Connecticut
The Effect of Technology on Education Meetings
Submitted by Aldon Hynes on Tue, 10/21/2008 - 09:41There is a lot of talk about the effect of technology on education, but not a lot of it focuses on the effect of technology on meetings about education. However, last night, I observed three different meetings about education that provided an interesting contrast of how technology is affecting these meetings.
The Woodbridge Board of Education met last night for their monthly meeting. Yet this meeting was different. It was the first time that they used a program called Emeeting from the Connecticut Association of Boards of Education (CABE).
“CABE-Meeting is a user-friendly online service specifically designed to assist the board and superintendent, in preparing and running board of education meetings. “
At the beginning of the meeting, Nick Caruso from CABE, together with members of the technology staff at Beecher Road School assisted school board members get connected to Emeeting and learn their way around.
Superintendent Stella spoke about the importance of the board adopting new technology and modeling the appropriate use of technology for students, teachers and staff. He also discussed a committee being formed, headed up by Rick Wood, the technology educator at the school. The committee will include members of the Board of Education, and parents from the community and will address the three-year technology plan.
Dr. Stella also discussed the Connecticut Educators Computer Association (CECA). They are holding their 2008 CECA Conference today, “Surviving and Thriving in an e-Literate World”.
It was noted that Nancy White and James Crawford from Beecher Road School will be attending as 2008 CECA Award Winners for their work in Digital Storytelling.
This digital storytelling project involves a sixth grade class, a general education teacher and a special education teacher. This project integrates various elements of Language Arts, Social Studies and digital media to express the students’ thoughts and ideas on various subject matters. Students gain the necessary skills to produce their digital stories through a four-tiered approach in which the special education teacher is incorporating the teaching of successively sophisticated technical skills in a series of four mini projects. In this tiered approach the students learn how to take digital still photographs, create music soundtracks, record narration, use digital video cameras, and import these media into the iLife suite of software on their groups’ computers. Students then publish and/or present their work. Students are asked to evaluate their movies as they would for their writing for ideas, organization, voice, word (picture) choice, fluency and conventions. Digital Storytelling exemplifies a project that showcases how technology can be used to enhance learning for all students.
As part of the Superintendent’s report, there was also a discussion about the Connecticut Mastery Test and how the school is working on improving the already high results that BRS students receive.
I am not a big fan of standardized testing, the CMTs or No Child Left behind, and the presentation did not hold my interest. So, I checked on Twitter to see what some of my friends around cyberspace were doing.
This is how I observed a second meeting about technology in education. Christine, a woman I met through Twitter and Podcamp goes by the username of PurpleCar on Twitter. She was at some meeting where Katie Kessner was speaking. (For a brief bio of Ms. Kessner, check here.)
PurpleCar’s first Tweet about the talk said, “waiting for a 'the dangers of webkinz' talk to begin. If this woman has no facts and spreads panic, I'm politely gonna go BOOYAH on her.”
I noted that Fiona is working on her reading, writing, typing and math skills by using Webkinz. PurpleCar reported that the speaker talked about “the students denied access to college because of their facebook pages”. Another Twitter user, nazgul, noted “@dulceamargo got a scholarship to study motion picture arts at Interlochen because of an ad on Facebook. Life-changing.”
The discussion, both where PurpleCar was, and on Twitter, continued on and on, with many of us on Twitter coming to the conclusion that Ms. Kessner is an ill-informed fear monger.
The contrast between the Board of Education members, learning their way around a new system and talking about how technology is being used at BRS to improve education provided a sharp contrast to the meeting PurpleCar was at. It also provided an interesting insight into the standardized tests.
Standardized tests, like information technology can, and too often are, used to instill fear which thwarts education. However, they can also be a valuable tool to improve the educational process. It was clear from the presentation that the staff at Beecher Road School understood the benefits and dangers of standardized testing and were working hard to make sure they are used to the students best benefit.
The folks of Woodbridge should be proud of all the efforts that the teachers, staff and administration at Beecher Road School are doing to make sure that all tools, information technology, standardized tests, and so many other tools are being used in the best interests of students. I know I was.
Woodbridge BOE Enters the 21st century
Submitted by Aldon Hynes on Mon, 10/20/2008 - 18:45Reading Postman at a Democratic Town Committee
Submitted by Aldon Hynes on Wed, 10/15/2008 - 13:22(Originally posted at Greater Democracy.)
The words of Neil Postman provides a peculiar juxtaposition to the committee reports of the monthly Woodbridge, CT Democratic Town Committee.
Next month, I will be speaking, in Second Life, to a communications class about the relationship between Second Life and other forms of media, blogs, online Second Life News, online traditional news, and so on. The class will be reading essays on Media Ecology at that point in their class and I hope they will have some good questions.
