Five Big Changes to the Future of Teacher Education

In the book Teaching 2030 by Barnett Berry and 12 classroom experts, the authors pinpoint specific skills educators will need to teach in the schools of tomorrow. They say teachers must be prepared to find and adapt new technologies to engage the digital generation, as well as work across traditional subject areas using project learning. They must be able to use data and evidence to inform their practice and know how to work in both virtual learning environments and brick-and-mortar schools. And they’ll need to collaborate with community-based organizations and work in schools that provide all kinds of other services for students and their families.

Along those lines, Berry has outlined five changes he believes need to be made to the future of teacher education.

  1. INFORMED BY NEED. University-based education schools currently produce about 170,000 graduates every year — but only 70 percent of those actually enter teaching. One reason is the mismatch between production and market demand. In some “teacher surplus” states, universities graduate far too many teachers prepared for subjects and areas in low demand (such as elementary, physical education, social studies), while math, science, and special education vacancies continue to frustrate school leaders as well as parents. And because of the way education schools are funded, most universities offer just about every kind of teacher education major, irrespective of the local needs of area districts looking for new recruits. In the future, as long as we have the right policies in place, education schools should recruit and prepare those who are needed — and use the cost savings to recruit the right teachers who can teach the right subjects — as well as invest more in the right kind of pedagogical training.

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Online Courses for Elementary and High School Students?

In an effort to accommodate students with varying levels of advancement and in reaction to state budgetary cuts, at least 30 states in the US now let elementary and high school students take all their courses online.

According to Evergreen Education Group, a consulting firm that works with online schools, an estimated 250,000 students nationwide are enrolled in full-time virtual schools, a 40 percent increase in the last three years. And the International Association for K-12 Online Learning, a trade group, says two million kids take at least one class online.

Advocates say online schooling can save states money, offer curricula customized to each student and give parents more choice in education.

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Sloan-C Awards NYU-Poly’s Cyber Security Virtual Master’s Program [Professional Services Close - Up]

NYU-Poly’s online cyber security students enjoy a rare level of access to a virtual research laboratory where they can perform hands- on experimentation to reinforce the concepts they learn in virtual lectures. Students participate in real-time and e-discussions stimulated by chat, texting, forums and other media. A dedicated “success manager” helps students adapt to the online environment, and technical support is available around the clock.

Paralleling students on campus, online cyber security students learn not only basic technical skills and theory, but also how business needs, such as risk management and regulatory requirements, drive network security.

“The Sloan-C award for Outstanding Online Program is a high honor for NYU-Poly because it is bestowed by acknowledged leaders in virtual education,” said NYU-Poly President Jerry M. Hultin. “Furthermore, it recognizes innovation in an academic program that is vitally important to society because it addresses in real-time the critical shortage of highly educated experts needed to protect and secure our infrastructure, government and personal digital lives.”

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Dimensionu Extends Agreement With Connections Education To Offer Game-Based Learning Solution To Virtual School Students Nationwide

DimensionU, the company behind the DimensionU Learning System, the leading K-12 immersive gamed-based learning solution, announced today that Connections Education has signed a one-year extension and expansion to provide all students with the DimensionU educational video games system. The agreement gives access to standards-aligned math and literacy curriculum for elementary through high school students enrolled in Connections Education’s Connection Academy virtual schools nationwide. Connections Education is a leading, fully accredited provider of high-quality, highly accountable virtual schooling for students in grades K through 12.

For the past two years, Connections Academy virtual public schools have used DimensionU as an engaging resource for students to practice their newly acquired skills.

With content aligned to state, national and the new Common Core State Standards, the DimensionU instructional software engages students in a series of first-person action adventure missions that incorporate three-dimensional graphics, sound, and animation comparable to those in popular video games. By effectively navigating the myriad of embedded lessons, students quickly master concepts previously discussed in class. The software also provides automatic progress tracking for students so teachers can provide additional instruction to help them gain mastery of specific concepts.

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2011 McGraw Prize in Education Winners Named

Dr. Robert Beichner is an award-winning professor of physics at North Carolina State University and is receiving the Prize for his work at the post-secondary level. He has changed how students learn in the science classroom not only on his home campus, but at the more than 100 institutions of higher education that have adopted SCALE-UP, an approach that uses digital technology combined with innovative teaching approaches centered on hands-on activities and roundtable discussions. He was named an American Council on Education Fellow for the 2010-11 academic year and co-authored the most widely used college physics textbook in the country. Since 2007 he has been the Director of NC State’s STEM (science, technology, engineering and math) Education Initiative, with a mission to study and improve STEM education in North Carolina and around the world.

Dr. Mitchel Resnick, Professor of Learning Research at the MIT Media Lab, develops new technologies and activities to engage children in creative learning experiences, helping them learn to think creatively, reason systematically, and work collaboratively. He is receiving the Prize for his work in pre-K and elementary education. His Lifelong Kindergarten research group developed ideas and technologies underlying the LEGO Mindstorms robotics kits and the Scratch programming environment and online community, used by millions of young people around the world. He also co-founded the Computer Clubhouse project, an international network of more than 100 after-school learning centers where youth from low-income communities learn to express themselves creatively with new technologies.

