This document provides details on an individual's academic and professional background in educational innovation. It includes their educational degrees and experience in areas such as instructional design, online learning research, university teaching, and publishing. It also lists advisory roles for doctoral dissertations and examples of innovative training programs conceptualized and directed in both military and civilian settings. The individual has over 40 years of experience leading educational innovations across various contexts.
GovChal: Integrating entrepreneurship in education, K-16Bob Bradley
If we can grow championship athletes we can grow championship scholars! Preso describes how to overlay a customizable social design on educational enterprise. Combines TED-like strategies with an NCAA-like design that produces champion scholars, who can be drafted by a "league" of businesses the way athletes are drafted by NCAA, NBA, etc.
Scholars are often encouraged to be public intellectuals – to ‘go online’ and engage with diverse audiences. Yet, scholars’ online activities appear to be rife with tensions, dilemmas, and conundrums. In this presentation, I discuss the major tensions and challenges scholars face when engaging networked publics and highlight some uncomfortable realities of being a public scholar. Evangelizing public and networked scholarship without acknowledging the existence of tensions is detrimental to the field and misleading to the scholars who may be considering becoming more networked, more public, and more “digital.” Individual scholars and institutions, both networked and otherwise need to evaluate the purposes and functions of scholarship and take part in devising systems that reflect and safeguard the values of scholarly inquiry.
Research in international education can take many forms: whether you are trying to identify best practice in transnational collaboration, investigating strategic planning or measuring outcomes, you face the choice of how best to achieve the desired aims of the study. This session explores some of the mystery surrounding research by looking at some of the practical approaches to undertaking it and by providing insights into the challenges and benefits of the research methods available.
Invited opening talk for University of Brighton Pedagogic Research Conference, February 2017
https://staff.brighton.ac.uk/clt/Pages/Events/enhancing%20higher%20education.aspx
Successful, sunny, and smiling: The ways that student life and faculty are ...George Veletsianos
Canadian institutions of higher education use Twitter nearly universally. Yet, little research examines the narratives around college life constructed in their tweets. In this research, we used data mining and thematic analysis methods to examine this issue. Findings suggest institutions construct overwhelmingly positive representations that are incomplete and potentially misleading.
GovChal: Integrating entrepreneurship in education, K-16Bob Bradley
If we can grow championship athletes we can grow championship scholars! Preso describes how to overlay a customizable social design on educational enterprise. Combines TED-like strategies with an NCAA-like design that produces champion scholars, who can be drafted by a "league" of businesses the way athletes are drafted by NCAA, NBA, etc.
Scholars are often encouraged to be public intellectuals – to ‘go online’ and engage with diverse audiences. Yet, scholars’ online activities appear to be rife with tensions, dilemmas, and conundrums. In this presentation, I discuss the major tensions and challenges scholars face when engaging networked publics and highlight some uncomfortable realities of being a public scholar. Evangelizing public and networked scholarship without acknowledging the existence of tensions is detrimental to the field and misleading to the scholars who may be considering becoming more networked, more public, and more “digital.” Individual scholars and institutions, both networked and otherwise need to evaluate the purposes and functions of scholarship and take part in devising systems that reflect and safeguard the values of scholarly inquiry.
Research in international education can take many forms: whether you are trying to identify best practice in transnational collaboration, investigating strategic planning or measuring outcomes, you face the choice of how best to achieve the desired aims of the study. This session explores some of the mystery surrounding research by looking at some of the practical approaches to undertaking it and by providing insights into the challenges and benefits of the research methods available.
Invited opening talk for University of Brighton Pedagogic Research Conference, February 2017
https://staff.brighton.ac.uk/clt/Pages/Events/enhancing%20higher%20education.aspx
Successful, sunny, and smiling: The ways that student life and faculty are ...George Veletsianos
Canadian institutions of higher education use Twitter nearly universally. Yet, little research examines the narratives around college life constructed in their tweets. In this research, we used data mining and thematic analysis methods to examine this issue. Findings suggest institutions construct overwhelmingly positive representations that are incomplete and potentially misleading.
Maximizing the Impact of your Teaching Center WebsiteKaleem Clarkson
Based on a research study, learn some of the common services and website features that are offered at Teaching/ Faculty Development Centers. Then learn how to plan the re-design of your center's website to based on the goals and objectives your strategic plan.
