TWAIN – Technology Without an Interesting Name: An inside view to technology integration.

Archive for the ‘Fun’


Looking for I-T People

I am starting to get a little frustrated with something at work. I am seeing staff start to want my technology department to handle their responsibilities only because those responsibilities require the use of technology. It doesn’t seem fair to push the responsibilities on to the tech department because it uses technology to complete the tasks.

Can you imagine what this would look like? The technology department could be in charge of the budget because it is a database. We could also be in charge of evaluating all staff because PDAS is really a technology database as well. Why not have the technology department enter grades since it is an automated gradebook? This way, technology handles the technology side of things and people would not need to use the tools because they don’t need it. This technology fad will go away, right?

But I bet I am not the only one who fights this in their jobs. I don’t think I am the only one who is looking at how what I do impacts the others I work with and the stakeholders we serve. I hope I am not the only one who is looking at how decisions impact everyone and everything for months and years after the choice is made.

As I started this blog to vent about what is happening, I read an article posted on Business Week’s Innovation Column called “Innovation Calls for I-Shaped People” by Bill Buxton.

The second sentence hooked me as this nagging problem started surfacing today:
“If certain problems are beyond the scope of any individual—and most of them are—the way to address them is with a team with complementary skills and a common language in which they can all communicate….There may be no “I” in team, but every team needs to be made up of “I-shaped” people.”

The author recognizes how a friend of his Bill Moggridge, the co-founder of IDEO, came up with the idea of “T-shaped people”. Where the vertical line of the T represents depth and the horizontal line represents breadth. A T-shaped person has a “relatively broad domain of knowledge along with real depth of competence….”

The author adapts the idea of T-shape to the I-shape where there is a firm root in the practical world but then enough to stretch to the clouds to see above. He referenced a teacher who tied this concept to his students by saying “…outstanding students all had an outstanding capacity for abstract thinking, yet they also had a really strong grounding in physical materials and tools.”

So an I-shaped person can extend to the outside and abstract way of thinking but also knows the tools to access to work in the abstract. Mix these I-people with T-people and you can develop some interactions to solve some real problems that combine vision with the tools on hand.

Some days, I feel like I am surrounded by _ people. Underlines. I need some good I&T people and this doesn’t mean Technology staff. I need people who are I’s mixed with my T’s but I feel I am stuck with _’s. A _ person is grounded in what they’ve been doing for years. They are only looking at the grounded part – what is around them. It’s hard to develop vision when your eyes are pressed against the ground. But they sure know the ground and they know it very well! They have a real broad understanding of ground.

I guess I need to change myself before pushing the blame on others. There is a part of me that believes I could do the job better than the _s because I am not a _. But maybe I am a little bit of a _ by thinking it is someone else’s blame. It is a quandry!

I know that I need to figure out who my Is and Ts are in my district and work with them so that we can work together to solve these problems. The blame game doesn’t work and neither does moving the work around.

Even though there is a major part of me that wants to rant, kick, shout, and show how I spent the morning in Google Docs making forms that shorten the workload for that department so that one person could easily make it all work! I want to shake some knowledge into them! You know this feeling, right??

But that isn’t “I” or “T” of me. it makes me a _. Or maybe it is “I” and “T” but adds an “S” and an H” to it. Now “Y” would I want to be that?

Is it Friday yet?

An end to the conference

Today is Friday and it marks the end of summer camp….er…um…..TCEA 2009. It is sad to see everyone packing up their belongings and leaving us! The big group is gone and there are just stragglers left behind hoping to get one last mug or T-shirt from the vendors. And I am not casting judgment on them as I am in that group as well!

I am sitting by myself in the Blogger’s Cafe right now. It is sad to see the table empty except for the power surge protectors and discarded vendor pamphlets. But, it is exciting for me to be able to work on a form I am sending to my district participants so I can get their input about this conference.

I just made it on Google Documents which embeds the form online and then generates the spreadsheet behind it to gather all the data. Next week, I get to share their experiences with the district leadership team and we can start building our framework for technology vision for our district. It is exciting and motivational to be part of this process from the ground floor.

Though I am using this form only to gather data from my district, I thought I might share it with you all in case you would like to generate a similar one for your district/campus.

http://spreadsheets.google.com/viewform?key=pcJ_EAVrg90uwhN_UriPRUw

Only a few more sessions for me to attend followed by the keynote address by Dr. Robert Ballard. I confess that I am a Titanic geek and Dr. Ballard was the discoverer of this great ship at the bottom of the ocean. I am really looking forward to his session and am sure it will be a great close to this awesome conference.

