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CAREIResearch Practice Newsletter Archive

Center for Applied Research and Educational Improvement (CAREI)
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Tel: 612-624-0300 - Fax: 612-625-3086

What's inside.

Volume 4, Number 2

In this Issue:

From the Director:
And to Think, It All Began with Our Lovable Minnesota Rodent

Minnesota Committed to Providing Technology to All Students

High Tech Teaching

Technology and the Schools: The Future is Now

Web66: A K-12 World Wide Web Project

Notes from a Netmaker

 

 

CAREI > Research/Practice Newsletter

Minnesota Committed to Providing Technology to All Students

By Bruce H. Johnson, Commissioner, Minnesota Department of Children, Families, and Learning

Information runs the world. Information drives the global economy. Data, voices and images flow under the ground and through the air. Information on world events, business developments and scientific advances is available almost on demand. Clearly, those who are able to obtain high quality information first will have the edge. Minnesota's students will need this edge to compete and succeed in an information-driven marketplace and society. The Governor and Legislature teamed up in the 1996 legislative session to allocate more than $12 million to help provide Minnesota students with the information technologies they need today.

Information technologies bring the world into the classroom by allowing students to interact with other students in their community, state, nation and world. Information technologies have the potential for being a constant and convenient electronic connector that can join the lives and minds of students, teachers, employers and parents. Our goal is to make learning a shared, community-based activity.

There are few places as information-intensive as a school. Learning requires managing information and giving it meaning. But today, few schools have outside telephone lines in the classroom let alone high powered computers connected to international networks like the Internet. As one student said, "It's the 1950's in the classroom and the 1990's in the hallway." Schools simply must invest in the technology infrastructure, hardware, and software that will increase learning productivity and provide a rich stream of information into the classroom. Currently, the very places where students should be learning how to use and manage information provide little access to the high powered tools of the information age.

Some schools have invested heavily in information technologies and provide a high degree of access for students and teachers. These schools can access information from a variety of local, state and global networks; they have the tools to provide learning tailored to individual learning styles. They can provide teachers with efficient and effective means to manage student information and develop curriculum based on the latest research. These schools are ready to operate within and prepare students for the information-intensive society, workplace and world.

There is a clear need to provide a full range of information technologies to all of Minnesota's elementary, middle, and secondary schools. Today's students are tomorrow's workers and community members. They need to understand the possibilities for managing and using information technologies to meet their work, community, and personal needs. Employers want technology-literate workers and parents want their children to be prepared for postsecondary education and highly skilled work. The longer schools wait to provide their students with access, the more isolated they will become from the information revolution that is transforming American business, industry, and society.

The good news is that most of Minnesota's schools are ready to provide information technologies. The Governor and Legislature teamed up during the 1996 legislative session to help schools and students take advantage of the information revolution by providing more than $12 million in funding for information technologies. These funds will help the Minnesota Department of Children, Families, and Learning to develop the state's technology infrastructure and to provide hardware, software and information planning around the state so that technology can be applied in all classrooms. Our eventual goal is to connect students, parents, teachers, community members and others around the state, nation, and world in a larger learning community that provides information tailored to students' learning needs.

Projects funded to help complete Minnesota's technology infrastructure for schools:

Education Technology Improvement Clearinghouse

The Legislature allocated $250,000 to establish a grant program to create regional technology clearinghouses to refurbish, upgrade and distribute donated computers to schools. These clearinghouses will be accepting donated computers before the 1996-97 school year begins and will provide schools with the first refurbished computers before the school year ends. This initiative will not only put refurbished computers in the hands of students and teachers, it will also provide students the opportunity to learn technical skills by involving them in the actual refurbishing and program management processes.

School District Telecommunication Grant

This initiative will open the Learning Network of Minnesota, a statewide telecommunications highway linking K-12 schools, public libraries, and postsecondary education, to non-public schools. The network provides access to distance-learning opportunities and information resources such as the Internet for all of Minnesota's students. Non-public schools will, however, have to pay for the cost of connecting to this highway.

Telecommunications Access Grants

An additional $5 million was added to the Fiscal Year 1997 appropriation for a total of $15.5 million over the biennium to connect school districts and regional public library systems to the Learning Network of Minnesota. This will connect most school districts and libraries to Internet, interactive television and data movement services. School districts have voluntarily entered into nine regional clusters to facilitate building this telecommunications highway.

Rates for Special Service to Schools

This allows telephone and telecommunications companies to provide free or reduced services to schools or libraries in their area. The special service rates improve schools' ability to competitively bid for telephone and telecommunications services. It also makes it easier for schools to collaborate with local telephone and telecommunications services providers.