Assessment Tools for Online Courses and Programs (SUNYLA 2014)kstanwicks
Overview of rubrics that can be used to evaluate individual online courses and entire online education programs. A link to speaking notes from this presentation and an extensive bibliography of additional resources are provided in the final slides.
NITLE Shared Academics - Project DAVID: Collective Vision and Action for Libe...NITLE
As liberal arts colleges and universities consider their missions and contemplate the future, significant challenges lie ahead—financial sustainability, increased competition and public perception of value to name a few. Yet many opportunities lie waiting, too—new technologies and digital tools enable faculty and students to traverse many boundaries, increasing access and furthering support of scholarship and learning. Project DAVID uses a set of themes—distinction, analytics, value, innovation, and digital opportunities—to guide leadership through the various factors, forces, and challenges they face and consider how they might reinvent themselves. In this seminar Ann Hill Duin, professor at the University of Minnesota, founder of Project DAVID and a NITLE Fellow along with contributors to the Project DAVID eBook -- Elizabeth Brennan, Associate Professor and Director of Special Education Programs, California Lutheran University; Ty Buckman, Professor of English and Associate Provost for Undergraduate Affairs & Curriculum, Wittenberg University; Autumm Caines, Academic Technology Specialist, Capital University; and, Wen-Li Feng, Curriculum Technology Specialist, Capital University -- outlines how they are using these themes to examine current challenges and opportunities and to design their futures.
NITLE Shared Academics: An Open Discussion of the 2014 Horizon ReportNITLE
At a time of rapid, systemic change, decision-makers must be skilled at recognizing patterns that point to the future of higher education. Many resources exist that follow, describe, and analyze trends. One such resource is the NMC Horizon Report. The 2014 Higher Education Edition is a collaborative effort between the New Media Consortium (NMC) and the EDUCAUSE Learning Initiative (ELI). For more than a decade, the NMC Horizon Project has been researching emerging technologies with the potential to affect teaching, learning, research, creative inquiry, and information management. How might you use this research to make the best possible strategic decisions to ensure mission-driven integration of pedagogy and technology? These NMC Horizon Report slides were used during an discussion led by NITLE Senior Fellow Bryan Alexander in which participants reviewed the Horizon Report, identified local patterns that supported or contradicted the projections described, and evaluated their potential impact for individual programs or institutions.
Teaching the next generation of Information Literacy educators: pedagogy and ...Sheila Webber
Presentation by Pamela McKinney and Sheila Webber (Information School, University of Sheffield) given on 2nd June 2016 at the Creating Knowledge 8 conference, Reykjavík, Iceland. There is a video of this presentation at https://youtu.be/JDr1DbJJKRA
Best Practices in Online Academic Advising DeliveryLaura Pasquini
The Global Community for Academic Advising (NACADA) has identified the need to educate advisors on how to effectively implement technology into their practice. The NACADA Technology in Advising Commission continues to thrive to support new initiatives and tap into the advising needs for the profession. During the 2009 NACADA Winter Institute, the first hands-on, interactive NACADA Technology Seminar (Pasquini, Steele, Stoller & Thurmond, 2009) introduced participants to a conversation about technology in advising. NACADA continues to support online webinars to share expertise and resources throughout the United States, and across the globe. Other examples of online NACADA development and training initiatives can be found on commission group wikis, regional blogs, slide sharing websites, NACADA Facebook group page and daily on the NACADA Twitter stream.
Overall, a renewed emphasis for collaborative, online engagement in the higher education community is evolving to develop new forms of interaction and assessment. Participants will learn and share examples of online advising delivery being utilized in the advising practice. Session facilitators will share their experience advising with social networks, IM, web conferencing, podcasts, slidecasting, and other online resources. The growing use of social media and online tools, combined with collective intelligence and mass involvement, is gradually but deeply changing the practice of learning (The Horizon Report 2008). Electronic technologies can create a change in pedagogy for students, staff and faculty connected to the advising process. Advising units need to think about online advising development that includes increased participation, self-paced learning design, and continual assessment and feedback.
Dissertation defense.
