Keynote & Featured Speakers
Tuesday, March 30 • 10:00 AM
KEYNOTE
Educational Technology for Social Change: Affirming Diversity and Advancing Justice
Rajni Shankar-Brown
Jessie Ball duPont Endowed Chair of Social Justice Education, Executive Board Member of the National Coalition for the Homeless, Stetson University
Abstract: Teacher education programs and PreK-12 schools are situated within a rapidly changing, diverse, global society. Our world is filled with pervasive inequalities, including widening socioeconomic, ethnic, racial, and gender gaps. The causes and the effects of social inequalities on teaching and learning merits the immediate attention of all educational stakeholders. Mindfully using instructional technology to increase educational access and impact offers significant opportunities to advance social justice and sustain hope. It is imperative that education preparation programs, including teacher education and educational leadership, support candidates to develop the knowledge and skills to build and sustain equitable learning environments. Multimodal technological platforms, including vodcasting and others which allow collaborative global connections, provide viable pathways to affirm diversity and expand equitable learning opportunities. Innovative utilization of technology platforms in education assists in providing promising solutions to many complex issues, including efforts to tackle classism, racism, sexism, ableism, and other forms of systemic injustice. Pervasive inequalities, shifting demographics, and an ever-changing global economy require us to rethink how we address systems of oppression in PreK-12 schools, higher education, local communities, and our world. This keynote address will illuminate social inequalities and discuss how educational technology can be used to promote social change.
Bio: Rajni Shankar-Brown, Ph.D., is the Jessie Ball duPont Endowed Chair of Social Justice Education, recipient of the McEniry Award for Excellence in Teaching, and a recipient of the Hand Award for Distinguished Faculty Achievement at Stetson University. She serves on Executive Board of Directors for the National Coalition for the Homeless and is the Co-Chair of the Equity and Justice SIG for the International Society for Information Technology and Teacher Education. She is also the Founder and Director for the Poverty and Homelessness Conference, Hatters University Scholars, and the Acts of Kindness and Justice Movement, as well as the Faculty Advisor for the Student Homeless Coalition. She began her career as a public school teacher and has worked with schools PreK-12 in urban, rural, and suburban communities in a variety of leadership roles including serving as a literacy and technology coach.
As a civically engaged educational leader who is deeply committed to advancing intersectional equity, Dr. Shankar-Brown actively works to confront systemic oppression, build inclusive learning spaces, and advance educational excellence for diverse communities. She has presented and facilitated professional learning workshops around the globe, as well as published in leading peer-reviewed journals and books. Her current series with Information Age Publishing includes two edited books, Bending the Arc Towards Justice: Equity-Focused Practices for Educational Leaders and Re-Envisioning Education: Affirming Diversity and Advancing Social Justice. In addition, her recently published collection of poetry Tuluminous has been praised as “a marvelous and meaningful testimony of the power of language to heal and transform” by the Presidential Inaugural Poet, Richard Blanco, and she is described as the “Poet Laureate of the just society” by NYU’s Moral Courage Project Founder, Irshad Manji.
Dr. Shankar-Brown has received international, national, state, and local recognition for her scholarly and creative activities and transformative leadership including being selected as a Faculty-Scholar-in-Residence by the National Humanities Center, the Florida PDK International Educator of the Year, and a recipient of the Engaged Scholarship Faculty Award by the Florida Campus Compact. In addition to being a passionate teacher-scholar and human rights activist, Dr. Shankar-Brown is a devoted mother and artist. She resides in Central Florida with her family and their two English lop rabbits, Hazel Basil and Maple Sage.
Wednesday, March 31 • 10:00 AM
KEYNOTE
Becoming and Being a Teacher, Post-COVID
Rushton Hurley
Founder and Executive Director, Next Vista for Learning
Abstract: That the world has changed is not news. That our work has changed over the last year is another masterpiece of understatement. The question before us now, though, is what we and our schools will do with what we have learned about our work and our students in the world of the coming year. Where should we devote our time? What technologies will matter for the medium to long term? How can we better prepare teacher candidates for challenges new and ongoing? In this talk, we’ll begin to address these questions and tap our talents to try taking teachers to new levels.
Bio: Rushton Hurley is the founder and executive director of Next Vista for Learning, which houses a free library of videos by and for teachers and students at NextVista.org.
Rushton has spent decades exploring innovative possibilities for bringing together proven approaches with cutting-edge technologies, from his graduate research at Stanford University (using speech recognition technology with beginning students of Japanese in computer-based role-playing scenarios for developing language skills), to his work with teenagers as both a high school teacher of Japanese language and a principal of an online school, to speaking at conferences and trainings around the world, to 2017’s 5-Day Teacher Challenge, which over 2000 teachers in 40 countries signed up to try.
The author of three books about school and teacher improvement (Making Your School Something Special and Making Your Teaching Something Special, both from DBC Books, and Technology, Teamwork, & Excellence, from NCEA), Rushton also has spoken to over 100,000 teachers in the last decade. With the Krause Center for Innovation at Foothill College in Los Altos Hills, California, he has revised and run the MERIT Program (Making Education Relevant through Innovative Teaching), and is designing new programs to help exceptional teachers share their talents and insights globally.