Julie Young is President and CEO of the nation’s largest and most influential virtual program: Florida Virtual School (FLVS). She is receiving the Prize for her work in secondary education. Young became interested in combining technology and learning while serving as a teacher trainer for a partnership between her district and IBM. Since its inception in 1997 when it enrolled 77 students, the school has evolved both in offerings and number of students. FLVS, a public school free to all Florida students and supported by tax dollars, currently provides online instruction in over 125 courses to more than 130,000 K-12 students. In addition to directing the work of 1,500 employees, Young is a frequent national speaker and sits on numerous boards. She was also recognized by Technology & Learning Magazine as one of the “Top 30 influencers in Ed Tech,” along with Bill Gates and Steve Jobs.

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Seeking electives, Fort Ann school looks online

FORT ANN — To offer more courses at a lower cost, the Fort Ann school district has turned to the Internet.

This year, the district has teamed up with BOCES to make online courses available for juniors and seniors through Virtual High School, a nonprofit organization that provides online education to schools around the world.

Budget restraints have made it difficult for rural schools like Fort Ann to offer the selection of courses found at districts with more resources.

While Fort Ann has electives, it has no Advanced Placement courses.

But now, through Virtual High School, Fort Ann students can choose from six AP courses in subjects such as statistics, European history and English literature.

In addition, 18 online electives are available, such as astronomy, engineering, creative writing and psychology.

The instructors are state certified teachers.

Superintendent Maureen VanBuren said the district does not have the staff to offer more courses.

Since AP courses in small districts can draw as few as a handful of students, Virtual High School becomes a cheaper alternative.

“We are a relatively small school district. We don’t have a cadre of teachers here,” VanBuren said.

“We may only have one or two students who may take a statistics course. We can’t afford to have a class for two students,” she said.

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BOCES helps 8 Westchester districts develop shared online courses

Students in Stephen Walker and Bob Oddo’s class won’t be handing in their homework this school year — they’ll be uploading it.

In their new spring elective, “Wanted: Solutions to Problems of the 21st Century,” the Horace Greeley High School teachers will do away with textbooks, classroom tests and term papers. Instead, students will be assigned to write blogs, edit wiki pages and create audio and video podcasts on topics ranging from climate change to U.S foreign policy. In lieu of classes, the teachers will use video conferencing, online chats and email to stay in touch with their students — not just in Chappaqua but seven other Westchester districts.

“We’re trying to bring that real-world experience into (an) online classroom,” Walker said.

Their course is one of four new online electives being offered in eight districts this coming school year under a pilot program by the Putnam-Northern Westchester Board of Cooperative Educational Services. Sixty students will meet their teachers face-to-face for the first time today at an orientation at the BOCES Yorktown Heights campus. After that, though, most of their interaction will take place in the virtual world.

Online courses are not new in the Lower Hudson Valley. Croton-Harmon, Nanuet, Nyack and Yonkers have introduced Virtual High School electives taught by teachers from around the country.

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Ramapo Central faces sex-bias lawsuit involving student

According to documents filed in the suit, Pungitore emailed Suffern Middle School guidance counselor Travis Jackson Jr. in October with concerns that her then-eighth-grade daughter was “upset” because she wasn’t being challenged in her current math class, high school honors algebra.

In the ensuing email exchange detailed in the suit, Pungitore and Jackson discussed the possibility of the student’s placement in an accelerated math class offered by the district through the Florida Virtual School.

At the time, the class included only male students, according to the documents.

At a meeting in November, the student’s parents, her guidance counselor and her teachers discussed the need to challenge the student’s “gifted and accelerated mathematical abilities,” documents state.

The teachers and counselors made recommendations regarding her placement in the program, but the request for the student to join the advanced class was turned down by Barbera.

“Mrs. Barbera did not feel FVS was a viable option for current eighth-grade students scheduled for honors algebra,” Jackson wrote in an email to Pungitore on Dec. 7, documents state.

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Legislation to reshape charter schools in state

In its latest ranking in 2010, Pennsylvania was 12th out of 41 states.

Minnesota, home to the first charter schools, ranked first. Florida, Massachusetts, Colorado and New York rounded out the top five. Nine states don’t have any charter school laws.

“In general, Pennsylvania law provides an environment that’s open to new start-ups, public school conversions, and virtual schools and supportive of autonomy,” according to the report. But the report said the legislation could improve in several ways: by prohibiting caps on growth, increasing the accountability for the authorizer, allowing more entities besides school boards to approve charter schools and allowing the same organizations to start multiple charter schools.

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Principal: When Arne Duncan called to talk

Regardless of the outcome, I learned how critical it is that we all enter the dialogue and speak up for what we know is important and true.

We know that those who lobby for charter schools, sell computers to virtual schools, and profit from testing are legion. Those who love public education, respect the role of collective bargaining and believe that society must improve the lives of our neediest children cannot be silent.

That is what the July 30th march in Washington D.C. to Save our Schools is about. Secretary Duncan needs to hear from us all. I do hope that he takes the time on July 30th to listen. Wouldn’t we all love to be hopeful again?

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