The model was really nifty with the original animations. A Flash is available for the TNE Model slide here http://tne.nixhome.com/TNE_Model/TNE_Model.htm
A webinar presented on 26 July 2016 by Sheila Webber, Pamela McKinney, Liam Bullingham and Emily Wheeler. Presentations are copyright of the respective authors. The webinar was orgabnised by the IFLA Continuing Professional Development and Workplace Learning and IFLA New Professionals Special Interest Group in conjunction with the American Library Association.
The presenters were responding to 3 questions: 1. What does Information Literacy mean to me
2. How information literacy fits in with my job
3. How (or whether) I see information literacy being important to me in the future, and/or where I would like to go next with IL
Associated links: SCONUL 7 Pillars http://www.sconul.ac.uk/sites/default/files/documents/coremodel.pdf
Review of Seven Pillars model: http://bit.ly/2a1QBme
Pam McKinney and Sheila Webber’s Presentation from the creating knowledge conference: http://bit.ly/2a9mzie
Alison Head keynote from the Creating Knowledge viii conference: http://bit.ly/2allHq7
University of Sheffield Information Skills resource http://www.librarydevelopment.group.shef.ac.uk/
The Value of Distance Education: Burden or Blessing?Mark Brown
Presentation at the Graduate Employment Conference: The Economic Value of Higher Education. Commonwealth Association of Universities, Auckland, 12th July, 2013.
Cual es el costo de cada tn de su soja? PublicArg nro 62 octubre 2015Victor Piñeyro
Con un adecuado Control de Gestión en su empresa es posible tener calculado sus costos de producción por unidad y poder tomar mejores decisiones comerciales.
Maximizing the Impact of your Teaching Center WebsiteKaleem Clarkson
Based on a research study, learn some of the common services and website features that are offered at Teaching/ Faculty Development Centers. Then learn how to plan the re-design of your center's website to based on the goals and objectives your strategic plan.
Assessment Tools for Online Courses and Programs (SUNYLA 2014)kstanwicks
Overview of rubrics that can be used to evaluate individual online courses and entire online education programs. A link to speaking notes from this presentation and an extensive bibliography of additional resources are provided in the final slides.
NITLE Shared Academics - Project DAVID: Collective Vision and Action for Libe...NITLE
As liberal arts colleges and universities consider their missions and contemplate the future, significant challenges lie ahead—financial sustainability, increased competition and public perception of value to name a few. Yet many opportunities lie waiting, too—new technologies and digital tools enable faculty and students to traverse many boundaries, increasing access and furthering support of scholarship and learning. Project DAVID uses a set of themes—distinction, analytics, value, innovation, and digital opportunities—to guide leadership through the various factors, forces, and challenges they face and consider how they might reinvent themselves. In this seminar Ann Hill Duin, professor at the University of Minnesota, founder of Project DAVID and a NITLE Fellow along with contributors to the Project DAVID eBook -- Elizabeth Brennan, Associate Professor and Director of Special Education Programs, California Lutheran University; Ty Buckman, Professor of English and Associate Provost for Undergraduate Affairs & Curriculum, Wittenberg University; Autumm Caines, Academic Technology Specialist, Capital University; and, Wen-Li Feng, Curriculum Technology Specialist, Capital University -- outlines how they are using these themes to examine current challenges and opportunities and to design their futures.
NITLE Shared Academics: An Open Discussion of the 2014 Horizon ReportNITLE
At a time of rapid, systemic change, decision-makers must be skilled at recognizing patterns that point to the future of higher education. Many resources exist that follow, describe, and analyze trends. One such resource is the NMC Horizon Report. The 2014 Higher Education Edition is a collaborative effort between the New Media Consortium (NMC) and the EDUCAUSE Learning Initiative (ELI). For more than a decade, the NMC Horizon Project has been researching emerging technologies with the potential to affect teaching, learning, research, creative inquiry, and information management. How might you use this research to make the best possible strategic decisions to ensure mission-driven integration of pedagogy and technology? These NMC Horizon Report slides were used during an discussion led by NITLE Senior Fellow Bryan Alexander in which participants reviewed the Horizon Report, identified local patterns that supported or contradicted the projections described, and evaluated their potential impact for individual programs or institutions.
