1. Changes in Learning,
Teaching and Technology
School Technology Services
Program Update andSchool
Stettler Middle Next Steps
Clearview School Division
December 12, 2012
6. Capabilities Required to Realize Inspiring
Education
Technology to support:
1. Analysis, planning and design for learning
2. Access to learning resources and supports
3. Communication, collaboration and creation of
knowledge
4. Assessment and Assurance
7. [Today’s youth] value
relationships, communication,
information, diversity and
empowerment, and technology
knits it all together for them.
(Mintz, 2008)
8. The Big Five: Youth Values
Communication
Relationships Empowerment
Technology
Information Diversity
(Valiquette, 2009)
9. Percent of children who have ever used a
mobile device to play games, watch videos, or
use other apps
0-1 year olds 2-4 year olds 5-8 year olds
10% 39% 52%
(Commonsense Media, 2011)
10. Over the last 30 days what device or devices
have you used to access the internet?
Tablet Computer or iPad 16%
Game Console 30%
Mp3 Player or iPod 34%
Cell Phone 49%
Desktop or Laptop Computer 88%
(Pew Internet & American Life Project, 2012)
11. Cell Phone Ownership: Teens 12-17
23% 54% 23%
Smart Phone Cell Phone None
(Pew Internet & American Life Project, 2012)
13. 95% of teens go online
80% of teens online use
social networking
(Pew Internet & American Life Project, 2011)
14. Overall, in your experience, are people
your age mostly kind or mostly unkind to
each other on social network sites?
People mostly kind 69%
People mostly unkind 20%
Depends 11%
Don't know 1%
(Pew Internet & American Life Project, 2011)
16. Shift
Less… More…
Technology for Teaching Technology for Learning
Computer Labs Bring Your Own Device
Wired Network Infrastructure Wireless Network Infrastructure
Physical Print Media Digital Multi-media
Room-Based Videoconferencing Desktop-Based Videoconferencing
Learning about Technology Learning with Technology
28. Inspiring Education: Guiding Principles
Learner-centred
Shared Responsibility and Accountability
Engaged Communities
Inclusive, Equitable Access
Responsive, Flexible Approach
Sustainable and Efficient Use of Resources
Innovation to Promote and Strive for Excellence
What are the implications of these principles when considering
modernization of a school?
How do we manage tradeoffs?
29. Sources
Commonsense Media. (2011, October 11). Zero to Eight Children's Media Use in America. Retrieved December
11, 2012, from Commonsense Media:
http://www.commonsensemedia.org/sites/default/files/research/zerotoeightfinal2011.pdf
Mintz, J. (2008, May 6). Government needs to rethink how to recruit young people. Retrieved December
11, 2012, from Marketing in the Public Sector: http://www.jimmintz.ca/2008/06/05/government-needs-to-rethink-
how-to-recruit-young-people/
Pew Internet & American Life Project. (2011, November 9). Teens, kindness and cruelty on social network sites.
Retrieved December 11, 2012, from Pew Internet & American Life Project:
http://pewinternet.org/Reports/2011/Teens-and-social-media/Summary/Findings.aspx
Pew Internet & American Life Project. (2012, March 1). Nearly half of American adults are smartphone owners.
Retrieved December 11, 2012, from Pew Internet & American Life Project:
http://pewinternet.org/Reports/2012/Smartphone-Update-2012.aspx
Pew Internet & American Life Project. (2012, March 19). Teens, Smartphones & Texting. Retrieved December
11, 2012, from Pew Internet & American Life Project: http://pewinternet.org/Reports/2012/Teens-and-
smartphones/Cell-phone-ownership/Smartphones.aspx
The Nielsen Company . (2011, December 15). New Mobile Obsession: U.S. Teens Triple Data Usage. Retrieved
December 11, 2012, from Nielsen Wire: http://blog.nielsen.com/nielsenwire/online_mobile/new-mobile-obsession-
u-s-teens-triple-data-usage/
Valiquette, M. (2009, September 22). Youth in Transition / Youth 101. Retrieved December 11, 2012, from York
University: http://www.yorku.ca/abel/abel_website/homepage/Youth_101_Education.pdf
Hinweis der Redaktion
I noticed these two signs as I drove in to Stettler on December 12. The first was on my left in front of the Campus Alberta office and advertised Campus Alberta programs for upgrading and employment skills. The second was on my right a half-block farther along the road and advertised an agronomy seminar to be held at the Rec Centre that night.What struck me was the sense that this is a learning community…and that this creates great opportunity for purposeful collaboration. Could a modernized school be a hub of community learning? Shouldn’t it be?
Framing the conversation about technology in Inspiring Education.
Framing technology in capabilities needed – so that we wouldn’t be discussing technology for its own sake.
Thinking about technology from the perspective of youth.
A visual to support the previous slide.
Even very young learners are accessing technology – this sets different expectations.
Although most teens indicate that they accessed the internet through a desktop or laptop computer, what is significant here is the number of “non-traditional” mobile devices. Using these kinds of devices, leveraging student owned devices can be a way for schools to get much closer to one to one, and leverage technology in the learning process.
49% of teens indicate that they used a cell to access the internet, yet only 23% report owning a smart phone. This could be a problem with how smart phone is defined by teens.
This is a form of communication – this is how learners express their desire to be connected to each other.
This satisfies many values – information, relationships, communication, and empowerment (if we allow students to personalize their technology choices).
It was interesting to observe how the K-5 classrooms were organized with students in small, collaborative groupings, but at the grade 6 level and above, desks in rows was the order of the day (the exception being the CTS fabrication and foods labs).
There are three libraries in the three schools, three gyms, and so on – no common, shared spaces. Not surprisingly, there are three distinct cultures, and a feeling of disconnect between the schools. It seemed to be a strange way to organize learning. All three buildings were connected and accessible, yet there was no feeling of broader community.
There is an open area in front of the high school office that’s full of ramps and stairs. I thought the space would have been great as a student gathering space, but the placement of ramps and railings broke the space up too much. Students don’t come here to hang out. I wondered what a different design could look like to not only enable accessibility but to encourage connection.(This slide and the next were added on the fly)
I wondered if the Framework for student learning couldn’t be used as a framework for the modernization of the school.
At the outset of the conversation, Avi framed the challenge: high demand for facility modernization across the province puts this ask in direct competition with everyone else for scarce resources.I asked if the principles outlined in Inspiring Education might create a starting point for tradeoff discussions – because not everything can be done.(Added on the fly)