We are piloting our new digital badge program at the Superhero Summit on June 21! Participants of the nanobug session will receive a participation badge for the work they do during the session. Participants will then have an opportunity to earn two more badges, a reflection badge and an application badge. We will be gathering input from digital badge recipients to help us improve our badging program as we prepare for our December conference.
VSTE News
Big Deal Book, June 15, 2017
VSTE partners with Big Deal Media to bring you the best in online resources for digital learning and professional development plus grant and competition opportunities and more. In this edition, you can Avoid the Summer Slide, Tap Open Resources, Engage with Robots & More.
Here are a few of our favorites from this edition...be sure to check the full Big Deal Book for more great resources!
Program Promoting Astute Digital Citizenship
In celebration of Internet Safety Month, Google has released a classroom curriculum and computer game to teach children in grades 3–5 about online safety and security. The program, called Be Internet Awesome, is part of Google’s effort to instill youth with digital savvy and to encourage them to be good internet citizens.
Game Fostering Creativity and Empathy on Real-World Issues
The online digital multiplayer game @Stake was created by Emerson College to foster empathy and creativity between diverse perspectives on real-world issues.
Conversations About Bullying and Harassment
The KnowBullying app for iOS and Android is designed to help parents initiate difficult conversations about bullying and harassment with their children.
Not all the resources are time sensitive, so be sure to check out the archives.
Proposed TSIP Revision
A committee of The Virginia Society for Technology in Education (VSTE), with the support of the Virginia Department of Education's Office of Technology and Virtual Learning, is drafting new Technology Standards for Instructional Personnel (TSIP).
If approved, these standards will update the original 1998 standards and represent the base level skills that every educator must meet in order to be considered proficient in the use of technology for teaching and learning.
Below you can read the most current draft of the proposed revision to the Standards. We invite feedback on this proposal from every Virginia educator and you can provide your comments using this form.
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Proposed TSIP Standards (DRAFT) 2/13/2017
1. Lifelong Learner: Teachers engage in ongoing professional learning related to content, pedagogy and technology.
a. Engages in ongoing professional growth related to the use of innovative instructional strategies that integrate digital technologies.
b. Use technology to obtain feedback that allows for reflection and improvement in the learning process.
c. Employs digital tools to collaborate with the learning community on educational topics and learning opportunities.
2. Digital Leadership: Teachers model safe and ethical practices for their students.
a. Cultivate and manage their digital identity and reputation and are aware of the permanence of their actions in the digital world.
b. Promote safe and ethical behavior with students through collaborative online experiences
c. Embed digital citizenship skills in all lessons involving online experiences
d. Model the use of technology to communicate, create, collaborate and solve problems
e. Select appropriate digital content, tools and resources that meet local, state and/or federal policies.
f. Demonstrate an understanding of the rights and obligations of student privacy and security when collecting and using student data and selecting digital content, tools, and resources.
3. Learning Facilitator: Teachers support student learning by harnessing the power of technology.
a. Incorporate learning strategies that use technology to accommodate learner variability, personalize learning, and engender student choice, self-direction and goal-setting. (Possible Indicators: coursework in personalizing learning; recognizes and can articulate examples of personalizing learning using technology; articulates how to determine learner variability and potential technology solutions.)
b. Assist students in selecting and using appropriate and available digital tools for learning, creating, problem-solving and communicating. (Possible Indicators: Coursework in using digital tools in the classroom; recognizes a variety of digital tools and can articulate how they might be used with students; lesson plan that involves using digital tools to develop these skills.)
c. Use a variety of formative and summative assessments that leverage the power of technology to provide immediate and specific feedback, and offer alternative learning paths to students including competency-based approaches. (Possible Indicators: coursework in assessments; experience with using technology-based formative and summative assessments; ability to develop such assessments regarding a specific SOL.)
d. Acquire, access, and analyze quantitative and qualitative data to effectively respond to students’ needs and communicate findings to various stakeholders. (Possible indicators: coursework in assessment and understanding data; experience with using technology-based assessment tools; communication skills for interpreting data for student/parent/administrators.)
4. Skilled Technology User: Understand the fundamental concepts of technology operations and troubleshooting as well as basic uses of technology in instruction
a. Demonstrate the ability to choose and use digital technologies including both hardware, software and web-based resources to support classroom instruction
b. Demonstrate the ability to troubleshoot typical classroom technologies using a variety of resources
c. Perform basic computing operations such as accessing accounts, select appropriate applications to perform tasks, file management and web navigation.
New Board Members Elected for 2017 – 2020 Term
Five candidates have been elected to the VSTE Board of Directors for the 2017-2020 term. Two are new members while one is returning for a second term. We welcome all of them to the VSTE leadership:
David French, Virginia Beach City Public Schools
Heather Hurley, Arlington County Public Schools
Anita Harris, Cumberland County Public Schools
Terry Lowry, Wakefield Schools
Michael Speidel, Loudoun County Public Schools
Recognize Excellence with VSTE
VSTE recognizes excellence in education through its annual awards program. We ask our members for nominations for three awards: Outstanding Leader, Outstanding Teacher and Innovative Educator of the Year. Winners receive a complimentary registration to the annual conference and are recognized during the opening session.
You may nominate yourself or a colleague.
Nominations close on October 1, 2016.