Teaching the next generation of Information Literacy educators: pedagogy and ...Sheila Webber
Presentation by Pamela McKinney and Sheila Webber (Information School, University of Sheffield) given on 2nd June 2016 at the Creating Knowledge 8 conference, Reykjavík, Iceland. There is a video of this presentation at https://youtu.be/JDr1DbJJKRA
Best Practices in Online Academic Advising DeliveryLaura Pasquini
The Global Community for Academic Advising (NACADA) has identified the need to educate advisors on how to effectively implement technology into their practice. The NACADA Technology in Advising Commission continues to thrive to support new initiatives and tap into the advising needs for the profession. During the 2009 NACADA Winter Institute, the first hands-on, interactive NACADA Technology Seminar (Pasquini, Steele, Stoller & Thurmond, 2009) introduced participants to a conversation about technology in advising. NACADA continues to support online webinars to share expertise and resources throughout the United States, and across the globe. Other examples of online NACADA development and training initiatives can be found on commission group wikis, regional blogs, slide sharing websites, NACADA Facebook group page and daily on the NACADA Twitter stream.
Overall, a renewed emphasis for collaborative, online engagement in the higher education community is evolving to develop new forms of interaction and assessment. Participants will learn and share examples of online advising delivery being utilized in the advising practice. Session facilitators will share their experience advising with social networks, IM, web conferencing, podcasts, slidecasting, and other online resources. The growing use of social media and online tools, combined with collective intelligence and mass involvement, is gradually but deeply changing the practice of learning (The Horizon Report 2008). Electronic technologies can create a change in pedagogy for students, staff and faculty connected to the advising process. Advising units need to think about online advising development that includes increased participation, self-paced learning design, and continual assessment and feedback.
Dissertation defense.
The model was really nifty with the original animations. A Flash is available for the TNE Model slide here http://tne.nixhome.com/TNE_Model/TNE_Model.htm
A webinar presented on 26 July 2016 by Sheila Webber, Pamela McKinney, Liam Bullingham and Emily Wheeler. Presentations are copyright of the respective authors. The webinar was orgabnised by the IFLA Continuing Professional Development and Workplace Learning and IFLA New Professionals Special Interest Group in conjunction with the American Library Association.
The presenters were responding to 3 questions: 1. What does Information Literacy mean to me
2. How information literacy fits in with my job
3. How (or whether) I see information literacy being important to me in the future, and/or where I would like to go next with IL
Associated links: SCONUL 7 Pillars http://www.sconul.ac.uk/sites/default/files/documents/coremodel.pdf
Review of Seven Pillars model: http://bit.ly/2a1QBme
Pam McKinney and Sheila Webber’s Presentation from the creating knowledge conference: http://bit.ly/2a9mzie
Alison Head keynote from the Creating Knowledge viii conference: http://bit.ly/2allHq7
University of Sheffield Information Skills resource http://www.librarydevelopment.group.shef.ac.uk/
The Value of Distance Education: Burden or Blessing?Mark Brown
Presentation at the Graduate Employment Conference: The Economic Value of Higher Education. Commonwealth Association of Universities, Auckland, 12th July, 2013.
Cual es el costo de cada tn de su soja? PublicArg nro 62 octubre 2015Victor Piñeyro
Con un adecuado Control de Gestión en su empresa es posible tener calculado sus costos de producción por unidad y poder tomar mejores decisiones comerciales.
OPTION RESIDENCIAL COM SERVIÇOS NO RECREIO - Ligue (21) 3091-0191lucianobatista
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Presentation at the Florida Association of School Psychologists on using Universal Design for Learning principles to create an effective and equitable multi-tiered system of supports (MTSS) for all students.
Data driven innovation for student success (Studiosity Symposium 2017)Studiosity.com
Empowering cross-institutional collaboration to drive holistic approaches to student success that leverage the power of student centered analytics and prepare our graduates for the new world of work
Keynote:
Associate Professor Jessica Vanderlelie
Innovative Research Universities Vice Chancellors’ Fellow, Australian Learning & Teaching Fellow
Stuart Weinstein - Principal Research Scientist - Kaizen Approach, Inc.
1.
