The document summarizes a presentation on leading change in schools for the 21st century student. The presenters were Travis Warren from WhippleHill School in New Hampshire and Antonio Viva from Walnut Hill School for the Arts in Massachusetts. The presentation focused on understanding the unique needs of 21st century students and implementing change across the entire school to take advantage of technology.
Week 2: Social Media:Society & Citizenship
This course is designed to enable students to make safe and legal use of the Internet by identifying best practices, tools and methods that also respects free expression. It will develop the critical thinking skills necessary to understand the challenges, risks and opportunities regarding current computer-mediated communication technologies. Topics will include the rights and responsibilities of the digital citizen, Internet safety, social -networking, privacy, and creative content creation. Legal, technical, psychological, and social dynamics will be addressed with an emphasis on practical application. We will first build a foundation by looking at the technical aspects of social media by exploring the tools and skills necessary to enhance students’ online potential by building a culture of responsible online behavior. The second half of the course will focus on the more complex dynamics of collaboration, privacy, content creation and economic and political societal participation.
Of Hobbits, Amish, Hackers and Technology 2014Kaido Kikkas
A new version of the 2007 lecture, held at the Estonian Information Technology College in the "Deploying IT Infrastructure Solutions" Intensive Programme on April 3, 2014 (updated from the 2013 version in April'04).
AZLA 2010 Keynote Address by Anthony MolaroAnthony Molaro
The Keynote Presentation for the AZLA 2010 conference. There were technical issues, so the presentation was converted into Powerpoint from Keynote and lost some formatting.
Leveraging for Legacy: Cultivating #newliteraciesAmy Burvall
originally the opening keynote for the Think.Create.Share conference at California State Fullerton in May 2014. Please note that since this is an Apple Keynote exported as a pdf the embedded videos will not play, though I will try to link them separately
Week 2: Social Media:Society & Citizenship
This course is designed to enable students to make safe and legal use of the Internet by identifying best practices, tools and methods that also respects free expression. It will develop the critical thinking skills necessary to understand the challenges, risks and opportunities regarding current computer-mediated communication technologies. Topics will include the rights and responsibilities of the digital citizen, Internet safety, social -networking, privacy, and creative content creation. Legal, technical, psychological, and social dynamics will be addressed with an emphasis on practical application. We will first build a foundation by looking at the technical aspects of social media by exploring the tools and skills necessary to enhance students’ online potential by building a culture of responsible online behavior. The second half of the course will focus on the more complex dynamics of collaboration, privacy, content creation and economic and political societal participation.
Of Hobbits, Amish, Hackers and Technology 2014Kaido Kikkas
A new version of the 2007 lecture, held at the Estonian Information Technology College in the "Deploying IT Infrastructure Solutions" Intensive Programme on April 3, 2014 (updated from the 2013 version in April'04).
AZLA 2010 Keynote Address by Anthony MolaroAnthony Molaro
The Keynote Presentation for the AZLA 2010 conference. There were technical issues, so the presentation was converted into Powerpoint from Keynote and lost some formatting.
Leveraging for Legacy: Cultivating #newliteraciesAmy Burvall
originally the opening keynote for the Think.Create.Share conference at California State Fullerton in May 2014. Please note that since this is an Apple Keynote exported as a pdf the embedded videos will not play, though I will try to link them separately
1. Leading Change in a Facebook World
ROOM: NATIONAl HARbOR 13
School leaders at every level face challenges
never before experienced. Understanding
the unique needs of the 21st century student,
as well as what skills and attributes are in
demand, will inform school leaders how
best to take advantage of technology and
implement change school-wide.
PRESENTERS: Travis Warren, WhippleHill (NH);
Antonio Viva, Walnut Hill School for the Arts (MA)
22. ---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Samantha Hankey <shankey@walnuthillarts.org>
Date: Tue, Dec 28, 2010 at 1:53 PM
Subject: Internet stuff....
To: Antonio Viva <aviva@walnuthillarts.org>
Hi Mr. Viva,I hope you are having a relaxing and fun break! I'm
getting ready for a competition and thought that you might be
able to help me with something, as I know that you love
technology and using the internet for networking! If you wouldn't
mind, I'd love for you to take a few minutes and review my blog
before I go to YoungArts week. I use my blog as a way of
promoting my concerts, artwork, performance videos, and a way
to share my interest in non-music related things to initially my
friends and family, but now the whole web. I mentioned my blog
in my bio which will be published in the programs during
YoungArts week and I want to make sure it is the best
representation of both myself and Walnut Hill. If you would take
a look at it and give me any suggestions or thoughts you might
have, I would greatly appreciate it as I know your really
tech savvy! Have a great rest of break!!!
My blog: samanthahankey.blogspot.com
Best,
Samantha Hankey
samhankey@gmail.com
617-347-8411
38. PE
RS
O
N
“Blogging is free, it doesn’t matter if anyone
AL
reads it. What matters is the humility that
comes from writing it. What matters is the
meta-cognition of thinking about what you’re
going to say” - Seth Godin.