Showing posts with label Managing technology. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Managing technology. Show all posts

Friday, May 03, 2013

How Many Does it Take to Screw in a Light Bulb?

When we put a new practice in, we must let it replace something else. "One in—one out." In the world of the tech-savvy leader, it's more like "one in—one dozen out." In the world of those who are barely hanging on, it's "one in—one more in—here's another—and another." When we don't fully understand the new, we hang on to the old. We do double-duty.

As a starter, here are three quick practices which make changing the light bulb a one-person job:

1. Take teachers out of the receipt-writing business

As an elementary principal, our school stopped issuing receipt books to teachers. Any student with money brought it in a sealed envelope with his name, homeroom, amount of money, and purpose written on the outside. Students went to one designated place in the school and turned their envelopes in to two designated people. These two staff members received the money. When the tardy bell rang, they  would count the money, enter the information into a database, print receipts, and print a record of the transactions which was submitted to the office with the money.

The practice worked like a charm. Teachers had more time at the start of the day to teach, rather than practice their accounting skills. With a new procedure planned, I began making the needed changes in the faculty handbook. I was amazed at how much we had been asking of teachers in order to satisfy auditors.Entire pages came out of the handbook as we took this burden and its regulations off the back of our teachers. What went into the handbook instead was a simple paragraph explaining where to send students who have money and what information each student was to have on his/her envelope.

The procedure meant freeing up two people to handle the load of receipting money for the entire school. The larger the school, the more time required. However, the larger the school, the more time is already spent on receipting money. The light bulb is simply being turned by 100 people instead of 20. Since that time, the software to handle the job has gotten better. Let's take teachers out of the receipt-writing business.

2. Never ask a teacher to produce a report from the computer when one person can run the same report for the entire school.

Progress reports and report cards should be printed by one person in the front office, not by every teacher in the school. Ditto for award certificates. On my website is an all-purpose certificate and companion spreadsheet. When it comes time to print certificates for perfect attendance, honor roll, or membership in any school organization, the entire job can be printed in one huge batch. Let's get away from the antiquated model of dividing work amongst an entire faculty. Instead, let's use our technology efficiently.

3. Data data everywhere, but that doesn't mean we have to hand-copy.

Every year, the "high-stakes test" results arrive. Every year, in all-too-many schools, principals pass out computer-generated reports and ask teachers to copy figures from those printouts to paper grids. They call it "analyzing data." I call it copying numbers. The tech-savvy leader figures a way to deliver those figures in their final form to the teacher. The teacher's time is then spent making meaning of the data, not mechanically copying it.

How many of your co-workers does it take to screw in a light bulb?  What can you do to end the madness?
 

Thursday, August 02, 2012

Follow-Up for Fort Bend Independent School District

This post is intended for those who attended one of my sessions at the Fort Bend Leadership Institute.

iGoogle
If you are interested in adding to your iGoogle page some of the same gadgets I have on mine, here is an easy way to get them. As you click each link, you will be taken to a page that describes the gadget and lets you click a button to automatically add it to your iGoogle page.

GoogleCalendar
Toodledo
Gmail
Evernote
Google Bookmarks
Google Reader
WolframAlpha 
GoogleDocs
Yahoo News
Twitter
Facebook 
Remember the Milk
Bit.ly URL Shortener
Weather
People.com
MapQuest Driving Directions
Area/Zip Code Lookup
Music
YouTube
Document to PDF
Movies
Google Map Search
Portfolio Monitor
Calculator
Stopwatch
Flight Status

Here is how to make iGoogle your homepage.

Netvibes
If you wish to use a Netvibes page, click the green "Add content" button at the top of the screen. Clicking on "Essential widgets: will provide several screen of popular widgets from which to choose.

Also, click on "Browse categories:." Set the drop-downs to "United States," "Recently popular first," and "Applications." Choose from each of the categories the widgets you wish to have. I have found that some widgets will be listed on the screen which are no longer available.

Google Docs Forms
What are some paper forms you use now which Google Docs could handle in a paperless fashion?

Click here to see what other people have answered.


Monday, July 16, 2012

Myfaves as a Possible Homepage

During my search for an iGoogle replacement, I looked at Myfav.es. The service is ridiculously simple. The video below explains how to use it. If you blink, you will miss it:




See what I mean.

I created an account, and here is what I produced in just a few minutes.:



If Myfave.es were my homepage, then each time I open my browser on any of my devices, I would see this array of icons. Clicking on any one would take me to that site.