However, I’m not a communications scholar, and certainly not an expert on Media Ecology. So, I thought I’d try to get up to speed a little bit in preparation. The local library doesn’t have much on Media Ecology. The closest I got was two books by Neil Postman. Neither seems to be specifically about Media Ecology, but they are both interesting books that I’ve long been thinking about reading.
One book is The End of Education : Redefining the Value of School. Some of my friends in Woodbridge are encouraging me to run for Board of Education next year. I have lots of thoughts about education, and this book, together with his Teaching as a Subversive Activity are probably good books for me to read, even though I suspect they may not come up in any school board debates.
Setting that book aside, I thought I would start off with Building a Bridge to the Eighteenth Century. Postman sets the tone for the book with a quote by Randall Jarrell on the dedication page, “Soon we shall know everything the 18th century didn’t know, and nothing it did, and it will be hard to live with us.”
More on the CT GOP’s efforts against Voter Registration
Submitted by Aldon Hynes on Sat, 10/11/2008 - 10:59(Originally posted at MyLeftNutmeg.)
Since I wrote my previous blog post, The RNC Brings Voter Suppression to Connecticut there have been a few interesting developments.
More and more people are sending me information about this and about the RNC efforts across the nation to suppress voter registration and voter turnout. This included a PDF of a letter from Lucy Corelli, the Republican Registrar of Voters to Secretary of State Susan Bysiewicz and Attorney General Richard Blumenthal about a complaint she filed with the State Elections Enforcement Commission (SEEC). In her letter she writes
I am filing this complaint because I believe in the fair and democratic process. I feel fraudulent behavior should be discouraged and eliminated. Everyone who is eligible has the right to register and vote but this abuse of our system makes a mockery of one of our most precious rights.
The RNC Brings Voter Suppression to Connecticut
Submitted by Aldon Hynes on Tue, 10/07/2008 - 20:42(Originally posted at MyLeftNutmeg.)
Over the past several days, the Republican National Committee (RNC) has started an aggressive campaign against the Association of Community Organizations for Reform Now (ACORN). “ACORN is the nation’s largest grassroots community organization of low- and moderate-income people.” Recently, together with Project Vote Smart, they registered more than 1.3 million voters in 21 states.
Low- and moderate-income people have a tendency to vote Democratic and the RNC appears very concerned about how these new voters will affect the elections in November.
Last Thursday, the RNC had a conference call on ACORN in Wisconsin. Huffington Post reports that RNC discussed ‘allegations that a voter registration group, ACORN, had hired seven workers with felony criminal records to gather voter registrations’ and warned ‘that doing so poses a risk to voters who provide registrars with personal information.’
Today, I received an email that the RNC was holding another conference call today about ACORN in Indiana. However, I didn’t expect to see the RNC trying to suppress voter registration in Connecticut.
Yet this evening, I stumbled across a report at Only in Bridgeport which says that last Friday, Republican Registrar of Voters Joe Borges filed a complaint against ACORN with the ‘State Elections Enforcement Commission’.
According to Borges,
The organization ACORN during the summer of 2008 conducted a registration drive, which has produced over a hundred rejections due to incomplete forms and individuals who are not citizens…also we have a box of duplicate cards and three boxes of forms returned by the P.O. as undeliverable. All of this has been a strain on my office and jeopardizes our ability to enter legitimate registration cards.
Any registration drive is going to generate incomplete forms and forms of people who are not eligible to vote. It is the job of the Registrar of Voters to review the forms and determine who is in fact eligible or not. If determining whether or not forms are filled in properly and whether or not the people registering to vote are in fact eligible is too much of a strain on Mr. Borges, then he should resign and be replaced with someone capable of doing the job.
Emeline Bravo Blackwood, Chair of the East End ACORN chapter in Bridgeport, issued the following statement:
I am proud to be a part of ACORN's work to help more than 20,000 individuals fill out voter registration applications in Connecticut so far this year. Nationally, we have helped more than 1.3 million people fill out voter registration cards as part of our campaign to increase civic participation among low- and moderate income voters. It is shameful that partisan, right wing operatives – who are clearly afraid of our ability to bring low income people to the polls on election day – are more interested in slinging trumped up allegations at ACORN than in working with us in our campaigns to stop foreclosures and predatory lending, win paid sick days, raise the minimum wage, and make sure that low- income, working families have a seat at the table in our Democracy.
Here in Connecticut, there is still time to register new voters. Please, do everything you can to make sure as many eligible voters are registered and make it to the polls this November so that we can work together with great groups like ACORN to address the economic woes are country faces for the benefit of all people.