SARASOTA –Sarasota County Schools, with the world’s largest installation of interactive classroom presentation screens known as ActivBoards, was the site of a national conference about the technology Feb. 15 and 16 at Sarasota Middle School.
Promethean, a U.K.-based company with offices worldwide, developed the ActivBoard and related interactive technology. Because the Sarasota district is a leader in the use of ActivBoards as teaching tools, the company showcased the technology in county schools by holding the conference in the district. Promethean also held the related U.S. Education Research Summit 2008 in nearby St. Petersburg Feb. 12-14 at the Hilton St. Petersburg/Bayfront.
Some 3,000 ActivBoards were installed in all classrooms and in a number of teacher training facilities throughout the district in 2007. They allow students to experience information from the World Wide Web, interactive maps, photos, videos, teachers’ notes written directly on the screen with an electronic stylus, and much more. The touch-screen capabilities of the ActivBoards, combined with wireless ActiVote student response systems, allow educators to engage, educate, assess and motivate learners.
“We are pleased that educators from throughout the U.S. visited our schools to see ActivBoards in action, and that Promethean held its first two-day U.S. users conference in Sarasota,” said Mike Horan, director of Instructional Technology for Sarasota County Schools. “ActivBoards and related technology are helping our district respond to the needs of today’s digital learners — a key component of our NeXt Generation Learning initiative. Because we have embraced this technology for all of our classrooms, the district is recognized as a leader in interactive learning in Florida and nationwide.”
At the U.S. Education Research Summit 2008 in St. Petersburg Tuesday through Thursday, 125 education professionals and decision makers from 19 states and Puerto Rico networked and shared their vision and best practices for the use of technology in education. Following presentations on Tuesday and Wednesday in St. Petersburg, Summit attendees traveled to Sarasota on Thursday to see ActivBoards demonstrated by teachers in several elementary, middle and high schools.
The two-day users conference in Sarasota on Friday and Saturday was the first in the U.S. for Promethean. It connected 325 ActivBoard users, experts and staff for motivation, education and community, with 20 presenters from Sarasota County Schools and 40 from districts around the U.S. The event was an opportunity for educators and interactive technology experts to share best practices, build valuable relationships and explore new possibilities for the classroom.
The presentations by Sarasota County Schools educators and instructional technology experts at the users conference at Sarasota Middle School, and some of the presentations at the summit in St. Petersburg, showcased ways in which district educators are using ActivBoards and related technology to realize the goals of NeXt Generation Learning (NGL).
NGL is a strategic vision for Sarasota County Schools developed after a year of data-gathering, public engagement and district staff collaboration. NGL embraces the next generation of students with its diverse face, independent thinking and digital upbringing. It acknowledges that the traditional teaching style — “the sage on the stage” — is being replaced with interactive learning, facilitated by the teacher as a “guide on the side.”
Technology is a big part of this paradigm shift to prepare students for the highly collaborative, rapidly changing 21st century workforce. To help facilitate this paradigm shift for all students, the School Board of Sarasota County and Superintendent Gary Norris decided that equity was the key. Every classroom in the district would be equipped with an ActivBoard and every teacher in the county would be trained to use the technology effectively to help students engage in interactive learning.
More information about the district and NeXt Generation Learning is available on the district’s Web site at www.SarasotaCountySchools.net.