The only control you will see is a cog in the lower right corner. When you click it, you can add a featured site, click "All Sites" to choose from a wide array of sites (Google Calendar, Evernote, Fox News, etc.), or "Create a Fave." The "Create a Fave" option lets you choose an ion and assign any URL to it.


 Once you have added an icon to your page, mousing over the bottom of the icon displays a cog that allows you to flip the icon over and either change its URL or delete it.

What I Like About Myfav.es
  1. The look is uncluttered and attractive. The icons are large and colorful.
  2. The site is simple to create.
  3. Like other personalized homepages, if you are on a computer other than your own, you can log into Myfav.es and you are viewing all of your stuff.

What I Don't Like About Myfav.es
You must click on an icon to see anything. With iGoogle or Netvibes, we have a "dashboard" where we can read a great deal of information without ever leaving that page. Clicking one of the gadgets/widgets would take us to the full site where we could see more detail.

I want the "dashboard" effect, the ability to keep my most common tools in front of me and see information without leaving the homepage. For that reason, Netvibes became my choice over Myfaves.

Special Implications for Schools
In any classroom or computer lab, there are generally a few sites which students access regularly. For example, elementary schools use Accelerated Reader, STAR, and search the holdings of the school library, just to name three. Teachers try to make it as easy as possible for students to get to these programs. Created shortcuts on the desktop has been a common way to solve the problem. Of course, that means going to computers individually to create those shortcuts. As changes are made, it also means gonig to each computer to make them.

With Myfaves, the only thing which must be done on individual computers is to set the homepage to Myfaves. After that, the teacher makes a change in one place. Myfaves makes an attractive homepage each time the browser is opened. Students are presented with commonly-accessed sites featured in large, colorful tiles. I would think the younger the student, the more benefit teachers will find with Myfaves as the homepage.
 
Is anyone already using Myfav.es? Have you found any advantages I have not mentioned? Are there concerns?

Friday, June 15, 2012

AETC2012 and Free Dropbox Storage

Thanks to everyone who came to one of my sessions at AETC2012. If you are visiting this blog for the first time as a result of one of the sessions, I hope that you will find ideas here that are worth your time and will keep you coming back.

Dropbox
For those who were in the Free Digital Tools session, here is the Dropbox information I promised. Want to set up a Dropbox account? Here is an easy way for you to set up an account and get an extra 500MB of free storage for both you and me. Click here to sign up.

I have written a short e-book which explains how I use Dropbox. For information on downloading for free, go here. 

Wednesday, July 06, 2011

Coming to SDE Conferences in Las Vegas or Chicago?



Coming to the SDE Administrator Summit in Las Vegas next week? What about the Midwest Differentiated Instruction Conference in Chicago later this month?

If so, I hope ou will join me for the following sessions:

SDE DI Administrator Summit
  • The 5 Keys to Successful Organization & Time Management
  • A Day in the Life of the Digital Administrator
  • Your Own Blog in 10 Minutes or Less
  • Free Digital Tools That Increase Productivity


Midwest Differentiated Instruction Conference (Chicago)
  • A Day in the Life of the Digital Administrator
  • Your Own Blog in 10 Minutes or Less
  • Get More Done! 5 Keys to Organization & Time Management
  • Free Digital Tools That Increase Productivity

Wednesday, May 26, 2010

Spend the Day With Me at AETC


If you want nut and bolts tools to make your life easier, spend anywhere from an hour to the whole day with me on June 10 at the Alabama Educational Technology Conference.

Here are the workshops I will be presenting:

Get Organized With Outlook    9:15
Whether you organize with a BlackBerry, Palm, or other smartphone, the common denominator is the ability to synchronize with Outlook. Learn strategies for using Outlook to access, store, and retrieve information easily. The aim is increased productivity in a complex world.

Get Organized With Your BlackBerry     10:30
The BlackBerry is a common tool, yet methodology for how to manage your life with it is sparse. This session provides the nuts and bolts strategies that will allow the handheld to hold a very complete calendar, prioritized to-do list, contacts, and a wealth of reference material.

Data That Matters     12:30
Are you drowning in data yet searching for meaning? Learn how to put all of your “data that matters” on a single spreadsheet, set goals, and tell at a glance whether you are on the right track. Participants will be able to download the “Data That Matters” tracking tool free.You can get away from having your data strewn through various folders and various filing cabinets. Get away from those piles of paper and gain clarity about your data that matters.

