Monday, February 1, 2016

Tech Interview LM 550 Spring 2016


1. What is the most important piece of technology for students at your school?
Because we are a 1:1 technology district, each student has a school issued Lenovo Yoga laptop that has textbooks, office products, and needed student apps already downloaded.
2. Where do your technology funds come from and does that influence the technology purchased?
For the past several years, all technology has been funded and purchased at the district level. The technology plan has been put in place to maximize the money spent. The needs of the entire district as a unit are considered. 2015-16 is the first year the local school has received any money for individual school purchases.  A technology committee was formed at each school to decide how these extra monies were to be spent.  A list was formed based on teacher recommendations and then voted on by the committee. This allowed us to purchase smaller items that were specific needs for Grissom.
3. How does technology impact the modern student?
I asked one of our students to answer this first… She said technology puts information at their fingertips, no borders or boundaries. However, she worries about constantly looking at computer screens. Students use their laptops all day in class, and are on them at night doing homework; or looking at their phones. She thinks that is too much and causes her headaches.
Our students have online textbooks, upload assignments to Edmodo, communicate with teachers in Edmodo, complete assessments online, collaborate with one another on class and group projects through One Drive, and use the cloud for storage. Teachers have software that allows them to see each student’s computer screen during class.
4. What are some of the best ways to protect students while using technology at your school?
The district has a firewall that filters inappropriate material; teachers have access to DyKnow which allows monitoring of students as they work in the classroom; class policies are structured to limit inappropriate access and behaviors.
 5. How have you taught your students to protect themselves while using technology?
Our students are given Cyber Safety lessons in key classrooms and during library visits and collaborative teaching sessions. CommonSense Media lessons are taught to the students.
6. How do you use technology to prepare your students for further education?
Students use technology to devise their Four Year Plans; Each senior is assisted in making application to college using the NAVIANCE online system; Students are instructed in Alabama Virtual Library that will prepare them for college research as well, emphasizing peer reviewed sources, MLA Citations, and different media formats. Students are encouraged to use technology for presentations. Cloud-based products and storage options are used by students. Robotics, Cyber Security, and Green Power Initiative are in place to encourage further education and provide job readiness skills.
7. Do you feel that technology can inhibit students’ abilities to gather information for themselves?
Yes. Students do not have the basic idea of where information is coming from, nor how those sources are organized. There is also a problem with determining credible sources. Most students just ask for information and blindly accept the results. Evaluating sources and information, organizing thoughts, and summarizing content are becoming lost arts.
8. How do you educate your students’ parents/care givers about the technology used by your school?
Parents/care givers are given handbooks at the beginning of each school year that outlines the technology provided within the system. Parents are also encouraged to access information on the school webpage in the parent resource section, hot links for specific topics, and links for current items of interest to parents, or to notify when something needs their attention.

I plan to interview Mrs. Kimbrough and Mrs. Baker, who are the Library Media Specialist at Grissom High School in Huntsville, Al. The phone number to the school is 256-428-8000 and Mrs. Baker’s email is Deborah.Baker@hsv-k12.org.



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