the relevance of Web 2.0Hands On: Instructional ArchitectThe Info CloudHands on: iGoogle: Managing Your Info Cloud

Saving

Searching

OrganizingSharing

Viewing/Playing

Transacting

Connecting

Publishing

The Equation

Technology is main variable– T1: Administration/Community– T2: Teachers/Collaboration/PD– T3: Students

Y=You! Are important (your program, your practice, your life)P=Power is the outcome (influence, sustainability of the school library program)

Start from your core

Technology is THE vehicle of influence

Schools lag private sector trendsAdministrators are under scrutiny from their superiors, Board, etc.Parents want to see value for $Teachers have territory--they want something differentKids need to have a place that matches themYou need a dynamic program; wsnh

Different ways to get it right, but no element can = 0

1

Adoption

No Concern

Access

2

Adaptation

Self

Skills

3

Appropriation

Task

Policy

4

Invention

Impact

Motivation

Cultural/Social Influences

Structural/Symbolic Influences

T1: Technology, Administration & Community

Return on Investment Analysis:Can we afford this?How much bang for the buck?Is this the most we can get?Will the benefits to our district justify the overall investment?Value add

Just look at ‘em go…they leave behind…

Your T1 Turf: Admin Concerns

Technology use key factor in college and workplace readiness100% schools, 93% classrooms connectedSchools on 5 yr or more replacement cycles (hardware and plans); depending on bondsAdministrators delegate technology leadershipTech support vs. Tech leadershipAccountability on all fronts

Your T1 Turf: What Parents Want

More connected to student performanceBetter preparedness for school, collegeBetter preparedness for career choiceEquity of access to learning

T1: How Libraries Fit In

Perception is keyLibraries contain most technologyIntegration is low (~47% in classroom)Form a technology committee (or get on the existing one): include teachers, parents, and studentsDocument technology use Include annual technology goals

T1: Web 2.0 Technologies Help

You must have a dynamic library Web siteUse TeacherTube to share school events, post library tour (link it to your Web page)Use blog & podcast to advertise new library resources and services, school announcementsAllow people to email you from your Web page and respond (even consider weekend or evening hours) Why email and not IM?

T2: The Teacher of It All

Collaboration is the grailTeacher territory is realTeachers want help with:– things that take time, – things they don’t know/never learned– things they do not see as their jobs

SLMS who lead with technology and resources collaborateKnow how your standards/their standards link (use the NETS•T to your advantage)

T2: How Web 2.0 can help

Use the “push approach” to getting your SLMC usedDon’t wait to be asked to pull resources together. Get the assignments from kids (have them help populate RSS)Use del.icio.us to organize resources and link them to your Web page

T3: The Student Body

Know what you’re supposed to be preparing them to do:– How your standards map to their standards

Know what they may not be getting in the classroom– Belonging, Creativity, Technology

Hospitality vs. Service– Is this my kind of place?– Can I be successful here?– Can I connect this to the rest of my life?

Dan Pink’s A Whole New Mind

Six Senses– Design: Voicethread – Meaning: Flickr, blog (have the students

blog for you and for other students)– Symphony: iGoogle – Empathy: Gliffy, GoogleDocs– Play: Jumpcut– Meaning: Ning

“Bookends” Service

Get me started

Check my work when I’m done

Outreach to External Forums, Social Networks