Who should be running your technology department?
Tuesday, July 3, 2007 at 01:19PM
Doug Johnson in Knowledge Quest

Who should be running your district’s technology department?
Real Questions, Good Answers, Knowledge Quest, Vol #28 no. 5

 

I am the coordinator of media and information services for our district. I am responsible for library media centers and the “soft” side of information services - training, staff evaluation, instructional software review, etc..

My question is about organizational patterns. Our district has added a Technology Director who is in charge of all the hardware. He is forward-looking and understands that the proper use of technology is the key to his success. Like most other school districts, we don’t have enough people to do all the jobs that need to be done, so we are looking at ways to better organize for service.

Where are the administrative computer services located in your district’s organizational pattern? How do the instructional people (excuse the expression) interface with that whole side of the operation? To whom do they report?

I think the Technology director’s goal will be to put library media centers along with information and other communication technologies into one organization headed by him. My gut reaction is that this will not be good for the students or teachers. I think their needs will not get really heard. But maybe I’m being reactionary.

 

 

Bonnie

 

Bonnie’s concerns about her district’s organizational patterns are not uncommon. Already at the building level, the addition of technologies to schools has resulted in new and changed job responsibilities for many media specialists1 and often the addition of new personnel to take care of technical duties2. Technology means changes at the district level as well. And the choice in leadership for the implementation and use of technology in a district will determine whether it a real asset to students, staff, and parents or just an expensive boondoggle.

In her must-read book, Failure to Connect3, Jane Healy reports on her visits to a variety of schools where technology is being used. And you can guess what she finds - technology being used as everything from a babysitter to a genuine educational tool that fosters higher-level thinking and communication. In some schools, Healy reports, technology is being used to reinforce the “factory model of education” with “a teacher (or software) firmly in charge, dispensing a well-defined body of knowledge, and preparing a workforce accustomed to lining-up, doing what they are told and not asking too many questions” to a “learner-centered” approach in which the teacher is a “coach” and students ask questions and “actively pursue learning because it is important or interesting to them.” Why, she asks, are there such differences in schools?

One thing she observes that helps answer that question is this: “…a critical factor I found in every successful program (was) one energetic and visionary educator who knows what teaching should look like and had the energy and dedication to make it happen. No matter what the neighborhood, wealthy or poor, people like this make the difference.”

My guess is that every building in your district has one or more of these educators. But how many districts have them in administrative positions that have responsibility for technology throughout the district?

There is both a hard and soft side of technology administration and school technology leaders often have different concerns, as Bonnie’s letter suggests. The “hard” side technologies asks questions like:

Those responsible for the “soft” side of technology equation often worry about:

Notice that the concerns of each side are not in opposition; they are only different. It is also apparent that neither side can function effectively without the other. As Bonnie’s letter indicates, her technology director “understands that proper use of technology is the key to his success.” And we all know that unless the technology is installed, operating, sufficiently powerful, and reliable, we may as well save our energies trying to get reluctant teachers to implement it into the curriculum. Face it - these folks are what Stephen Covey would call “interdependent.”

My experience is that it is imperative for a technology department to have both “hard” and “soft” experts on staff. (see figure one). And the key to whether they work well together is that they are housed together and they report to the same boss. The best decisions we make in our district are joint decisions that take into account curriculum and staff development, as well as hardware and networking realities. Both sides really need to listen to each other. My entire department, including the Instructional Computer Coordinator, Technical Support Coordinator, and Administrative Support Coordinator, and all building technicians, meets once a week to discuss day-to-day issues and often brainstorm future possibilities. When the library media specialists (who have the major technology integration responsibilities in their buildings) meet, the coordinators and technicians join us. Also both hard side and soft side representatives are on the district-level media-technology advisory committee.4

So what qualifications does this “techno-boss” need in order to be effective? Healy’s attributes (one energetic and visionary educator who knows what teaching should look like and had the energy and dedication to make it happen) are a good place to begin:

No techno-boss that I know embodies all these characteristics, but the best folks I have the privilege of knowing and working with come very close – and many of them have come from a library background.

Bonnie, I hope that you and your district’s new technology director establish good communications, find ways to be interdependent, and that you have a common supervisor who can help that happen.

1.    Johnson, Doug. “Librarians are from Venus; Technicians are from Mars.” Technology Connection, May 1998.<http://www.doug-johnson.com/dougwri/venus.html>
2.    Johnson, Doug. “Why Do Libraries Need All Those Support People?” Knowledge Quest, Volume 27, Number 4. <http://www.doug-johnson.com/dougwri/support.html>
3.    Healey, Jane M., Failure to Connect: How Computers Affect Our Children’s Minds for Better and Worse. (Simon & Schuster, 1998)
4.    Johnson, Doug. Advisory Advice. Technology Connection, October 1997. http://www.doug-johnson.com/dougwri/advice.html

A response:

This will be my 10th year to attend this conference and I always look forward to the excitement and new knowledge it brings.  I am the Media Specialist in a new Pre-K/Grade 6 elementary school in Melbourne, FL.  We opened in Aug. ‘98 with about 950 students and expect over 1100 next year.  I have a wonderful library/media-tech center with state-of-the-art TV studio and 30 station lab with another 18 workstations soon to be up and running in the media center.  My full time clerk is a degreed mechanical engineer who is very knowledgable and is like having another media specialist to work with me.  We also have a guy Tech Specialist who is a former 1st grade teacher, so we 3 work closely as a team to manage all the information and technology resources.  We think God must have a wonderful sense of humor to put together a team like us — A very right-brained 50-something grandma-media specialist, a very left-brained 40-something soccer mom of teens/chief media (engineer) assistant, and a 30-something Thai guy, technie nerd guru.   But we are learning to work together to make our school the best.  We are blessed to have a young principal who promotes the ITI (Kovalik) Multiple Intelligence type practices and fosters an appreciation of all people as important pieces of the teaching/learning puzzle — which sounds like the type of thing you will be talking about.  Having come from a very disagreeable, non-cooperative environment in my previous school, I truly believe I have come to Heaven-on-Earth at Longleaf. 

Article originally appeared on Doug Johnson Website (http://www.doug-johnson.com/).
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