2. 2
ACADEMIC BACKGROUND
• Ph.D., Florida State University, Instructional Systems, 1981
• M.Ed., University of Miami, Educational Media, 1976
• B.A., University of Miami, Mass Communications, 1972
• A.S., Miami-Dade Community College, Radio/TV Broadcast
Technologies, 1970
• A.A., Miami-Dade Community College, Journalism and Public
Relations, 1969
3. 3
ACADEMIC EXPERIENCE
• Leading and supporting instructional design, development, delivery, and
evaluation of training and education products and services in all media formats at
K-12, commercial, higher education, military, and civilian government settings
• Committee / Advisory Member for nine educational innovation Doctoral
dissertations and two Masters theses at five universities since 1997 (See Slides 6
& 7 for titles)
• American Society for Training and Development “Instructional Theory Domain
Expert” in support of the Certified Professional in Learning and
Performance™ (CPLP™) program for learning and development professionals
• Graduate faculty member at four universities teaching instructional design,
instructional innovation and related courses, continuously, since 1983
• Published 68 articles in refereed journals, including presentations at all major
learning conferences – ASTD, ISPI, SALT, USDLA, AECT, and SHRM
4. 4
EMPLOYMENT IN EDUCATIONAL & COMMERCIAL SETTINGS
44 years of higher education, commercial, and government experience in training
innovations, course/curricula development, research, university teaching, and project
management:
• Kaizen Approach, Inc. – Columbia, MD
• Management Concepts, Tysons Corner, VA
• University of Maryland Baltimore County, Baltimore, MD
• IBM Corporation, Fairfax, VA
• Booz Allen Hamilton, McLean, VA
• BETAC Corporation, Alexandria, VA
• Universal Systems, Inc., Chantilly, VA
• UNISYS Corporation, McLean, VA
• SWL, Inc., Vienna, VA
• Professional Management Associates, Bethesda, MD
• Information Technologies Group, Inc., Gaithersburg, MD
• AAI Corporation, Baltimore, MD
• Eagle Technology, Inc., Orlando, FL
• Florida State University, Tallahassee, FL
• University of Miami, Coral Gables, FL
5. 5
KEY APPOINTMENTS AND HONORS
• Contributing author and technical editor for internationally-recognized learning and
development leaders, including Drs. M. David Merrill (Utah State University),
Robert M. Gagne (Florida State University), and Donald Shandler (Marymount
University)
• Awarded several top awards for training research and service, including:
• Hammer Award for Reinventing Government (presented by Vice President
Gore for Modernization of the IRS) Basis for Award: IRS Training Improvement
• IRS Commissioner’s Award (IRS highest award -- presented by IRS
Commissioner Charles Rossotti for Modernization of the IRS) Basis for Award:
Leading the IRS Training Supply and Demand Studies
• State of Maryland Superintendent’s Award (presented by the Commissioner of
Education for the State of Maryland) Basis for Award: Chair, Technology Advisory
Council for 4 years
• Special Commendation from the Undersecretary for Security, U.S.
Department of Commerce (presented by Department of Commerce Deputy
Undersecretary for Security) Basis for Award: Developing and leading
workshops in Performance Improvement
6. 6
ONLINE LEARNING INNOVATION RESEARCH ADVISOR
• Hoard, B. Human Performance Technology - Standards and Practice, Old Dominion
University, Norfolk, VA, April 2015. (Doctoral Advisory Panel)
• Barker, C. Barriers to Teaching Gamification Courses in Instructional Design Degree
Programs, Ohio State University, Columbus, OH, December 2014. (M.Ed. Advisory Panel)
• Ashton, J., A Phenomenological Inquiry of Instructor Solitude in Online Education, Nova
Southeastern University, Ft. Lauderdale, FL, Ph.D., November 2014. (Doctoral Advisory
Panel)
• Khan, K., Evaluation of the Proactive Design for Learning (PD4L) Model, Capella
University, Ph.D., January 2014. (Doctoral Committee Advisory Panel)
• Brigance, S., ADIT: Asynchronous Discussion Instructional Tool, Capella University,
Ed.D, December 2013. (Doctoral Committee Advisory Panel)
• Ortiz-Arteaga, C., A Delphi Study: Expert Recommendations on Employing Media in
Collaborative Online Learning Environments, Capella University, Ph.D., August 2012.
