Tuesday, October 28, 2014

National and State Technology Standards

1.                              As you read the Introduction to the National Education Technology Plan, what did you determine to be the purpose of the National Education Technology Plan? How does it affect teachers and students, people like you and me? (feel free to be critical if you like).

            When I read the introduction I felt as if I was reading the same speeches and promises that our government wants to change because we are lacking as a country in education to our children P-20.  The focus now is on technology because it has changed the world, education, communication; it is now the focus.  We are beyond being wowed by new textbooks, tools and hands on media we now can literally see the vastness of space and oceans through SmartBoards, SmartPhones and computers the fit in the palm of our hands yet we still aren’t meeting basic goals consistently as a nation; why?  Why do we think that because we have instant knowledge at the tips of our fingers that is going to solve our education needs?  I am a huge fan of implementing technology in our classrooms however when we remain more focused on assessments, data collections, and pie charts than making sure a child can read his grandmother’s cursive handwritten note we will always fail.  We get bombarded as parents by teachers, fellow parents and media that we need to limit our children’s “screen time” and yet in these initiatives our government is wanting to make it so our kids never unplug, go outside and experience in real life what a changing leaf looks like or jump in a creek to do field studies because we can now pull it up on our computers.  The teachers I talk to K-12 are so bogged down with reports, assessment, hours inputting into the computer and more that they are not engaging with our children as much because they are so worried about not getting their work done.  How can we say that we are effectively implementing technology in our kindergarten classrooms by showing kids where to have a book read to them and call it implementation?  I watch our kids crave to stare at the computer and have something read to them instead of being introduced to meaningful and engaging activities.  We wait until our kids are in Middle school and above to really open the doors to technology freely.  Classes are offered for a price that most cannot afford in Still Motion, Animatronics, computer programming and more however these are the “engaging and empowering strategies for innovation” that I believe we should be introducing along with reading, writing, and math in kindergarten.  So to answer what I think the purpose of this plan is to provide more data collection for the government so they have a means to personally track our children into early adulthood and predict their likely paths even before our children figure out their passions based on number trends, its going to push out the “experienced” teachers to bring in Digital Natives that are ready to eliminate books, paperwork and move to computers and our children are going to be a new breed of strategist that will excel in deductive reasoning and use technology to replace most human interactive experiences.  If we don’t find a way to improve the love of learning for our children no amount of technology is going to save us. 


  1. As you read the Introduction to the National Education Technology Plan (NETP), what were the main assumptions under which the plan was developed?  (you may copy and paste the main assumptions, and then answer the question below in your own words). What are some concerns administrators, educators, or even students might have with these assumptions?
The plan is based on the following assumptions:
  • Many of the failings of our education system stem from our failure to engage the hearts and minds of students.
  • What students need to learn and what we know about how they learn have changed, and therefore the learning experiences we provide should change.
  • How we assess learning focuses too much on what has been learned after the fact and not enough on improving learning in the moment.
  • We miss a huge opportunity to improve our entire education system when we gather student-learning data in silos and fail to integrate the information and make it broadly available to decision-makers at all levels of our education system—individual educators, schools, districts, states, and the federal government.
  • Learning depends on effective teaching, and we need to focus on extended teams of connected educators with different roles who collaborate within schools and across time and distance and who use technology resources and tools to augment human talent.
  • Effective teaching is an outcome of preparing and continually training teachers and leaders to guide the type of learning we want in our schools.
  • Making engaging learning experiences and resources available to all learners anytime and anywhere requires state-of-the-art infrastructure, which includes technology, people, and processes that ensure continuous access.
  • Education can learn much from such industries as business and entertainment about leveraging technology to continuously improve learning outcomes while increasing the productivity of our education system at all levels.
  • Just as in health, energy, and defense, the federal government has an important role to play in funding and coordinating some of the R&D challenges associated with leveraging technology to ensure the maximum opportunity to learn.
The plan also assumes that with technology we can provide engaging and powerful learning content, resources, and experiences and assessment systems that measure student learning in more complete, authentic, and meaningful ways. With technology-based learning and assessment systems, we can improve student learning and generate data that can be used to continuously improve the education system at all levels. With technology, we can execute collaborative teaching strategies combined with professional learning strategies that better prepare and enhance educators’ competencies and expertise over the course of their careers. With technology, we can redesign and implement processes to produce better outcomes while achieving ever higher levels of productivity and efficiency across the education system.
I think the main concern after reading this is the government is saying our teachers are failing our students which for me means that everyone above the teachers must be failing as well.  When I read the first assumption I agreed with that statement and I believe the reason why is not because we don’t use technology to engage our kids we have removed the permissions of our teachers to fully engage with our students.  We are not able to hug our students for fear of being accused of being sexually inappropriate, or discipline in a manner that students respect teachers.  Our world has not changed so much to say that students did not get violated in the 1970’s or that teachers could spank a child even earlier (and I would not want that for any child) however teachers were respected and obeyed.  If my mom came into my classroom and volunteered she was respected by the students as an educator and also loved as a mom.  We have stripped our teachers of being empowered because we now have to cater and react to all parents wishes, desires and dictates for their children.  It is not just educating children today it is teaching them how to be respectful socially giving human beings because parents don’t have the time to do it themselves.  If we want engaging learning experiences quit threatening to take away related arts programs, field trips and real life experiences for children that connect their minds and hearts to principles and lessons.  An interactive computer screen cannot give a child the experience of catching a crayfish in a cool stream wearing boots and manipulating tools and water flow.  Now we can take pictures and videos of our children and use technology and apps to further the experience however there is not enough time in the day nor desire in a child or teacher to make all of that happen yet that is what we are demanding today.  These demands aren’t just coming from parents but administrators, districts, superintendents, and government; we make unrealistic expectations look easy and obtainable yet set up thousands of teachers and children to fail by such standards. 