And then, I will raid that exhibit hall for any crumbs and leftovers I can find!

Ciao!

Wednesday – Open Sessions!

Today marked the first day of open sessions and the exhibit hall at TCEA. I had a full schedule laid out on my cheat-sheet (which keeps me from pulling out the booklet), and I completely disregarded it. I ended up visiting the Exhibit Hall and then going to the Blogger Cafe.

But this morning was incredibly awesome! I was really blown away to hear my blog post from a few days ago read out loud to the audience. How incredible was that?!?! I thought it was really cool and my row of Kerrvillites seemed to enjoy it as well. What an honor.

I did attend the TEC-SIG luncheon later and heard the speaker share about how the mood we project reflects the mood of our environment. It wasn’t a technology training talk as we usually get; but it was about how we can serve our stakeholders better. It was that component of learning more about how we can serve than just providing more tools and resources for us to gawk at. I really appreciated this presentation for just that reason.

After this, I was asked to be interviewed for a segment on SchoolTube. I asked for Kari Rhame to interview me and she did. I was hoping to embed the video here tonight but it hasn’t been uploaded to SchoolTube.com yet.

All in all, a great day. I hope to get to my sessions tomorrow and to have a good workshop. Tomorrow I am presenting a workshop for three hours on Web 2.0 Tools and I am about to assemble the presentation right now.

Also – great seeing everyone. Thanks for the handshakes and hellos!

KISD Tech Newsletter

I posted a newsletter to all staff in my district today and I wanted to open this blog post to them. Share what you think of the newsletter, comments, commentary, suggestions, etc.

Did you try out any of the websites?
If you checked out a site, what ways could you use it in your classes?

Any fears about using Web 2.0 tools?

Summer training ideas?

Anyone else blogging out there? How about a wiki? Would you be interested in learning more about these tools?

Feel free to join the discussion by adding a comment. I would love to hear from you!

To post a comment, under this post are some words in smaller print. Click on the word Comment to add your voice. You can post the name Anonymous if you don’t want your name to appear. You must enter an email address though (it doesn’t show me who, I promise!). The email is just to verify that you aren’t a spammer.

A frustrated blogger!

I am quite disappointed in the lack of comments to my blog. I get more response on my old Myspace page that I haven’t touched in years, than this place.

I thought blogging was two-way communication. I post something and then people respond.

But lately, I post something and no one responds. Lately?? Who am I kidding? This has been ongoing for about 4 months now! No response! No comments!

It is bruising my delicate ego, to say the least.

Another nail in the coffin: I tried Plurk again recently, only to find that I have no fans there. So whatever I post, no one is reading. I wondered why no one responds to my comments there. The news was broken to me when I had to read the help page to learn that I have no fans. I can post a response to others on the timeline but they choose not to follow me.

I use Plurk to post all my confessions now. It is quite liberating to throw them out to the world. I also post vulgar tirades there. I mean, why not?!?! A timeline of tirades that no one is watching meshed in with other ed. tech leaders sharing about what they eat, how they exercise, and what they think of Plurk vs. Twitter. It is like an explosion of vulgarity between their conversations that only I am enjoying.

I get good responses to Twitter, but that’s the only place where my Web 2.0 interactive conversations take place. The problem is that the response has to be less than 140 characters.

Maybe blogging is dead and I didn’t get that memo! I read blogs daily on all sorts of topics in and outside of education.  I have noticed that several educational blogs/podcasts I used to access haven’t updated in a while (see previous post). Maybe it isn’t just me! Maybe our entire blogosphere has shifted. Have people stopped blogging? I bet they have until February 10 when we all finish the state conference and blogging is cool again!

Ahh.. I dunno what I am saying here. I don’t understand this at all and am really starting to take it personally. I reach out and post on other blogs, Twitter posts, Plurks, message boards, etc. in hopes that the link will draw them to read my opinions here. But…..that isn’t working.

Am I giving up? Nope. This is a nice venting place. People can reply or not. I use it to track my own progress on things.
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Hmmmmm

I don’t think anyone is even reading this post,  so I will end by saying “ppppplllllllbbbbbbppppp!!!!” (phonetic raspberry sound)