(Doctoral Committee Advisory Panel)
• Cooper, V., Instructional Development Model for Mobile Learning Study, Capella
University, Ph.D., May 2011. (Doctoral Committee Advisory Panel)
7. 7
BLENDED LEARNING INNOVATION RESEARCH ADVISOR
• Grincewicz, Amy M., Instructional Design Strategies for Deep Learning within Accelerated Courses
Across Disciplines, Capella University, Ph.D., June 2016, (Doctoral Committee Advisory Panel)
• Done, K., Factors in the Implementation of Online Courses of Study in Selected Community
Colleges in Mississippi, Mississippi State University, Ed.D, May 2009. (Doctoral Committee Advisory
Panel)
• Joy, D., Instructors Transitioning to Online Education, Virginia Polytechnic and University, Ph.D.,
September 2004. (Doctoral Committee Member - Signatory)
• Snyder, W., Perceptions on the Diffusion and Adoption of Skillsoft® an E-learning Program: A
Case Study of a Military Organization, Virginia Polytechnic and University, Ph.D., March 2003.
(Doctoral Committee Member - Signatory)
• Johnson, K., Factors Influencing the Faculty Adoption of Web Media Objects: Identification and
Recommendations, Virginia Polytechnic and University, M.S, December 2001. (Masters Thesis
Advisory Panel)
• Lucas, M., Distance Education in Social Studies Curricula, University of Connecticut at Storrs, Ed.D,
December 1995. (Doctoral Committee Advisory Panel)
• Fulbright, T., Evaluation of the Efficiency of United States Marine Corps Training and Audiovisual
Support Centers, M.A., University of North Florida, 1985. (Masters Thesis Advisory Panel)
8. 8
HIGHER EDUCATION LEARNING INNOVATION RESEARCHER
• Weinstein, S. H., The Relationship Between Teacher Perceptions of
Instructional Television Delivery System Attributes and Their Use of
Instructional Television Programming, Doctoral Dissertation, Florida State
University, December 1981. (Awarded the Association for Educational
Communications and Technology (AECT) Research Scholar of the Year Award,
1982.) (Dissertation replicated 6 times since 1982 – making it contemporary
regardless of new technology implementation)
• As part of teaching two Masters level courses at UMBC: EDUC 671: Principles
of Training and Development and EDUC 647: Corporate Distance Learning, I
review an average of 1,110 online posts per semester by 18-21 students, and
evaluate 40 final projects. I also subscribe to 14 RSS feeds and have a
membership in four professional societies. This keeps my quality of research
refreshed.
• I’m involved in instructional design, online learning, corporate learning, evaluation,
and dissemination/diffusion of instructional innovations all year long, plus
dissertation reviews.
9. 9
TECHNICAL REVIEWER FOR PFEIFFER- WILEY PUBLISHERS
Paperback: 528 pages
Publisher: Pfeiffer; 1st edition (October 16, 2012)
ISBN-10: 0470900407
ISBN-13: 978-0470900406
*Dr. M. David Merrill selected me to be a Content Reviewer for his draft and final manuscripts for this book.
I’ve served on committees and co-presented with Dr. Merrill since 1981.
*
10. 10
CONTRIBUTING AUTHOR AND TECHNICAL REVIEWER FOR AXZO
PRESS – CRISP PUBLICATIONS
Quote- Page 242:
Series: Crisp Fifty-Minute Books
Paperback: 257 pages
Publisher: Axzo Press (December 16, 2009)
ISBN-10: 1426018592
ISBN-13: 978-1426018596
*Dr. Donald Shandler, Assistant Vice President for Adult and Professional Education at Marymount University
and Principal Author selected me to be a Contributing Author and Reviewer. Based on his recommendation, I
also became the instructor for EDUC 671 - Principles of Training and Development at UMBC in 2010.
*
11. 11
“GRADUATE INTERNS: NEW ROLES, RULES, AND
RESOURCES” – TALENT MANAGEMENT MAGAZINE
*Co-Authored with Dr. Gregory Williams, Program Chair, UMBC Instructional Systems Development Masters
degree and Certificate program
Publication: Talent Management Magazine
Publisher: Human Capital Media Group, Inc.
Publication Date: May 2012
12. 12
CHIEF LEARNING OFFICER MAGAZINE – BUSINESS
INTELLIGENCE BOARD AND LEARNING ELITE PROGRAM
JUDGE – 2013, 2014, 2015 & 2016
• Chief Learning Officer Business Intelligence Board Member – 6 years
• Learning Elite Judge – Appointed for 2013, 2014, and 2015 Judgeship
13. 13
ENCYCLOPEDIA OF INSTRUCTIONAL TECHNOLOGY (2015)
Dr. Weinstein authored the
sections on “Cybersecurity
Training” and “Instructional
Games in Business and
Industry.”
