Tech Savvy Teachers are Comin!
Watch out kiddos! The teachers are getting savvy!
Got this one from a blog called Reflections from a Teacher’s Heart. Very Cute!

Watch out kiddos! The teachers are getting savvy!
Got this one from a blog called Reflections from a Teacher’s Heart. Very Cute!

The Ron Clark Academy, housed in a renovated red brick warehouse, is located in southwest Atlanta, Georgia, and accommodates fifth through eighth grade students. Students are from low wealth to high wealth families. Clark had planned to build the school for ten years before construction began. Along with the proceeds of his two books The Essential 55 and The Excellent 11, Clark raised additional funding for the project which eventually cost over $3.5 million. The academy was established on June 25, 2007. Classes began for students on September 4, 2007.
Each classroom provides students with technology such as notebook computers, interactive whiteboards, digital cameras, projectors, and audio video equipment. In addition to the technologically-equipped classrooms, the school provides students with accessible amenities such as a recording studio, a darkroom, a two-story vaulted ceiling library, a gymnasium, and a dance studio.
The Ron Clark Academy uses donated computers in all classrooms and offices. As a result, students will be able to study photography, music production, and business leadership.

Library/ Cafe
The students that attend The Ron Clark Academy come from a range of backgrounds, including students from high wealth families. Students must go through an application process in order to be accepted into the school. Only 50 students were accepted out of 350 applications the first school year. Students must be nominated for the school and then must apply. Students’ applications are then reviewed by Ron Clark and other teachers and students are selected to be interviewed by the school. If accepted, students’ parents must sign a Contract of Obligation in which parents agree to volunteer 10 hours of their time each quarter. They also will have to allow their child to go on mandatory field trips essential to the curriculum.
Check out this video about the school from CNN. SMART thinking Ron Clark!
While this is not the only great kinesthetically-attention-enhancing (is that a word?) furniture for schools, I appreciate that the Safco company has provided some links for funding and grant opportunities on their web page. Below is a description and video about the stand up desks. SMART thinking Safco!
“The stand up desk allows students to feel less confined and helps them stay focused in the classroom. It offers improved body ergonomics, expends excess energy, allows for better oxygen flow to the brain, improves handwriting, and is being studied for increase in caloric expenditure which could help fight rising childhood obesity statistics.”
This submitted by Jim Brady of Americas Schoolhouse Council:
In a recent survey taken at an ASCD (formerly the Association for Supervision and Curriculum Development) conference, educators say they believe textbooks will soon be obsolete but few districts are prepared for the digital revolution.
Educators cite a lack of hardware and access to technology as the main roadblock to change. In a recent article on www.mysanantonio.com, fifth grade teacher Debbie Dixon is quoted as saying
“The school would have to make it something so that all the kids have equal access,” …“When you have a textbook, it’s something that all kids have and can take home. When you have e-books, you run into the problem that you still have kids who don’t have computers and you can’t deny them.”
We need some SMART thinking right now… pockets of school districts are incorporating ereaders and other digital tools..we need good examples!
Systems thinking is a way of teaching dynamic problem solving and applies to a broad range of global, technical and societal issues. The Waters Foundation has great resources for teaching and understanding the Systems thinking model.
…”(S)ystems thinking considers the relationship between the parts of a system, and the “dynamics those relationships produce.” A system can be anything – a novel, a historical event, a culture, a scientific formula. All are made up of different pieces that form the “system.” In systems thinking, you look at the whole of something, the individual parts of that whole, how those parts make the “whole” what it is, and how one action to a piece of the system can affect the entire thing.” (from ASIA society).
Exploration of dynamic complexity is a highly motivating learning experience for students. Their learning is enhanced by the “real” nature of the problems that they explore and the sense that they are developing skills that will prove useful throughout their lives. The merging of system dynamics and the characteristics of effective instruction creates tremendous potential for engaging students in powerful learning experiences.
Research shows that instructional settings that optimize learning should be student-centered, experiential, holistic, and authentic. In addition, students should be provided opportunities to utilize many forms of expression, to reflect, to interact with other students, and to collaborate. Learning should be developmental and should involve the construction of ideas and systems. Effective applications of systems thinking/dynamic modeling include all of these characteristics. What appears to be most successful is an essential combination of the powerful concepts and tools of system dynamics with best practice in instructional strategies.
