Connected Educator Profile (Day 6) – Cristy Vogel – Columbia, SC

The United State Department of Education has declared the month of October Connected Educator Month. According to ConnectedEducators.org,  the website set up to support this event, the Mission of Connected Educator Month is to  promote educators learning and collaborating through online communities of practice and social networks.With this in mind I reached out to my Personal Learning Network (PLN) via Twitter, my favorite resource for connecting, and tweeted the following:
As is normally the case, my network came through! When I have a question on an educational topic or want some feedback for one of my crazy ideas, I have a network of amazing educators at my fingertips that never cease to amaze me. Being a “Connected Educator” is awesome!

Today’s Connected Educator Profile

Cristy Vogel, High School French Teacher

Columbia, South Carolina

image via http://langchat.pbworks.com/f/1352169735/CristyGoogle.jpg
Why do you choose to be a connected educator?

Sharing ideas and collaborating with others are benefits that allow me to improve my craft anytime I like. My PLN is indispensable! My students benefit greatly from my connected learning experiences and that is what drives me.

Where can other educators connect with you online? 

Twitter – @msfrenchteach 

Cristy’s Blog – The Slanted Apostrophe 

Connected Educator Profile (Day 5) – Tom Murray – Bucks County, PA

The United State Department of Education has declared the month of October Connected Educator Month. According to ConnectedEducators.org,  the website set up to support this event, the Mission of Connected Educator Month is to  promote educators learning and collaborating through online communities of practice and social networks.With this in mind I reached out to my Personal Learning Network (PLN) via Twitter, my favorite resource for connecting, and tweeted the following:
As is normally the case, my network came through! When I have a question on an educational topic or want some feedback for one of my crazy ideas, I have a network of amazing educators at my fingertips that never cease to amaze me. Being a “Connected Educator” is awesome!

Today’s Connected Educator Profile
Tom Murray, Director of Technology and Cyber Education
Bucks County, Pennsylvania



Why do you choose to be a connected educator?

Simply put, being a connected educator allows me to learn from a global network, from people of all walks, position titles, etc., who challenge my thinking, encourage my initiatives, and force me to be better tomorrow than I was today. My PLN has inspired my work and pushed me to be the very best that I can be….for kids.

Where can other educators connect with you online?  

Twitter – @thomascmurray  

Follow Tom on Google+  

Friend Tom on Facebook

Tom’s Website –  http://www.thomascmurray.com/

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Connected Educator Profile (Day 4) – Scot Wright – Ore City, Texas

The United State Department of Education has declared the month of October Connected Educator Month. According to ConnectedEducators.org,  the website set up to support this event, the Mission of Connected Educator Month is to  promote educators learning and collaborating through online communities of practice and social networks.With this in mind I reached out to my Personal Learning Network (PLN) via Twitter, my favorite resource for connecting, and tweeted the following:
As is normally the case, my network came through! When I have a question on an educational topic or want some feedback for one of my crazy ideas, I have a network of amazing educators at my fingertips that never cease to amaze me. Being a “Connected Educator” is awesome!

Today’s Connected Educator Profile
Scot Wright, Ore City, Texas
High School Principal



Why do you choose to be a connected educator?

I’ve been exposed to so many different people from all over the world thru twitter. I’ve been able to learn so much more this way than I ever thought possible.

Where can other educators connect with you online? 

Twitter – @scot_wright

Blog: scotwright.wordpress.com

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Connected Educator Profile (Day 3) – Mark Engstrom – Sao Paolo, Brazil

The United State Department of Education has declared the month of October Connected Educator Month. According to ConnectedEducators.org,  the website set up to support this event, the Mission of Connected Educator Month is to  promote educators learning and collaborating through online communities of practice and social networks.With this in mind I reached out to my Personal Learning Network (PLN) via Twitter, my favorite resource for connecting, and tweeted the following:
As is normally the case, my network came through! When I have a question on an educational topic or want some feedback for one of my crazy ideas, I have a network of amazing educators at my fingertips that never cease to amaze me. Being a “Connected Educator” is awesome!

Today’s Connected Educator Profile
Mark Engstrom, Sao Paolo, Brazil
Middle School Geography

Why do you choose to be a connected educator?

I have been able to connect with over 20 educators globally to enhance the experience of my geography students. Would love to connect with even more educators looking to give their students collaborative experiences around global issues.

Where can other educators connect with you online? 

Twitter – @MarkAEngstrom

  

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Connected Educator Profile (Day 2) – Alan Stange – Moose Jaw, Saskatchewan

The United State Department of Education has declared the month of October Connected Educator Month. According to ConnectedEducators.org,  the website set up to support this event, the Mission of Connected Educator Month is to  promote educators learning and collaborating through online communities of practice and social networks.With this in mind I reached out to my Personal Learning Network (PLN) via Twitter, my favorite resource for connecting, and tweeted the following:
As is normally the case, my network came through! When I have a question on an educational topic or want some feedback for one of my crazy ideas, I have a network of amazing educators at my fingertips that never cease to amaze me. Being a “Connected Educator” is awesome!

Today’s Connected Educator Profile

Alan Stange, Moose Jaw, Saskatchewan, CA
4th Grade Teacher

Why do you choose to be a connected educator?

I have an interest in integrating instructional technologies into the learning environment to support collaborative learning within a flexible studio classroom design. Learning is connected, and we live in a flat world (so to speak). Conversations here have informed my teaching.

Where can other educators connect with you online?

