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Virginia Society for Technology in Education

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Front Page Middle

VSTE Partners With JoyLabz to Provide Makey Makey Training

September 17, 2018 by vsteadmin

VSTE is pleased, as part of its partnership with Joylabz, to offer professional development for the Makey Makey. Not sure what that is? This video should clear up any confusion:


Taught by a certified Makey Makey Training Partner, the Makey Makey Invention Literacy Workshop for Educators is a fun hands-on learning experience where you’ll learn how to teach Invention Literacy, Making, and Design Thinking using the award winning Makey Makey invention kit. We’ll explore how to teach circuits and conductivity using Makey Makeys and then put our skills to use designing your own inventions! Participants learn best practices and gain access to a multimedia training website that can be used later when working with your students or training others. Participants receive a Makey Makey (offered at the reduced price of $20) to take home along with a certificate of participation.

VSTE has certified trainers located in almost every region of the state. Contact mikescott@vste.org to get more information about participating in or hosting a training.

Current Scheduled Training

VSTE is offering this session on December 1st in Virginia Beach during its all day pre conference workshops.

Invention Literacy Workshop
Higher Education Center, Abingdon, Virginia
Tuesday, April 9, 2019

9 AM – 3 PM
Trainer: Karen Richardson
Cost: $25 includes Makey Makey

Taught by a certified Makey Makey Training Partner, the Makey Makey Invention Literacy Workshop for Educators is a fun hands-on learning experience where you’ll learn how to teach Invention Literacy, Making, and Design Thinking using the award winning Makey Makey invention kit. We’ll explore how to teach circuits and conductivity using Makey Makeys and then put our skills to use designing your own inventions! Participants learn best practices and gain access to a multimedia training website that can be used later when working with your students or training others. Participants receive a Makey Makey to take home along with a certificate of participation.

 

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Filed Under: Events, Front Page Middle, VSTE News Tagged With: Makey Makey, training

Past is Prologue: A Message from the Chairperson

September 9, 2018 by vsteadmin

Keith David Reeves

The call to serve children is clarion, resonating through time and across countless divides. Transcending culture and community, geography and space, we who teach feel our hearts swell and sing with the vibrations of that call, even when things are hard… and I daresay especially when they are.

Teaching in 2018 is not easy. Working in a field that lives at the state of the art, intersecting pedagogy and technology, is a profound challenge, but nearly each one of you that I’ve met - thousands now, in this sixth year of my service on the VSTE Board - shares the ethical mandate that we must use our skills and talents to teach, to make the world better for children, and to serve. It has been humbling to be a part of this extended network that is in so many ways an extended family, and to know that even on the hard days, we are not alone.

September is a hard time of year for we educational technologists. From people wondering what we did all summer despite spending weeks in back rooms with stacks of iPads to the inevitable bombardment of those who seek assistance with that which we’ve assisted them a dozen times, it is precisely because we dwell at the nexus of critical practices that we are so important to our school communities. Our students and teachers rely on our expertise as well as our compassion. The grace with which so many of you labor to ensure that everything is as right as it can be, is as ready as it must be, is a source of great inspiration for me and for my fellow VSTE leaders.

Inevitably, programs will expand, new tools will continue to arrive, and we will continue to have to expand our skill sets and knowledge bases, network with those in ever-more-diverse fields and related services… and we will inhale, and exhale, and strive for grace and empathy for those who rely upon our unique blend of futurist and practitioner, of superhero and grunt.

In the evolving landscape of the internet of things, with artificial intelligence and virtual environments steadily on the rise, and exponentially-increasing breadth and density of information available to children and adults around the world, our jobs get harder and harder, year after year. It takes special passion, work ethic, professionalism, and knowledge - and admittedly maybe just a little bit of cray-cray - to be an educational technology leader in 2018. I know that I do it because I am absolutely convinced that the ITRT role in Virginia represents the most bang for any buck anywhere in the Commonwealth, and many of the wonderful classroom teachers that have strong ed tech backgrounds bring those same skills to bear even if they are not in the ITRT role itself.