The End of Paper Forms     1:45
There is no reason to ever distribute a paper form again. Learn to use the “forms” function of Google Docs to collect and assemble your data effortless and with no paper. Whether you are giving a survey, composing a directory, and giving a test, the forms feature in GoogleDocs is huge time-saver. This one is almost too good to be true. Oh, did I mention it’s free?

All sessions are in North Hall Room A.

Saturday, October 17, 2009

Did you Know 4.0.? Social Networking and the Computer in Your Pocket

This version of "Did You Know?" focuses on the changes in communication brought about by technology, and in particular changes brought about by the cell phones we carry in our pockets.

Saturday, September 19, 2009

New Alabama Graduation Rate Formula

Alabama will be changing the way it computes the its graduation rate, and I have been trying to determine the easiest way for schools to be able to track their progress. I think it's crucial that we can project our graduation rate at any time, and for any subgroup.

The solution that seems easiest to me is one list of all students with some well-chosen columns. The "game plan" is for school leaders to record for each student their feeling about whether that student will graduate on time or whether there are some concerns about the student. That information, along with keeping the list up to date in terms of students who have enrolled, dropped out, and moved is all that is needed. The graduation will compute itself for any grade level and any subgroup.



I will soon have the new calculator, along with a help document, on the "free resources" section of my website. It will be available to those who attended the CLAS New Principals Institute and will be presented at the CLAS Assistant Principals Conference (October 13).

Thursday, June 25, 2009

Digital Natives, Digital Immigrants

One of my summer projects is taking an online course to fulfill the requirements for a "professional learning unit," the new vehicle by which Alabama administrators renew their certificates.

One assignment asked the question, "What differences do you see between you as a student and the students of today?" Here is my reply:

I think the issue has to do more with the change in the environment than the change in the person. Students today were not genetically wired any differently than a generation ago. They are products of their environment, and it is an environment which offers far more choices than we knew as students.

I grew up with 3 TV channels (4 if the weather was just right), a radio, a turntable, one telephone in the house, and print media. Of those, the only one of them which was portable was print. In addition, only one held any type of suspense--the phone. Will it ring? If so, who will it be? The environment pretty much lent itself to focusing on the task at hand.

Contrast that scenario to the student of today who has access to over 100 channels, a go-anywhere iPod, go-anywhere cell phone (which rings, delivers text messages, and delivers e-mail), the internet, instant messaging, Facebook, MySpace, etc. The ability to take the cell phone anywhere means students are prone to being interrupted anywhere or interrupting themselves from anywhere and at any time. Curious about who may have sent an e-mail or left something on Facebook, self-interruption fragments their time.

The readings put a positive spin on "multitasking." Notice the dates--2001 and 2005. That's a long time ago in the world of technology. I did a Google search for "multitasking studies." Click the link and see if you get the same impression of what current thought says about multitasking as I did.

What all of this says to me is that time is as finite as it ever has been, yet the demands on that time grow. Our students have two choices. The first is to allow technology to be the master as they allow themselves to overwhelmed with new piece of input feeling as if there is no other choice. The results is that they do twice as much half as well, a result that looks like this video:



The other choice is for our students to use technology as a tool. Let technology perform a Google search that will return more relevant information in 2 seconds than two days in the stacks of the local library would yield. Use the "found time" for endeavors that require creative thought. Let Excel crunch the numbers in 2 seconds instead of spending 2 hours with the calculator. Use the "found time" to focus on something of quality.

In a world filled with choices and where interruptions and diversions abound, self-discipline and the ability to focus are going to be the keys to accomplish anything of substance. Like anything else, teachers are being looked to for guidance in this area. That's why we've got to be on the forefront, learning.

The frightening thing is that if someone is going to teach our young people how to use technology as a servant rather than letting it be the master, that someone is going to be us, the "digital immigrants."

Thursday, June 18, 2009

Virtual AETC Sessions Archived

ImageChef.com - Custom comment codes for MySpace, Hi5, Friendster and more The sessions from Virtual AETC have now been posted so that anyone who missed a session can view the archives. It is my understanding that they will be available for the remainder of the month.

You can view and listen to the my sessions by going to each of the following links:


These sessions are presented through Elluminate. You may be prompted to do some downloading of software one time.

Monday, March 16, 2009

A Light-Hearted Look at Software Design

New York Times columnist David Pogue takes aim at technology’s worst interface-design offenders, and provides encouraging examples of products that get it right. To funny things up, he bursts into song.

Friday, July 18, 2008

Some Thoughts on Web 2.0

How research using technology has evolved...and the implications for research and communication today and tomorrow.