Lessons in Responsibility from Spider-Man, Part 3

Wordle: Leadership Day: The Pace of Change
Lead­er­ship Day: The Pace of Change, from Prac­ti­cal The­ory by Chris Lehmann

In my last two posts, I wrote about the respon­si­bil­i­ties that go along with using pow­er­ful tech­nol­ogy tools, both for stu­dents and for teach­ers. Today I will con­sider a third group: administrators.

The Inter­na­tional Soci­ety for Tech­nol­ogy in Edu­ca­tion (ISTE) rec­og­nizes the impor­tance of strong lead­er­ship to the effec­tive use of tech­nol­ogy in schools, shown by the fact that they have devel­oped national stan­dards for admin­is­tra­tors. It is not enough to sim­ply cre­ate poli­cies aimed at enforc­ing safety and pro­duc­tiv­ity for stu­dents and teach­ers. Admin­is­tra­tors must accept their respon­si­bil­ity for vision­ary lead­er­ship, which takes sev­eral forms.

Understand

Just as teach­ers and stu­dents must under­stand a new tool or tech­nique before they can use it prop­erly, admin­is­tra­tors must deeply under­stand what is hap­pen­ing in the realm of tech­nol­ogy if they are going to be able to lead effec­tively. This means learn­ing about research and best practices.

It also requires them to use the tech­nolo­gies them­selves. Con­sider what a “chalk­board pol­icy” might have looked like if designed by admin­is­tra­tors who had never used one:

  1. Chalk­boards by nature are open and acces­si­ble forums, and as such have inher­ent risks involved with their use. In the best inter­ests of stu­dent and employee safety, it is the pol­icy of this admin­is­tra­tion to restrict access to chalk­boards and to mon­i­tor their use at all times.
  2. Chalk­boards will be main­tained behind a locked panel when not in use. The key to this panel is avail­able in the main office of each school build­ing and must be signed out when needed.
  3. Only autho­rized brands of yel­low or white chalk may be used on Dis­trict chalk­boards. Other writ­ing imple­ments, includ­ing but not lim­ited to col­ored chalk, serve no dis­cernible edu­ca­tional pur­pose and are forbidden.
  4. Only those who have a signed “Chalk­board User Agree­ment” on file may write on the chalk­board at any time.
  5. The use of the chalk­board is a priv­i­lege, which may be revoked by the admin­is­tra­tors at any time for abu­sive con­duct or vio­la­tions of this agreement.


Of course, there are many places where the par­al­lels break down, and it is not my intent to make light of the real issues and risks involved with Inter­net use by stu­dents. I believe, how­ever, that if more admin­is­tra­tors had a thor­ough under­stand­ing of the tools affected by their poli­cies, those poli­cies would have a dif­fer­ent focus.

Plan

Many dis­tricts seem to think that the prin­ci­ple of reverse psychology–where doing the oppo­site of what is expected will have more pow­er­ful results–also applies to pol­icy imple­men­ta­tion in this three-​​step process:

  1. Imple­ment new policy
  2. Deter­mine how the pol­icy should work (usu­ally after 6–12 months of practice)
  3. Decide whether the pol­icy was war­ranted in the first place (often after a year or two of failure)

In real­ity there must be thor­ough plan­ning before a pol­icy can be put into effect, with con­sid­er­a­tion for how it will impact all areas of cur­ricu­lum and instruction.

Another, more sub­tle sort of plan­ning is required if the use of tech­nol­ogy tools is going to be any­thing other than just a tacked-​​on option to an already over­stuffed cur­ricu­lum. This is where a clear, long-​​range vision for the future is cru­cial. The higher in an orga­ni­za­tion an admin­is­tra­tor rises, the more that per­son needs to see the big pic­ture and proac­tively design, not man­age, what that pic­ture will look like as the dis­trict develops.

Model

Edu­ca­tors know that more pow­er­ful than telling is show­ing. Good teach­ers build mod­el­ing into their instruc­tion because it pro­vides stu­dents with an exam­ple of what skilled, expert use looks like.

Admin­is­tra­tors can­not expect teach­ers and stu­dents to sim­ply fol­low their vision with hav­ing an exam­ple to fol­low. If admin­is­tra­tors expect tech­nol­ogy tools to be used prop­erly, they must show what that proper use looks like. If they want to see more stu­dents and teach­ers blog­ging, they must blog. If they want to see Twit­ter used as a pro­fes­sional tool rather than sim­ply a social one, they must be on Twit­ter themselves.

Communicate

A clear, effec­tive vision will never become real­ity until it is com­mu­ni­cated with those who are ulti­mately required to put it into effect. Just as teach­ers must com­mu­ni­cate with stu­dents, giv­ing feed­back, shar­ing goals, set­ting expec­ta­tions, admin­is­tra­tors must com­mu­ni­cate in all the same ways with their constituents.

Conclusion

Imple­ment­ing tech­nol­ogy respon­si­bly and effec­tively is a com­plex thing. Because it has so much power, I believe it would be irre­spon­si­ble not to embrace these tools in schools today. Many stu­dents, teach­ers, and admin­is­tra­tors are under­stand­ably reluc­tant to take on the respon­si­bil­i­ties that come along with the power of the tools. But like Peter Parker, who received his pow­ers with­out ask­ing for them, we can­not ignore them. We have to dive in, accept the fact that we have been handed great respon­si­bil­i­ties, and use our pow­ers to become super­heros instead of villains.

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