We meaningful integrators of technology into learning wear more hats than most, and so many of us fluidly move between roles as needs arise: teacher, mentor, coach, assistant, administrator, technician, principal, analyst, graphic designer, communications expert, media consultant, pedagogue, curriculum designer… We know few people understand that there is no single-sentence answer to the question “what does an ed tech person do?”

There’s no much we don’t do in the service of education in Virginia. I am proud of us, and I am proud of you.

I appreciate you, and your work, and hope you will remember in this unique (and admittedly tiring) season that we do what we do for all the right reasons, and even if you don’t get the smile or thanks that you deserve, you have it nonetheless: You have it from me, if no one else has said so today.

Serving as your Chairperson for for the past three years has been one of the great privileges of my professional life, and I’m humbled that you’ve chosen me to be your voice for advocacy in Virginia so many times. This will be my final year as your Chairperson as I conclude my second and final term of office on the Board of Directors in 2019. As I look back over the past six years, I am struck by the profound number of wonderful people I’ve met, and how much stronger my network is now than it was when I began. I count myself fortunate to represent you, and to have helped shape this most recent chapter of our organization, strengthening our finances and our infrastructure, fostering powerful collaboration and our national-class conference… What will the next years hold for you, and for VSTE? I hope those two destinies are intertwined, and that you will continue to lend your voice and your talents to your students, your colleagues, and to this organization we so love.

Welcome back to school, my friends. VSTE stands ready to support you all year, and I pledge my full efforts in the months to come, for one more phenomenal year.

With affection and in service,

Keith David Reeves, M.Ed., CETL
Chairperson
Virginia Society for Technology in Education

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Filed Under: Blog, Board of Directors, Front Page Middle, VSTE News, VSTE Voices Tagged With: VSTE Voices

Board Welcomes Five Board Members Following Recent Election

May 23, 2018 by vsteadmin

Five members were elected by the VSTE membership for the 2018 - 2021 term. Three of those elected are incumbents and will begin their second terms. Two of those elected are new members and can serve up to two terms.

Learn more about each Board member by clicking below:

Smiling Man in Blue ShirtRod Carnill, Incumbent
Supervisor of Instructional Technology Coaches
Frederick County Public Schools

Learn More

 

 

Lynmara Colón
Principal
Prince William County Public Schools

Learn More

 

 

Woman Smiling

Nicci Dowd
Special Education Teacher
Prince William County Public Schools

Learn More

 

 

Smiling man with glasses

Tim Stahmer, Incumbent
Freelance Educator
Fairfax County Public Schools (Retired)

Learn More

 

 

Smiling woman with glasses

Meg Swecker, Incumbent
Coordinator of Technology Integration/ITRT
Roanoke County Public Schools

 

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Filed Under: Board of Directors, Front Page Middle, VSTE News Tagged With: Board of Directors

2018 Awards Open Now: Recognize Excellence with VSTE

May 21, 2018 by vsteadmin

The Virginia Society for Technology in Education honors excellence in educational technology through four awards given at the annual conference in December. For 2018, the VSTE Awards committee has updated the awards program by creating a new award and changing the process to include more input from the nominees. Awards Committee chair, Terry Lowry, described the process in a recent blog post.

Nominations are being accepted for Outstanding Teacher, Leader and Coach of the Year and Innovative Educator of the Year.

The Outstanding Teacher, Leader and Coach of the Year awards recognize and honor one leader and one teacher who have demonstrated outstanding achievement and leadership in implementing technology to improve education.

The Innovative Educator of the Year award recognizes innovative teaching practices.  Award recipients are selected from a pool of nominations submitted by VSTE members from around Virginia.