3.                  As you read the Executive Summary, the NETP presents a model of learning powered by technology, with goals and recommendations in five essential areas. (You may copy and paste the areas directly from the document and then answer the question below in your own words).

Goals and Recommendations

To transform education in America, we must turn ideas into action. The NETP presents five goals that address the key components of this plan—learning, assessment, teaching, infrastructure, and productivity—along with recommendations for states, districts, the federal government, and other stakeholders in our education system for achieving these goals.
What are the “21st century competencies” - see the section titled “what and how people need to learn”- listed in the summary? How will technology support the growth of these competencies?
My question is where is the money going to come from to support these competencies?  I am all for 3D printing, modeling and having our students use tools that doctors, artists, cartoonists, writers and so forth use; but our schools are broke.  In our district our Administrators and Principles are always trying to figure out how to buy copy paper and basic supplies for administrative purposes so trying to add on real life technology outside of computers in school, I just don’t see it happening.  The other vehicle that could get our students to these places are field trips and project based learning and again in our school district (our school first hand) all field trips are cancelled because there isn’t money or our teachers don’t have time to plan it.  To acquire 21st century competencies we need to be creative in our paths to opening the doors to access these competencies for our teachers and students.  My son is now in the sixth grade and I cannot remember that last field trip that he took to a business or community center to enrich his learning in any subject; it saddens me deeply.  My hopes as a future Professional Educator is to know the time is required for training, openness of mind to new techniques, passion to give my students every chance in life that they work for and to create an environment of learning that students cannot wait to walk into my doors.  Technology can certainly provide the passion, drive, and empowerment of learning for our students however we have to be realistic of cost and what it truly is we want to accomplish for our student.

4.                  As you read The State of Ohio's Educational Technology Plan's "purpose and mission" (page 6), how do you believe it aligns with the National Education Technology Plan? In which respects are the two plans perhaps not aligned?  Why?
I think that both parties are seeing 21st Century tools as means of connecting students and teachers with the outside world agencies, businesses and creating this partnership to bring in real world thinking to all levels of education.  I just keep asking myself why everyone acts as if this is new thinking just because we have more technology and avenues to get the information to our students don’t mean we have compiled a plan to make it financially happen.  I am a stakeholder as a parent, future teacher and student and yet I find in most classes I am taking technology fails and we keep reverting back to good old fashion hands on experiences.  I cannot wait to get into a classroom to truly give me the experience of teaching and finding out what age group is my true fit.  If we want to teach our children about anatomy in elementary school why aren’t we brining in doctors to talk to them, use realistic models or videos instead of cartoon ones using our Smartboard and calling that implantation of a technology plan?  I think that Ohio’s plan calls for more partnership with “stakeholder, organization and affiliates” where the NETP feels like a military lockdown and regiment of our government dictating policy to gather information to profile our country.  The more I read that more I desire to teach and learn with children in the midst of my negativity toward how the education system looks from my seat presently. 


5.                  As you read Ohio’s State Educational Technology Plan outlined on page 8, how do you believe this outline aligns with the "model of learning powered by technology, with goals and recommendations in five essential areas" proposed by the National Education Technology Plan?  In which areas are the two plans perhaps not aligned?  Why?
I believe that the states that have bought into the Race to the Top program for Federal funding and adoption of Common Core are trying to keep up with the NETP and seriously struggling due to the demands of assessments and keeping up with training on curriculum changes and technology that aren’t truly being passed down to our children/students at this point in the time line.  I think we are fantastic as creating goals, new policies and creating charts as to what the needs and demands for successful careers as time marches on however if we can’t find a means to truly identify how our students learn best and how to motivate them to want and desire to learn we have just spent the last five years creating great charts and expectation.  Why can’t we seem to address or truly assess how children learn best or accept that children learn best through play; of course self control and subject learning and the foundations of literacy, science, social studies and mathematics are vital but why do we think a computer test is going to determine how we teach our students?  We need to access each school surrounds and how we can incorporate our environments to benefit learning and not be seen as distraction.   We have an unlimited supply of information and ways to collaborate with schools, teachers and businesses who are making this all work; if we are truly unified in our goals why are we taking advantage of unification of successes and making sure we don’t have failing schools, failing students or failing teachers?


6.                  As you read Ohio’s State Educational Technology Plan's "measurements of success" (page 16), what barriers do you see to fulfilling this plan? Provide four reasons why it may not be possible to reach these "measurements of success" in the state of Ohio.
            One of the biggest barriers I see in fulfilling this plan in the State of Ohio  is how many people are we going to have to dedicate to obtain and maintain all of these reporting measures?  The more we open hybrid teaching to all levels of students how is the State of Ohio going to have the school, parent and online educator collaborate a students achievements and mastery of skills?  Second, when are we as parents going to get educated on the online courses for our children?  It isn’t something that is promoted or discussed in elementary school and to me that is when our children are most pliable and open to all information and teachings.  Third, training, training and more training for our teachers to be able to be proficient in integrating technology into curriculum; are we going to have more teacher and professional days and substitutes for our classrooms?  Again, I often think why we continue to be so focused on technology when our graduation rates are what continue to be of concern; if our students aren’t learning the basics of literacy how does anything else matter?  If we can’t teach our students to be successful problem solvers starting in preschool what means of technology is going to be there for them as they are in high school?  I’m still quite confused about this measuring tool as its dated 2009 and again our implantations time line ends in 2014….how have we met any of these goals? When I look at my child’s education in a strong school district and I ask how our district has implemented any of these goals and have not one answer I worry. 



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