(Mary Scheetz, Panel Presentation – International Conference of the System dynamics Society, Bergen, Norway, 8/00)
Research Source: Best Practice – New Standards for Teaching and Learning in America’s Schools Steven Zemelman, Harvey Daniels, Arthur Hyde (Portsmouth, NH: Heinemann, 1998)
Learn more about Systems Thinking at www.watersfoundation.org. SMART thinking!
This from The Centre for School Design:
A great short poem from students at Hamble College in Southampton. I this this poem speaks for itself!
Click Title Slide to See the Presentation (hint log in to google docs for full access!)
Obviously, “form follows function” when designing highly-responsive school environments and understanding the key survival skills 21st century learners will need is one way to identify “function.” The 15 considerations that follow are key “survival skills … for careers, college, and citizenship in the 21st century” (Wagner), skills for a participatory culture, and key characteristics for the environments needed to support communities of learners, local and global (Jenkins.) 15 Skills to consider are:
1. Critical Thinking and Problem Solving
2. Collaboration and Leading by Influence
3. Agility and Adaptability
4. Initiative and Entrepreneurial-ism
5. Effective Oral & Written Communication
6. Accessing & Analyzing Information
7. Curiosity & Imagination
8. Engagement
9. Personalization
10. Global Competencies
11. Social Equity/ Responsibility
12. Community Focus
13. Arts Integration
14. Maintainability, Safety and Security
15. Sustainability
Just visited New Orleans and toured the schools that are being rebuilt, modernized and replaced after the storm. What a big job these folks are facing! Our tour guide, Kenneth J Ducote, PhD, AICP, has been working with the Orleans Parrish School system for years and was a wealth of information. I salute his passion and perserverence on behalf of the children – especially children of poverty and color.
Our tour took us by the Phyllis Wheatley School, built in 1954 for one of the oldest black neighborhoods in New Orleans as an attempt to build quality facilities for minority children of the area.
Today, the school is being considered for replacement by the Orleans Parrish School Board. Preservation architects have fought hard to have the school remodeled. Below is an excerpt from docomomo US.
“The Phillis Wheatley Elementary School is in danger of demolition by the School Facilities Master Plan for Orleans Parish. The elevated school was designed by the architect Charles R. Colbert (1921-2007) in 1954. The cantilevered steel truss structure is solid and clearly did not flood after Hurricane Katrina. The building suffers only from neglect. It is one of the most innovative monuments of mid-century Modern architecture in New Orleans. The design was recognized by Progressive Architecture in 1955. Mr. Colbert received the Louisiana AIA Medal of Honor in 2006.”
While I am personally in support of saving historically and architecturally significant buildings, I believe that no building of historic significance should be placed above student learning or a community’s best interests. After touring the site, it is clear that the Wheatley school has a number of issues that will significantly interfere with every student’s right to 21st Century learning. Most notably:
The resources that will need to be expended to remodel this facility are significant and the essential drawbacks of small site and elevation are not solved. The OPSB must consider how to get the highest and best use of funds for student instruction…students are the history that must be most important to this great community.
The Treme/Lafitte neighborhood has not been supportive of remodeling the school (click here for a NPR story), even though the building has been placed on the World Monuments Fund Watch List.
Definitely, this is a building worth preserving – as a community center or other community resource, but it doesn’t meet the needs of a quality 21st Century Learning Environment.
Spotted this project at SchoolDesigner.com…
From MaryAnn Thompson Architects:
“The program for the Children’s School, a school for 60 children 2-8, was given to us as a “one room schoolhouse”. The two age groups of the school are housed in two classroom “wings,” both joined and separated by the entry area in which quiet activities are located to calm the child upon arrival.
Roof planes subtly tilt against one another to let in light from above between their skewed forms, and they define the classroom spaces below them without the use of walls. The younger children occupy the east-facing wing as they are only in school in the morning; the older children occupy the west wing to take advantage of western light. The scheme has multiple relationships to the exterior play areas with doors out from every classroom.
The shifting plan allows for a fragmented reading of the building that reduces the scale of the mass to be more in keeping with the scale of the child. It also prioritizes the subjective. In order to fully understand it, the building must be occupied and its spaces engaged. The spatial sequence is one of hide and reveal. The building offers a sense of journey and moments of epiphany for the child in its unfolding layers.”
The school has won numerous design awards and is a champion for student’s individual learning styles. For more pictures and the full story CLICK HERE.
SMART thinking!!

