Title: The State of Technology in Maryland, 2002: Why the
1The State of Technology in Maryland, 2002 Why
the New Focus on Technology
- Davina Pruitt-Mentle
- September 23, 2002
2Pre Assessment Exercise
3Overview of Pre-Assignment
- Focus today no longer on basic skills
- In the mid to late 90s, University provided
basic skills training for the K-12 community - K-12 then developed their own training IT PD
units - University provided integration training
- K-12 IT PD staff then developed their own
integration training - University focused on web-based/distance
education - K-12 developed own and/or with company partners
- Currently, the university focus is on
- new topics (Cyberethics, universal access,
accessibility issues), - research (assessment of student and PD teacher
outcomes) - survey/assessment data collection and analysis
4Growth of Access
- Since the 1980s, when computers were first
targeted for deployment in schools, more than 5
billion has been spent on hardware, software,
teacher training, and connections. - Is there a set of necessary skills that defines
technology literacy or fluency?
5Changing Definitions
- 1982 -Teachers are told to Teach students to
program in Basic - Rationale Its the language that comes with the
computer. - 1984 - Teachers are told to Teach students to
program in LOGO - Rationale Teach students to think, not just
program. - 1986- Teachers told to Teach with integrated
drill and practice systems - Rationale Individualize instruction and
increase test scores. - Source H.J. Becker, Analysis and Trends of
School Use of New Information Technologies,
Office of Technology Assessment contractor
report, March, 1994
6Changing Directions
- 1988 - Teachers told to Teach word processing
- Rationale Use computers as tools, like adults
do. - 1990 - Teachers are told to Teach with
curriculum-specific tools (e.g., history
databases, science simulators, data probes). - Rationale Integrating the computers with the
existing curriculum. - Source H.J. Becker, Analysis and Trends of
School Use of New Information Technologies,
Office of Technology Assessment contractor
report, March, 1994
7Changing Directions
- 1992 - Teachers told to Teach multimedia
hypertext programming - Rationale Change the curriculum, students learn
the best by creating products for an audience. - 1994 - Teachers are told to Teach with Internet
telecommunications - Rationale Let students be part of the real
world. - Source H.J. Becker, Analysis and Trends of
School Use of New Information Technologies,
Office of Technology Assessment contractor
report, March, 1994
8Drivers of Change
9National and International Assessments of
Computer Competence
- In 1983, the landmark report A Nation at Risk
identified computer competence as a fourth basic
skill - The emphasis was on computer literacy
10National Assessment of Educational Progress
- 1985/1986 - The first national assessment of
computer competence, conducted as a part of the
National Assessment of Educational Progress
(NAEP) - Surveyed 3rd, 7th, and 11th graders on their
knowledge and skills in using the computer - Students did well on identifying parts of
computer but poorly on computer applications and
knowledge of programming - Report provided the framework for examining
differences in outcomes related to gender, race
and ethnicity, computer use in and outside of
school and parental education - Source M.E. Martinez and N.A. Mead, Computer
Competence The First National Assessment,
Educational Testing Service, April, 1988
11Business Demands
- 1991, the Department of Labor report What Work
Requires of Students, the Secretarys Commission
on Achieving Necessary Skills (SCANS) identified
the following as necessary for the workforce - Resource allocation skills
- Interpersonal skills
- Information skills
- System skills
- Technology Skills
12Resource Allocation Skills
- Handling
- Time
- Money
- Materials
- Space
- Staff
13Interpersonal Skills
- Working on Teams
- Teaching Others
- Serving Customers
- Leading
- Negotiating
- Working well with people from culturally diverse
backgrounds
14Information Skills
- Acquiring and evaluating data
- Organizing and maintaining files
- Interpreting and communicating
- Using computers to process information
15System Skills
- Understanding social, organizational, and
technological systems - Monitoring and correcting performance
- Designing or improving systems
16Technology Skills
- Selecting equipment and tools
- Applying technology to specific tasks
- Maintaining and troubleshooting technologies
17International Association For The Evaluation of
Educational Achievement (IEA)
- 1992 - Survey involving 12 countries -using the
Functional Information Technology Test instrument - In U.S., 11,284 students from 573 schools
- Results
- U.S. spends considerable more time learning
about computers, but did not give students
opportunities to practice with computers (as
Austria, Germany and the Netherlands) - Western European countries require
computer-related classes (informatics)- in the
U.S. not required
18Scholastic Achievement Test
- In 1996, high school graduates who participated
in the Scholastic Achievement Test (SAT) provided
information on the kinds of computer technology
they used in school - 72 Word processing
- 51 Computer Literacy
- 44 English Courses
- Math problems, Data Processing and Computer
programming 25 - College Board data published in R.J. Coley, J.
