EDU 5373 Week 3
Week 3 – Development of a shared vision for technology
access and use.
1) From the
Crompton (2023) article, describe at least two best practices to support
student learning gains from educational research reflected in the ISTE Educator
Standards. How might these connections assist you in guiding the development of
a Technology Vision for your district or organization based on the identified
digital divide(s) you have identified?
Crompton (2023) study suggested
technology alone doesn’t improve learning; it must be matched to the appropriate
content and pedagogies by the educators. Several organizations such as InTASC,
ISTE, UNESCO had developed standards to support educators with the integration
of technology into education. Technology is changing rapidly and educators have
implemented technology tools guided by ISTE standards (International Society
for Technology in Education, 2026a).
Crompton (2023) research of
literature of peer-reviewed journal articles done for years 2015 to 2022 concluded
that Learner 2.1 standard helps the educator to use best practices, improves their
professional development and reflection. Educator’s using technology enhanced
their student’s learning. The Leader 2.2 standard applies to educators who not necessarily
are in a leadership position but to those that champion technology and other
educators or peers using technology leading to student achievements and
empowering of students.
It was found that Citizen 2.3
standard guides educators to prepare students for the digital world by enhancing
their cognitive, emotional, and behavioral factors. The Collaborator 2.4 standard
provided opportunities for students to collaborate with experts facilitated by
the educator. The Designer 2.5 standard helped educators with authentic learning,
student-centered, and learner variability opportunities for the variety of students.
The Facilitator 2.6 standard
provided students with ownership of learning and computational thinking which
was evidenced by students using digital tools to set their learning goals and
formulate their own problems solved by a computer. The Analyst 2.7 standard
helped educators support students in achieving goals by using assessment data,
artificial intelligence (AI), and data driven instruction. ISTE educator standards
helped educators improve instruction and students learn (Crompton, 2023).
These connections between ISTE
standards assisted me as a Lerner 2. 1, Collaborator 2.4, and 2.7 Analyst. As I
learn how to use technology, I can evaluate data produced by my survey and plan
accordingly. I am also able to collaborate with experts from my home and in the
future help patient connect to health services needed from their home.
2) Gonzales
(2019) offers perspectives into the challenges that school leaders face as they
serve as technology leaders. How might the challenges that arise with a 1:1
initiative be addressed in the Technology Vision and Goals? How might the ISTE
Education Leader Standards provide support/guidance for you and your leader(s)
as you engage in the process of developing and sustaining a Technology
Integration Plan?
Gonzales (2019) case study explored the 1:1 school initiative vision and
the challenges encountered by administrators. The 1:1 visionary leadership
resulted in two theme, one was that 1:1 would enhance student-centered learning
and the other one was that a1:1 would be a tool enhancing inquiry.
The challenges found were:
a) budgeting and financing.
b) negotiations and expectations with students, educators, and the
community.
These challenges were concentrated on Empowering leader, System designer,
Visionary planner and Connected leader ISTE standards. Funding was considered an
external challenge while compromising with the teacher was considered an
internal challenge. Administrators need to re-evaluate the funding process and more
research is needed to create standards, models, and measurements for instructional
improvement.
Th use of the ISTE standards for leaders may provide support and guidance
in my technology integration plan with the visionary planner standard. The
project that I got started last semester was about the digital divide in rural
areas, there is a vision of getting psychiatric health care services to their home
via telehealth, it must be a shared vision with the stakeholders. There are
other providers, patients, family members that share the same vision. There is evidence
of technology or telehealth improving health. The ISTE Education leader
standards are 3.1 Digital citizenship advocate, 3.2 Visionary planner, 3.3 Empowering
leader, 3.4 System designer, and 3.5 Connected learner (International Society
for Technology in Education, 2026b).
3) In what
ways might you employ the ISTE Standards for Students, Educators, and Education
Leaders as you collaborate with stakeholders to develop a Technology Vision and
Goals to address digital inequity in your school or
organization? How might you leverage the ISTE Essential Conditions
to support this work?
The ISTE Standards are a guide for collaboration, citizenship, and empowering.
Everyone learns, collaborates, and gets empowered when working with a shared vision.
There may be many challenges but with guidance the objectives can be
accomplished.
References
Crompton, H. (2023).
Evidence of the ISTE standards for educators leading to learning gains. Journal
of Digital Learning in Teacher Education, 39(4), 201-219. https://doi.org/10.1080/21532974.2023.2244089
Gonzales, M. M. (2020).
School technology leadership vision and challenges: Perspectives from American
school administrators. International Journal of Educational Management, 34(4),
697-708.
https://doi.org/10.1108/IJEM-02-2019-0075
International Society for
Technology in Education. (2026) ISTE Standards: For Educators. Retrieved from https://iste.org/standards/educators
Hi Monica. I enjoyed reading your post. The part about the Crompton study suggesting that technology doesn't improve learning, alone really resonated with me. I have been in education for 28 years and have been fortunate enough to work in 1:1 schools. One was amazing at professional development and training. We met frequently and worked through new resources and programs, but lately I have noticed, at least in my experience, in my current school, that we have all the technology and resources that we could ever desire, but no training to facilitate. I look forward to seeing your future blogs and proposal.
ReplyDeleteThanks for your comment. I am realizing that I need lots of technology training. What it helps me in the hospital setting is not what is needed in the outpatient setting. The requirements for an outpatient visit are not what I am used to deal with. It is going to be hard for me and I am developing a learning plan for myself.
DeleteI agree that technology alone does not facilitate learning. Technology is just a tool. A powerful one, but just a tool. If I take a screwdriver and set it next to the bookcase I'm building, the bookcase doesn't just build itself using the screwdriver. Technology is the same. I have to use the tool and learn to use it correctly before I can start accomplishing things with it. This is why teachers need digital skills. The students need guides for technology.
ReplyDeleteDennis,
DeleteThanks for your comment. I appreciate the teachers my children have at school. They had helped my kids to navigate in their chrome books. My kids know all the google products well and have been a help to me. I am pretty sure regardless degree any computer skill be helpful for my kids in their future studies or jobs.