With experience at a wide variety of schools around the world (elementary, secondary, and college; large and small; urban and rural; traditional public, public charter, private independent, and schools of faith), Rushton regularly works with school leaders on professional development, school improvement, change strategies, staff morale, promotion in the community, online technologies, and getting the best out of students and teachers.
He loves to travel, makes occasionally successful attempts to take a good picture, cleans up after his cats, and considers himself to have married up.
Thursday, April 1 • 10:00 AM
KEYNOTE
School After COVID: Lessons Learned and Opportunities Gained
Kerry Rice
Professor & Fulbright Scholar, Boise State University
Abstract: The coronavirus pandemic disrupted education in ways no one could have imagined. Some have suggested that this crisis will change our educational systems in a permanent way. My hope is that it will change for the better. Perhaps it is the forced change that we needed to move away from antiquated systems that rely on ways of teaching and assessment of learning that don’t necessarily serve the needs of the most important stakeholder, the learner. Remote learning forced a shift in mindset and perspective and an understanding that it’s effectiveness depended on student-centered instructional approaches that rely more on mastery and less on time, more on student-needs and less on institutional needs, and a better understanding of how technology is an important tool to support student learning. In addition, the technology access issues that have plagued us for years have come fully to light, prompting some pretty drastic measures and very creative solutions. We no longer have excuses for continued equity disparities in the quality of an educational experience or the access to one. This talk will focus on reflecting on our lessons learned and how we might move forward after the crisis has passed.
Bio: Kerry Rice is a Fulbright Scholar and Professor in the Department of Educational Technology at Boise State University. Her research focuses on best practices in K-12 online and blended education and includes policy analysis, Delphi and mixed methods studies, and large-scale program evaluations using both traditional and emerging methods in data mining and deep learning analytics. She is a former middle school teacher and author of Making the Move to K-12 Online Teaching: Research-Based Strategies and Practices (Second Edition; 2020).
Friday, April 2
KEYNOTE PANEL
Silver Lining For Learning
Punya Mishra, Arizona State University, Yong Zhao, University of Kansas, & Curt Bonk, Indiana University
Silver Lining for Learning is an ongoing conversation on the future of learning with educators and education leaders from across the globe. Hosted by Chris Dede, Curt Bonk, Shuangye Chen, Punya Mishra & Yong Zhao, these conversations began under the “dark cloud” of the COVID19 crisis and continue today. We see these conversations as space to discuss the creation of equitable, humanistic and sustainable learning ecosystems that meet the needs of all learners. These conversations are hosted live on YouTube every Saturday (typically 5:30 PM Eastern US time) and are archived on silverliningforlearning.org
Tuesday, March 30 • 3:00 PM
INVITED TALK
Deeply-digital, the Next Generation of Curricula: Engaging and Effective!
Digital transformation, regardless of the company, will typically take this path. First, the company mimics paper-and-pencil processes using the computer. But then, a disrupter comes along and creates new processes and new materials that truly leverage the unique affordances of digital technology and the digital transformation occurs. K-12 is beginning to move from digitized curricula to deeply-digital curricula. Issued by the Center for Digital Curricula, College of Engineering, University of Michigan, deeply-digital curricula, unlike 1-dimenstional, text-based digitized curricula, are 2D and graphical – just like the video game world inhabited daily by the Gen Z’s and Gen Alphas. For teachers, the 2D enables the graphical aggregation, in one place, of all the learning activities in a lesson, making it easy for students – and their parents – to understand what’s been done and what’s coming next. In the 2020-2021 school year, 5,000+ K-5 students began using the Center’s deeply-digital curricula daily! Teachers report the students are engaged, and test results indicate the students are learning! In our presentation we will further explore the nature of deeply-digital curricula and their use in the classroom.
Panelists: Cathleen Norris is a Regents Professor in the Department of Learning Technologies at the University of North Texas, Denton, TX.
Elliot Soloway is an Arthur F. Thurnau Professor, in the Department of Computer Science and Engineering at the University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, MI.
Norris, the classroom teacher, and Soloway, the techie, began working together during the early days (2005) of handheld computers, e.g., Palm Pilots, PocketPCs. They could see how small, low-cost, personal devices in the hands of every student could dramatically change the classroom. They created MLE – Mobile Learning Environment – with a broad range of educationally-oriented tools for mobile devices. Schools and districts licensed over 40,000 copies, worldwide. The lack of digital curricula, however, to help teachers leverage MLE – was MLE’s and GoKnow’s downfall. Learning the lesson – the hard way – that curricula is the heartbeat of the classroom, recently, Norris and Soloway founded the UMich Center for Digital Curricula with the mission of providing free, deeply-digital curricula to classrooms. Stay tuned!
Thursday, April 1 • 12:30 PM
FEATURED PANEL
Searching for an Academic Job in the Era of COVID
This panel, addressing different variables shaping the academic job search, focuses on graduate students preparing for and seeking faculty positions in the current COVID environment. Four current faculty members representing a variety of academic backgrounds, experiences and placements will tackle a variety of topics related to the job search process, such as responding to position announcements, preparing for the interview, negotiating for the new job and navigating the first year. Following brief presentations from the panelists, the audience will be invited to join the conversation through an open question-and-answer session.
Panelists: Lee Langub, Kennesaw State; Elizabeth Langran, Marymount Univ; Jonathan Cohen, Georgia State Univ