Hardcover: 968 pages
Publisher: SAGE Publications, Inc. (February 20, 2015)
ISBN-10: 1452258228
ISBN-13: 978-1452258225
14. 14
SELECTED PUBLISHED EDUCATIONAL RESEARCH
(From among 68 articles and presentations)
• Weinstein, S and Forno, R, “Cybersecurity Training” in Encyclopedia of Educational
Technology, Sage Publications, in Press, Released January 2015.
• Shandler, D. (Author); Weinstein, S., (Contributing Author for Chapter on Technology and
Learning), Book: Motivating the Millennial Knowledge Worker, AXZO Press, Washington,
DC, 2010.
• Weinstein, S., et. al., Is Instructional Systems Design Dead?, Conference Presentation,
Learning 2006, Orlando, FL, 2006.
• Weinstein, S. & Naughton, J., Public Relations Society of America - "Certified in Public
Relations" Redesign Process, Public Relations Society of America, Conference Presentation
and Paper, San Francisco, CA, 2003.
• Enger, N., Fitzgerald, M., & Weinstein, S., Office of Personnel Management e-Gov
Initiatives, Federal E-Learning Conference - Washington, DC, Conference Presentation and
Power Point, 2002.
• Driscoll, M., Merrill, M.D., Spector, M., Morgan, R., & Weinstein, S., Tribute to Robert
M. Gagne - Legend in Instructional Design, Association for Educational
Communications & Technology, Conference Session and DVD Recorded Program,
Dallas, TX, 2002.
15. 15
SELECTED PUBLISHED EDUCATIONAL RESEARCH
• Weinstein, S. & Wisher, R., Issues and Research for E-learning Implementation:
Where Are We Heading?, Conference Presentation and Paper, TELECON 2000 -
Atlanta, GA, 2000.
• Wisher, R., Weinstein, S., & Hohos, J., Research and Case Study Development for
Distributed Learning, Pre-conference Workshop, United States Distance Learning
Association Annual Conference, Washington, DC, 2000.
• Weinstein, S., Attributes for Successful Adoption of Educational Innovations,
Conference Presentation and Paper, Annual Meeting of the American Society for
Training Development, San Francisco, CA, 1990.
• Weinstein, S. & Loveless, F., Assuring Successful Utilization of New Training
Innovations in Military and Educational Settings, Conference Presentation, USAF
Conference on Technology In Education & Training, Keesler AFB, Biloxi, MS, 1988.
16. 16
RESEARCH EXPERTISE: CONCEPTUALIZING, PROPOSING &
DIRECTING INNOVATIVE PILOTS
• Innovation: U.S. Department of Education's Preparing Tomorrow's Teachers to Use
Technology (PT3) initiative
• Stuart’s role: Grants Evaluator (7 years) and Evaluation Team Lead (3 years), plus
Advisor to Grantees for post award pilots and implementation
• Audience: Teacher Educators in U.S. Public and Private Schools Systems, Colleges, and
Universities
• Sponsorship: U.S. Dept. of Education, Office of Post-Secondary and Higher Education
• Process: Evaluator and team lead for a three-tier process in evaluating technology innovation
grants and implementation for the largest federally-supported programs for pre-service
teachers. Focused on implementation and evaluation of programs designed to systemically
improve the preparation of teachers to effectively integrate technology into their teaching.
• Results: Evaluated an annual average of 25 grants for 7 years (approximately 175 total) and
mentored new evaluators in the review and adjudication processes. Program supported the
efforts of the Association for the Education of Teachers in Science, Association of
Mathematics Teacher Educators, College and University Faculty Assembly of the National
Council for the Social Studies, Conference on English Education of the National Council of
Teachers of English, and Society for Information Technology and Teacher Education. To date,
over 400 grants were awarded.
17. 17
RESEARCH EXPERTISE: CONCEPTUALIZING, PROPOSING &
DIRECTING INNOVATIVE PILOTS
• Innovation: U.S. Department of Education Technology Innovation Challenge Grant
Program
• Stuart’s role: Grants Evaluator (4 years) and Evaluation Team Lead (1 year)
• Audience: Local educational agencies, state educational agencies, and institutions of
higher education, businesses, museums, libraries, academic content experts, software
designers, and others.