Cooperative Purchasing

The Department of Children, Families, and Learning will work with the Department of Administration to establish direct statewide contracts with hardware and software manufacturers. These contracts will combine the purchasing power of schools, libraries and other state agencies to reduce the of cost of video, and computer hardware and software. The goal of this initiative is to purchase newer technology more quickly and at a lower cost.

Programs funded to increase the application of information technologies in Minnesota's schools:

Technical Assistance

This requires the Minnesota Department of Children, Families, and Learning to work with school districts, service cooperatives, TIES, education districts, higher education, public libraries, and other governmental agencies to develop a technology planning process that helps local school districts to develop and implement a technology plan. The Department will meet with representatives from each of the nine Telecommunications Access Grant Clusters, geographic regions collaborating to implement information technologies, to develop guidelines and standards for technology planning. These standards will then be shared with schools to help develop their own technology plans.

After-School Programs

One million dollars has been allocated to provide grants to school districts, private schools, nonprofit community organizations, public housing agencies, and successful youth programs to use technology in after-school programs. The aim is to encourage students to use their free time after school to learn.

Advancement of Technology in Education

The Center for Applied Research and Education Improvement (CAREI) at the University of Minnesota received $20,000 to publicize ways telecommunications and computers can be used to enhance and support learning. This information will be made available on the Internet and updated regularly.

Technology Incentives Pilot Program

One school will be given a four-year levy authority to purchase each ninth grader a lap-top computer and to build and maintain a network for these computers. This program identifies model ways for students to use information technologies to increase learning productivity.

Technology Integration Matching Grants

An additional $3.5 million was allocated for grants to school districts that will provide training to help staff and students learn how to use technology in the classroom and to purchase computer hardware and software. These districts must match each $1 of state funds with $2 of local funds and must have a designated technology coordinator.

Technology Related Fund Balance Adjustment

School districts with positive fund balances will not receive aid or levy reductions for general education revenues for fiscal year 1996. These funds can be used to purchase information technologies for schools. This initiative will supply about $1.3 million from general education funds and a levy of $800,000.

Electronic Curriculum

A $750,000 allocation will create a pilot project for a group of school districts to develop, implement and demonstrate how to use an electronic curriculum library. This library must provide teachers with curriculum aligned with the content standards of the graduation rule and must include benchmarks to track student progress. The Environmental Conservation Section of the Minneapolis Library will receive $50,000 for technology investments and to expand environmentally related curriculum on the Internet. An organization with a demonstrated ability to apply computer hardware and software to reading improvement for at-risk students will receive a $40,00 grant.

The new information technologies have enormous potential for learning. If properly used, they can help teachers engage their students in learning and enable students to experience the larger world without leaving the classroom. Information technologies have the potential to help teachers deal better with individual learning styles.

Technology can also help to meet the needs of special education students. Assistive technology for students with special needs is becoming increasingly affordable. Voice recognition systems, for example, are decreasing in price as the technology improves and the user base expands. This technology is easier to use, more accurate and costs one-seventh of what it did four years ago. Voice recognition systems replace labor-intensive keyboarding. Thus, the funds being spent for an assistant to take dictation from a physically impaired student can now be invested in other services. This can reduce costs for schools while improving independence for students who can do their own work.

In order to weave information technologies into the curricular and administrative fabric of schools, teachers and administrators need to make a cultural shift. This requires patience and commitment. Teachers need time and long term support to learn how to use and apply technology to engage students in high level learning skills. This will require intensive staff development up front as well as ongoing training. Most network managers have come to learn that funds should be allocated equally to staff development, hardware and software purchase, and ongoing maintenance and support. The equipment must be put it place, teachers need training to use it, and the equipment must be maintained so it is reliable. New technology without focused ongoing professional development is like no new technology at all.

It is easy to get excited about how technology will transform our schools. However, technology alone is but a tool and can only help people more effectively transform schools into organizations that prepare students for the 21st century and beyond. Technology will not and cannot take the place of sound decision making by parents, teachers, administrators and school boards on curriculum, facilities, and other school services. In fact, technology managed poorly could actually do more harm than good. Used effectively, information technologies are useful tools to help organize information and support sound planning practices driven by high quality and current information.

The rate of technological advancement in industry and society will continue to increase. Learning how to use and manage information technologies has already become a basic skill in modern society. Teachers and students need the tools and hands-on experience to learn how to use information technologies to support learning goals. The future success of students depends on their ability to manage the information technologies of today to prepare them for success in society and the workplace.

 

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©2000-2006 Regents of the University of Minnesota. All rights reserved.
The University of Minnesota is an equal opportunity educator and employer.
Last modified on September 17, 2009