Amelia Wagner sits on a WittFitt chair while working at her desk; photo credit: Amy Correnti www.rrstar.com
This from Cathy Bayer at the Rockford Register Star:
Students at Spectrum School have had their standard chairs replaced with WittFitt chairs – a chair like an exercise or stability ball with feet.
The chairs help to increase students’ attention level and improve posture. Each chair is fit to a students’ size and the cost is comparable to the old chairs – about $30. Schools can buy about five different sizes and students can change seats as they grow. Balls can also be inflated or deflated for comfort.
Teachers observe less wiggling and leaning forward. The balls help to exercise the stomach and back muscles because one needs to concentrate to stay upright.
SMARTthinking Spectrum School!!
From YouTube: This video was created by Tom Woodward of Henrico County schools in Virginia. Tom used the work of Karl Fisch from Colorado who created a PPT using various quotes and statistics from “flat world” thinking.
Now check out the 4.0 Version of Shift Happens
This completely new Fall 2009 version includes facts and stats focusing on the changing media landscape, including convergence and technology, and was developed in partnership with The Economist. For more information, or to join the conversation, please visit http://mediaconvergence.economist.com and http://shifthappens.wikispaces.com.
“Chartwell is the 1st LEED platinum K-12 campus. It also has a goal of achieving net-zero electrical usage (grid neutral). This school has inspired the EPA to start a design for deconstruction competition and is a role model for the State of California´s ambitious initiative to mandate grid neutral schools by 2010. This school campus includes the best-known practices for energy efficiency and creating an optimal learning environment.”
EHDD Architects; Photos Michael David Rose.
Click here for the full story on SchoolDesigner.com.
SMARTthinking!
Just had the privilege of seeing Jonathan Kozol speak at the Mid-Year CEFPI Conference. If you haven’t ever read Savage Inequalities or Shame of a Nation, you need to. Posting a link of his 2005 speech at CSU Sonoma. Kozol starts speaking at about 9:24 into the video. It’s about an hour long speech, but MAN is it worth it…he makes a passionate and compassionate statement for underprivileged students in America. And as a facility planner I have visited some of these environments he speaks of….we need more people to carry Kozol’s torch. Enjoy.
“Pick battles big enough to matter;
small enough to win.”
From Online Universities.com:
“Whether you want to be a teacher, principal or even an educational policy-maker, learning all you can about the field and how to be a more powerful leader while you’re still in college is essential. These blogs will fill you in on the latest news, provide inspiration, and ensure that you are up-to-date with the latest educational technologies so you can be the best education leader you can be.”
Check out these blogs for the latest updates in education, subject specific blogs (language arts, math, science, etc.), new ideas in technology, policy, and much more.
One of my favorites is the Box of Tricks Blog. SMART resource! Thanks Online Education…