• Sponsorship: U.S. Department of Education Office of Innovation and Improvement
• Process: Grants were five-year development and demonstration projects. Each
consortium developed a plan to begin start-up activities in year one, including initial
trials of new learning content and sustained professional development for teachers.
Years two and three were devoted to refinement and expansion of the new applications
of technology. Years four and five supported system-wide adoptions that could become
self-sustaining after the fifth year.
• Results: Reviewed annual average of 10 grant applications per year (40 grants – total)
Over a six year period, the Program funded approximately 100 projects.
18. 18
INNOVATIVE TRAINING LEADERSHIP: CONCEPTUALIZING,
PROPOSING & DIRECTING INNOVATIVE PILOTS
• Innovation: Defense Leadership and Management MBA Program (Civilian
Government) [Booz Allen and Georgetown University MBA Program Partnership]
• Stuart’s role: Deputy Director – DLAMP, Instructional Designer, and Instructor
Lead Evaluator for pilots of seven different courses
• Audience: Civilian DoD Leadership (GS-14, 15 and SES)
• Sponsorship: Department of Defense (DoD), Office of Personnel and Readiness,
Training Directorate
• Process: Designed and delivered a DoD-focused MBA program (36 credits).
Degrees issued through Georgetown University, George Mason University, and
University of Connecticut at Storrs. Also, designed, developed, and co-taught
“Media and National Security” for three years.
• Results: Successful program, over 600 graduates. Program is in its 11th year.
19. 19
IN THE PRESS: CONCEPTUALIZING, PROPOSING &
DIRECTING INNOVATIVE PILOTS
• Innovation: Management Development Pilot for the U.S. Intelligence Community
Beginning and Experienced Managers
• Stuart’s role: Project Manager, Lead Instructional Designer and Lead Instructor,
• Audience: GS- 13,14, & 15 leaders from 17 U.S Intelligence Agencies
• Sponsorship: U.S. Defense Intelligence Agency (DIA)
• Process: Created curricula for two cohorts – (1) Front-Line (Beginning) Supervisors and
(2) Advanced Managers serving the intelligence community. Curriculum includes 26
Web-based instructional modules, on-line facilitation sessions, Webinars, workshops,
and downloadable job aids. Joint effort of Harvard Business School, IBM and DIA.
• Results: Successful pilot program, 50 graduates. Program is in its 5th year. Two articles
published in DIA Communique journal – 2008 & 2010.
20. 20
HIGH SCHOOL EDUCATIONAL INNOVATION
• Innovation: Individualized Science Instructional Systems (ISIS)
• Stuart’s role: Implementation and Field Research Lead
• Audience: 25,000 High School Students with 20 concurrent pilots in Florida,
Texas and other States, during first two years of program
• Sponsorship: National Science Foundation (NSF), U.S. Department of Education,
and Ginn & Co. Publishers (Xerox Company) - $10M NSF Funding, $3M U.S.
Dept. of Education, and $3M Florida State University (FSU) Funding
• Process: Design, Develop, Implement (Field Test) and Disseminate 36 Print and
Multimedia-based Mini-courses in Science for non-science prone High School
Students
• Results: Florida State University sold exclusive distribution rights to Ginn &
Company Publishers resulting in $11M in annual sales for 10 Years
21. 21
AWARD WINNING TECHNICAL TRAINING INNOVATION
• Innovation: AN-GPN Precision Approach Radar Multi-Use Interactive
Training (Military)
• Stuart’s role: Project Manager, Lead Instructional Designer, and Media
Production Liaison. Conducted two pilots of the program at USAF Technical
Training Centers: Keesler, AFB (Biloxi, MS) and Hill, AFB (Ogden, UT)
• Audience: Radar Operators & Maintainers Throughout the U.S. Air Force
• Sponsorship: United States Air Force, Air Education and Training Command
• Process: Design, develop, implement (field test) and disseminate interactive
training approaches to address operation and maintenance requirements through
on-the-fly curriculum development in animated and static presentation format
• Results:
o Implemented at Keesler AFB (MS) and Hill AFB (UT) Technical Training Centers
o Won a NEBBY Interactive Media Award for “Best Interactive Military/Government
Training Product” (Equivalent to an Emmy for Interactive Training Media)