Nominations will remain open through early September. Nominees will have until early October to provide supporting evidence to the awards committee and decisions will be made by October 15, 2018. Award winners will be recognized during the opening general session at the annual conference. They are also provided with a complimentary conference registration and hotel accommodations for the annual conference. This year's conference will be held December 2 - 4, 2018, in Virginia Beach.

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Filed Under: Awards, Front Page Middle, VSTE News

Turning Big Data Into Big Benefits For Students

May 15, 2018 by vsteadmin

Ten Questions BrightBytes Can Help You Answer as You Turn Big Data into Big Benefits for Students

  1. How can we be sure that we offer the specific professional development teachers need?

“With BrightBytes data, we discovered that most of our districts needed to focus on digital citizenship skills. We created online modules to teach those skills, and made them available for free to every teacher.” —Teela Watson, Director of Instructional Services & Digital Learning, Texas Education Service Center Region 11 (ESC 11)

 

  1. Is our organization’s data and direction clear to all stakeholder groups?

“Our districts use BrightBytes data to show their school boards where they are with integration. It’s been critical to provide clear, communicable data to identify challenges.” Teela Watson, Director of Instructional Services & Digital Learning, Texas Education Service Center Region 11 (ESC 11)

  1. How can we take complex data and use it to make an immediate difference in a student’s life?

“With the Student Success module, we can identify a student at risk of dropping out and the specific issues immediately. This information helps determine the right interventions.” —Jeffrey Luks, Manager, Northeastern (NY) Regional Information Center (NERIC)

  1. What can data show us in terms of interventions for each student?

“The Intervention module helps schools look at inputs and outputs to determine which interventions have the most impact on students.”

—Jeffrey Luks, Manager, Northeastern (NY) Regional Information Center (NERIC)

  1. How can we identify students in need early and get them the necessary support?

“By analyzing data from multiple sources, the Student Success module provides easy-to-understand visualizations to help target specific students for support.”—Bryan Fairbrother, Educational Data Services Leader, Mohawk (NY) Regional Information Center

  1. Is there a way to understand student trajectory earlier?

“The data is meaningful, impactful, and clear, so we can see the big picture, identify students who need help, and take immediate action.” —Bryan Fairbrother, Educational Data Services Leader, Mohawk (NY) Regional Information Center

  1.  How can data help teachers learn to integrate technology in a way that meets students’ expectations?

“Teachers report using technology frequently, but students say otherwise. We have to provide the mindset and training to support a big shift. We started a book series and as a result, one teacher spent the summer rethinking lesson plans.” —Charlotte M. Golden, Director of Curriculum & Instruction/Educational Technologies, Carbon Lehigh (PA) Intermediate Unit #21

  1. Can data provide insight on the big picture of our initiatives?  

“Often, districts make decisions based on intuition. With the Technology & Learning module, we’ve been able to connect the dots to see how to achieve smaller initiatives. The data helps us learn how each initiative works together toward a common goal.” —Lisa Cala Ruud, Managing Coordinator - Instructional Services, Northeastern (NY) Regional Information Center (NERIC)

  1. How can we better determine and validate new initiatives?

“The data puts assumptions in check. There was a lot of resistance about blended learning from educators who assumed students didn’t have devices or Internet at home. After the BrightBytes survey, they discovered only a small percentage lacked access.”

—Lisa Cala Ruud, Managing Coordinator - Instructional Services, Northeastern (NY) Regional Information Center (NERIC)

  1. How can we better understand our district’s digital equity?

“The data serves as a jumping-off point for conversations. We found most students have devices at home, but many of them are shared. That data impacts the consistency for instruction at home. A teacher needs to be intentional about using digital assets at home.” —Doug Renfro, Executive Director of Learning Technology and Library Services, Metro Nashville (TN) Public Schools

Learn More about using data to support students at the Bright Bytes website: http://www.brightbytes.net/

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Filed Under: Education, Front Page Middle, VSTE News, VSTE Partners Tagged With: Data

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