From Huffington Post: Residents look on as rescue workers search for victims at the 'La Promesse' school after it collapsed in Petionville, Haiti, Saturday, Nov. 8, 2008. The school, where roughly 500 students crowded into several floors, collapsed Friday during classes killing at least 75 people and injuring many more. (AP Photo/Ramon Espinosa)
The Council of Educational Facility Planners International and Schools for Children of the World are creating a task force to assess and eventually help repair Haiti Schools. The following is a description of volunteer services needed from the SCW website:
Initial Assessment:
o Structural engineers with seismic expertise to assess the safety of remaining school facilities
o Volunteers to assist with the clean-up efforts
· Schools that can be repaired will need:
o Project Managers to manage project funds and provide project oversight
o Architects and Engineers to provide design solutions
o Contractors to make the needed repairs
o Fund raisers to identify and secure resources
· Facilities that cannot be repaired will need:
o Project Managers to manage the project funds and provide project oversight
o Contractors to help with the demolition and cleanup
o Educational Facility Planners, Architects, and Engineers with seismic experience to plan and design replacement facilities
o Fund raisers to identify and secure resources
Click here to find out how to donate or sign up to travel to Haiti and help out.
From District Administration: “ARAMARK recently launched Cool*Caf a new elementary school dining environment that incorporates the company’s newly designed wellness menus that exceed U.S. Department of Agriculture and state-level nutrition guidelines. Cool*Caf uses animation and student-inspired themes and messages on walls that promote good health.”
According to a USA Today article about Cool*Caf, the concepts include:
•Hefty selections. Fresh fruit and veggie “bars” are being installed with five or more fresh selections in each. Kids can take as many fruits and veggies as they want as part of their meal.
•Splashy décor. Cafeteria serving areas are being redecorated in bright colors with kid-friendly characters and signage.
•Shorter lines. Express lanes are being added so kids who bring lunch don’t wait in long lines for fruit, veggies or milk.
Another healthy trend in schools is the use of local farms and even school grown gardens. According to District Administration,”many districts have also begun sourcing some of their produce from local farmers—a win-win for both parties. The national Farm to School programs connect schools with local farms to improve student nutrition, provide health and nutrition education opportunities, and support local small farmers.” School districts such as LA Unified have encouraged schools to plant their own gardens and create a composting program. Very SMART thinking!
There seems to be a lot of interest out there around this topic with our facilities friends in schools so I thought I’d post another story from NPR about the Urinal Fly. It seems that reducing “spillage” can be fun. Click here to see the full story at NPR….
This from Architectural Record: Camino Nueva High School, a Camino Nueva Charter School, (designed by Daly Genik Architects) is an urban high school designed on a site that is essentially a traffic island in a gritty section of Los Angeles called Filipinotown. The site is bounded by the 101 and four busy streets.
The architects fit over 30,000 SF in under an acre of land. The building’s exterior is skinned in metal perforated panels to allow light in and block sound from the busy streets. Interior courtyards are sheltered from noise and blowing wind. Click here to see the whole story.
Okay this blog is all about SMART thinking…but Diesel has a point! Most brilliant ideas started out sounding stupid! As visionaries, we need to go out on a limb sometimes. So go out and think stupid folks….dreaming is what moves us forward.

ipods and other handheld devices will become integral to learning
These top trends from THE (transforming education through technology) -
#1: eBook readers will continue to proliferate. No chance of replacing textbooks immediately..but the day will probably come.
#2: Netbooks functionality “Priced at $200 to $300, these small, inexpensive computers are helping to bridge the technology divide that exists at those schools where individual students don’t have access to their own laptops.” (THE)
#3: Teachers will expand the use of interactive whiteboards or similar (less expensive) technology being developed.
#4: Student’s Personal Devices will become ubiquitous and integral to the teaching process.
#5: Personalized Student Assessment Tools are becoming easier, cheaper and faster. Students, teachers and parents will be able to evaluate and track students’ progress in order to make timely course corrections.
To see the orginal article click here.
SMART thinking indeed!
This from Huffington Post:
“Today’s schools are an anachronism. They resemble the assembly lines of the industrial era, when they were conceived. Groups of 25 to 30 children, beginning at age five, are moved through 13 years of schooling, attending 180 days each year, and taking five major subjects daily for lengths of time specified by the Carnegie Foundation in 1910. These schools are time-based — all children are expected to master the same studies at the same rate over the same period of time. They focus on teaching — how long students are exposed to instruction, not how much they have learned. They are rooted in the belief that one size fits all — all students can benefit equally from the same curriculum and methods of instruction.
We have learned much about education since today’s schools were created. We know now that what students learn and what they are taught are different, and that learning is what matters. We know that children learn different subjects at different rates, some slower and some faster. We know that children have different learning styles, which make different methods of instruction more or less effective for them. We also know that today’s new technologies offer the prospect of individualizing education for each child and gearing instruction to the student’s particular learning style and most effective means of instruction.” (Levine)
Through an innovative iniative led by the New York City Public Schools, the School of One will focus on the needs of learning versus those of teaching; turning traditional schools inside out by allowing students to focus on their individual learning and setting their own pace for doing so.

Photo Credit: American Architectural Foundation/
Dull Olson Weekes Architects and Cuningham Group Architect
Focusing on the physical environment of a School of one, the New York City Department of Education’s School of One faculty and staff gathered with architects John Weekes, AIA, of Dull Olson Weekes Architects; John Pflueger, AIA, of Cuningham Group Architects; and educational planner Susan Wolff, director of Wolff Designs. The occasion was a charrette put on last May by the American Architecture Foundation and sponsored by Target.