Twitter – @stangea

Follow Alan on Google+ 

Alan’s Website: www.Alan-stange.ca 

Connected Educator Profile (Day 1) – Kathy Schrock – Cape Cod, MA

The United State Department of Education has declared the month of October Connected Educator Month. According to ConnectedEducators.org,  the website set up to support this event, the Mission of Connected Educator Month is to  promote educators learning and collaborating through online communities of practice and social networks.With this in mind I reached out to my Personal Learning Network (PLN) via Twitter, my favorite resource for connecting, and tweeted the following:
As is normally the case, my network came through! When I have a question on an educational topic or want some feedback for one of my crazy ideas, I have a network of amazing educators at my fingertips that never cease to amaze me. Being a “Connected Educator” is awesome!

Today’s Connected Educator Profile

Kathy Schrock, Cape Cod, MA

Why do you choose to be a connected educator?

I have been providing resources for teachers on the Web since 1995. However, now that Web 2.0 is here, I am a connected educator because I can learn so much from all of my connections! I have access to creative educators, experts in the field, and others who like to share their findings. It is a win-win for me!

Where can other educators connect with you online?

Twitter – @KathySchrock

Follow Kathy on Google +

Follow Kathy on Facebook

Kathy’s Websites:  

http://kathyschrock.net

http://schrockguide.net

http://ipads4teaching.net

http://blog.kathyschrock.net 

Editors Note: 
Kathy was such a valuable resource for me as a classroom teacher back in the mid 90’s. Her website offered a wealth of resources for me back a time where there were not too many high quality resources to be found online for classroom teachers.  Nearly 20 years later, her web resources continue to be a source of the highest quality content that teachers can find online. 

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Connected Educator Month Begins In Two Weeks! What Will You Do To Connect?

For the second year in a row, the United States Department of Education has made October Connected Educator Month.  What is Connected Educator Month (CEM) you ask? Check out the following description from the great CEM District Toolkit created by Powerful Learning Practice:

Connected Educator Month (CEM) is a month-long celebration of community, with educators at all levels, from all disciplines, moving toward a fully connected and collaborative profession. 

 The goals of Connected Educator Month include:

  • Helping more districts promote and integrate online social learning into their formal professional development 
  • Stimulating and supporting collaboration and innovation in professional development 
  • Getting more educators connected (to each other) 
  • Deepening and sustaining the learning of those already connected
The Connected Educator Month District Tool Kit
The bottom line is that our students need to know how to create Personal Learning Networks (PLN’s) that will allow them to connect with others who share their passion in a particular area. For this to happen to the fullest extent possible, we need out students to be surrounded by educators who can model the practices of a connected learner.  
With this in mind, I hope to profile one Connected Educator from my PLN on each school day during the month of October. To make this happen, I will be asking the members of my network to fill out a short Google Form and share a bit of information about who they are, where they are, and why they connect. Stay tuned…
If you are willing to help me achieve my goal of a “Connected Educator Profile” for each school day during October, please fill out this brief form.
Thanks in advance for your help!

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Leadership Day 2012 – Reevaluating The Plan…

A look back to look ahead…

As I gather my thoughts for this year’s Leadership Day blog contribution, I thought I would take a look back at my posts from the past two years to evaluate my efforts. Back in 2010, my post Leadership Day 2010 – Two Of My Goals For This Year focused on connecting with my my administrative colleagues in Massachusetts and getting out and showing them the ways in which digital tools could help them to connect and collaborate within their schools, their communities, and beyond.

In last year’s post, Leadership Day 2011 – A Few Thoughts,  I focused on the following quote from Steven Johnson’s Where Good Ideas Come From:

“Some environments squelch new ideas; some environments seem to breed them effortlessly. The city and the Web have been such engines of innovation because, for complicated historical reasons, they are both environments that are powerfully suited for the creation, diffusion, and adoption of good ideas.” 

The main point again was that school leaders need to take the lead due to the fact that public schools tend to stifle new ideas.  I concluded with the following words:

Of course order to do this we need to get more school leaders on board using them.  As has always been the case, our schools need to teach literacy, citizenship, and responsibility.  However, the playing field has changed and we now need to embrace the digital realm as well.  If we do not accept this, we will shortchange both our students and ourselves.

As I think about my focus on school leaders and teachers over the past two years, I feel fortunate to have made so many connections with passionate educators who have started to embrace the power of digital resources to engage students in meaningful ways.  However, I also have been frustrated at the limited movement I have seen among educators in adopting resources which I see as beneficial in the creation of more relevant learning environments for students.

This year, I propose a change in focus, or better yet, an additional focal point in the effort to create learning environments that will better prepare our students for the growingly complex world that they will enter when they complete their formal education. It is time to go all-in with that group of people that many educators tend to avoid…the parents.  We need to engage the people that care most about our students and engage them in a meaningful dialogue about the schools their students need.

IMAG0091
Parents play a key role in our move to create more engaging classrooms.

We need to have real discussions about the fact that the classrooms that our students enter are amazingly similar to the ones that their parents and grandparents entered decades earlier despite the fact that the world outside of those classrooms is in many ways unrecognizable from the world   of school children at those times.

There is no group that cares more deeply about the education of our students than their parents. However, it is up to us to show parents some of the new resources that were not available when they were in school. Even more important is that we show parents how to use these tools that are sometimes perceived negatively by those who have never seen them used constructively. 
For quite some time schools have lamented the fact that parents do not physically show up at school for these types of conversations, but fortunately time and place is no longer a hinderance with the plethora of digital tools we can draw from to get more people engaged in te dialogue. We  (school leaders) are the only ones holding us back from this endeavor at this time.  
The tools are there to connect and there is plenty to discuss, so let’s have it! I look forward to sharing our movement in Burlington with anyone interested.

Here are a couple of reference points that will help us lead this conversation:

What Qualities Do “Bold Schools” Share? – from Will Richardson

 Race To Nowhere resources

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