VSTE

Virginia Society for Technology in Education

  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • YouTube
  • About
    • About VSTE
    • Leadership
    • Awards
    • Get Involved
    • Subscribe
  • Events
    • Annual Conference
    • Brainstorm 2020: Limitless Learning
    • 2019 Conference
    • Live Events
    • Online Events
  • Diversity, Equity, & Inclusion
  • VE PLN
  • Blog
  • Contact Us

Leading a School in the Digital Age

February 18, 2018

David French is a member of the VSTE Board of Directors.

I often say that I have the greatest job in the world. I get to work with fantastic students and teachers every day. As the school principal, I have the opportunity to make decisions that can have a life-long impact on children. I truly don’t take that responsibility lightly. With 30 years as an educator (over half of this time being a principal), I have experienced a lot of change in what happens in a school. Now more than ever, we face an evolution of our students like we have not witnessed since dry erase replaced chalkboards.

Those transformational moments

Every now and then, we get to experience moments that shape our next steps. A few years ago this happened to me. Brandon was a fourth grader at Corporate Landing Elementary School. Brandon was a bright student but I knew he was not doing well in the classroom.

He was not interested in what was going on in the classroom. He had a traditional teacher but that kind of classroom was not meeting his needs. Students just don’t learn from worksheets. After school, he would be so deeply engaged into his pocket video game that you could not possibly disturb him.  I realized at that point that if we could transfer lessons onto that format, students would love it. From that point on, I made sure I learned as much as I could not only about the new kind of student in our schools, but how can we better meet their classroom needs.

When the Principal sneezes the school catches a cold

Teachers will only do what their leaders do. There are some that will take the reins and go, but most look to us to lead them. I realized that if we were going to meet our students where they are, I had to make this happen. Most all of our teachers want to be the best they can be, but they are most often looking for help to get there. It is our responsibility to provide on-going professional development opportunities

for our teachers that are relevant to engaging the 21st century learner. Providing them with the appropriate tools and keeping them current in those tools will only make it easier for our teachers to grow with the rate of evolution we are seeing in with our learners.

You can talk the talk but you had better walk the walk.

I always say that I will never ask a teacher to do something If I cannot do it myself. How can we ask teachers to try new strategies and tools to meet the needs of their learners if we are not willing to get outside our own comfort zones? If we are asking teachers to teach without worksheets, yet we hand out papers in our meetings, what is that showing our teachers? We talk much about student agency, but tend to overlook teacher agency. If we develop our teachers- then we are developing our students. As the principal, I have forced myself to learn new ways to doing my job using digital tools. Teachers see that. I always say that if I am willing to learn new ways, why shouldn’t others in our school do the same thing?

It is OK to fail

Once during a teacher presentation, one of my videos didn’t work. At first I thought that was bad and embarrassing;  but immediately I realized that it was one of the best things that could have happened. Teachers need to know that when you challenge yourself to grow, there are times things may not work as planned. I make it a point to let others know that as long as you are stretching yourself and trying new things to engage your students, that will happen and that is OK. Those who have not made mistakes have not tried anything new. Teachers feel comfortable with this if they know their principal does the same thing. They will grow at a faster rate if they feel safe taking risks. Taking risks must be part of on-going conversations. Over the past few years, those educators who challenged themselves to grow and use new tools in the classrooms were the ones taking risks. That has changed. Now the ones NOT using new tools and continue the traditional practices are taking larger risks. They risk losing their students each day. Today’s student requires a different teacher than they did a few years ago.

“If we teach today’s students using yesterday’s lessons, we are robbing them of their tomorrow”- John Dewey.

Today’s School Leader

We have always talked about the school principal being the instructional leader. We must also realize that this instructional leader is now more of a transformational leader. If we expect teachers to transform their classrooms, we must transform the schools. The transformational leader will establish the vision and goals; carry the technology banner in the school; model the use of digital tools and support their use throughout the school; engage in PD activities that focus on the integration of transformational learning in student learning activities-; provide PD for teachers and staff for facilitation of transformational learning (each year I dedicate 100% of our school’s professional development funds to send teachers to TechEd conferences); be an advocate for digital tools to support learning; and communicate the value and importance of Tech to all stakeholders.

“If children don’t learn the way we teach, we must teach they way they learn.” –Margaret Mead

Smiling man with red tie and beard
David French
Principal, Glenwood Elementary School, Virginia Beach

 

Share this:

  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Pinterest
  • LinkedIn
  • Email

Comments

  1. Dr. William Schmachtenberg says

    May 7, 2018 at 2:36 pm

    Mr. David French raises a good point in his blog post that included a fourth grader names Brandon who needed to learn not only from worksheets but from modern digital tools. It is surprising that Mr. French did not list the tools that educators have available today to meet the needs of 21st Century digital learners. A few years ago, VSTE at a brainstorming session taught me about MIT app inventor, and I saw how easy it was to create apps for android devices. In an hour, I had created my first app. Many teachers use Kahoot with students to review concepts on the internet and allow their students to answer multiple choice questions on their cell phones. The results are displayed on an LCD projector. Then there is game salad which allows the development of 2D games for mobile devices. Finally, we get to Unity3d (www.unity3d.com) which allows the development of games for iPhones, iPads, android devices, pcs, macs, and even virtual reality devices like google cardboard and Oculus Rift. If you would like to see what can be done with Unity3D, go to my website: http://www.evwllc.co, and click the Student showcase tab for games my students have created, and a list of apps I have created for the Apple App store. Unity 3D can also be used to create multiplayer games which are very popular with teenagers today using assets like Extremality and sine space’s servers.

    Reply

Leave a Reply to Dr. William Schmachtenberg Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

Join Us

VSTE membership is always free, so why not become a part of our community?

Click here to join us.

Already a member? You can support VSTE by making a donation to Friends of VSTE.

Click here to donate.

Search

Advertisement

VSTE on Twitter

  • Webinar: Being the Calm in The Storm https://t.co/RwXw4XR1TB

    2 days ago
  • Nominations for VTSE Board of Directors extended through Sunday, March 7th at 5:00pm. https://t.co/PUGVxFj17a

    2 days ago
  • Big Book Deal, March 1st, 2021 https://t.co/L2pEwzIpJq

    3 days ago

VSTE Partners

Big Deal Media

Big Book Deal, March 1st, 2021

VSTE partners with Big Deal Media to bring you carefully curated resources designed for K-12 … Continue Reading

Big Book Deal, February 15th, 2021

VSTE partners with Big Deal Media to bring you carefully curated resources designed for K-12 … Continue Reading

See More from Big Deal

VSTE Affiliations

 


Copyright © 2021 Virginia Society for Technology in Education · Log in

loading Cancel
Post was not sent - check your email addresses!
Email check failed, please try again
Sorry, your blog cannot share posts by email.