Cradler and P.K. Engel, Computers and
Classrooms The Status of Technology in U.S.
Schools. Policy Information Report, Princeton,
NJ, Policy Information Center, Educational
Testing Service, May, 1997
19Federal Leadership and National Standards
- Technology Literacy Challenge Initiative (Clinton
administration) - Built on 4 pillars
- Computers
- Connections
- Content
- Competency
20Standards
- New Standards Project, begun in 1991 by the
National Center for Education and Economy
(http//www.ncee.org) - New Standards Reference Examinations
- Designed to measure student achievement in
mathematics and English language arts - Uses a mixture of traditional test items as well
as performance tasks - Computer skills are not distinguished as discrete
standards but embedded
21Technology Education and Information Literacy
Standards
- Technology Literacy standards proposed by the
International Technology Education Association
(ITEA)-aimed to develop standards for K-12
technology education (http//www.iteawww.org/ ) - Information Literacy standards were prepared by
the Association of American School Librarians
(AASL) and the Association of Educational
Communications and Technology (AECT) - aimed at
school library and media specialist but
correlated to learning concepts developed under
other national association standards
(http//www.aect.org/ )
22Evolution of the Current Technology Standards and
Performance Indicators for Teachers
- 1993- ISTE (International Society for Technology
in Education (http//www.iste.org/) - developed the first edition of the ISTE
Technology Standards for all teachers, 13
indicators - 1997, second edition- 18 indicators organized
into the following three categories - Basic Computer/Technology Operations and Concepts
- Personal and Professional Use of Technology
- Application of Technology in Instruction
23ISTE NETST
- 2000-alignment with
- the ISTE NETSS (National Educational Technology
Standards) for students http//cnets.iste.org/inde
x2.html - Reflected research on teaching and learning with
technology - Reflected advances in technology
24Current ISTE NETST
- 23 indicators organized into the following six
categories - Technology Operations and Concepts
- Planning and Designing Learning Environments and
Experiences - Teaching, Learning, and the Curriculum
- Assessment and Evaluation
- Productivity and Professional Practice
- Social, Ethical, Legal, and Human Issues
25ISTE NETST links
- http//cnets.iste.org/index3.html ISTE NETST
(for teachers) - http//cnets.iste.org/index2.html ISTE NETSS
(for students) - http//www.iste.org/standards/ The National
Educational Technology Standards Project - http//cnets.iste.org/ NET Standards
- http//cnets.iste.org/tssa/ ISTE NETSA (also
Technology Standards for School Administrators
TSSA) - UMCP COE ETO helped in drafting - http//cnets.iste.org/ NCATE Technology
Referenced in NCATE 2000 Standards - http//msde.aws.com/ Process Report on Technology
in Maryland Schools - http//msde.aws.com/results/ Maryland Technology
Inventory by LSS school - http//msde.aws.com/digitaldivide.asp Maryland
Digital Divide Report
26ISTE NETST
27State Approaches to Technology Standards
- According to state technology directors
responding to an informal survey conducted by the
Office of Educational Technology at the U.S.
Department of Education, student technology
standards are typically embedded in curriculum
guides
28Maryland State Technology Standards
- MSDE Technology Link http//www.msde.state.md.us/
technology/ - For Students- embedded within the Content
Standards http//www.msde.state.md.us/technology/t
ech_plan_2002/APPENDIX_A_content_standards.pdf
(new State testing designed to embed technology
assessment) - For Teachers effective May 2002
http//www.msde.state.md.us/technology/tech_plan_2
002/APPENDIX20C20Teacher20Tech20Standards202.
pdf - Maryland State Technology Plan
- http//www.msde.state.md.us/technology/md_tech_pl
an.html - accepted March, 2002
29MSDE Technology Link
30Maryland Teacher Technology Standards
31How Does All This Effect Maryland Teachers?
- MD State Technology Plan
- Student Technology Competencies embedded within
the Content Standards (based on the ISTE NETSS) - Testing (for technology) embedded within the new
State assessments - Teachers Standards modified from ISTE NETST
32Portfolio Modules
- http//www.itma.vt.edu/studio/portfolio.htm from
Virginia Tech (Davinas 1 pick) - http//www.sitesupport.org/module1/msde.htm JHU
Portfolio module - http//www.tandl.vt.edu/TESH/TESHPortfolioGuide.ht
ml Virginia Tech Portfolio Module
33E-Portfolio Examples
- http//www.tandl.vt.edu/scied/stu.htm from
Virginia Tech- scroll down to active student
links - http//teched.vt.edu/ good site for
informationthen click on portfolio link on side
bar, and view extensive examples of students
portfolios