Developing infrastructure
Ideas for technology-supported projects
 
Ideas from Chicago and Detroit:
       
 


Mumford High School involves teachers in design of technology facilities.


Chicago and Detroit schools look to grants and partnerships to fund teachers' requests.
Murray-Wright High School takes advantage of corporate resources.
 
Bogan High School receives funds from public and foundation grants.
Refer students to programs in your area.
   
           

Resources from other areas:

Federal E-rate program
http://www.ed.gov/Technology/eratemenu.html

GenY model (train-the-trainer program) in Seattle
http://www.genyes.org/genwwwy/

McREL hot topics in technology and education http://www.mcrel.org/resources/links/techined.asp#funding

Benton Foundation's Best Practices Toolkit: Technology Funding
http://www.benton.org/practice/toolkit/techmoney.html

 

 


Involve teachers in design
Mumford High School has been known as a technology school in Detroit since 1989, when it was funded by the Detroit "Compact" program. This partnership among Detroit businesses, institutions of higher education, and the city schools is intended to implement strategies to increase student test scores and prepare them for higher education and work.
Valerie Hatten, the school's union representative, served on Mumford's original technology steering committee to plan technology implementation. Several committee members visited sites throughout Southeastern Michigan to get ideas for the design. She recalled, "We were able to come back and provide our own personal experience of what we saw, what we learned, what we thought would be useful here at Mumford, and from there they were able to put together [the plan]."
   
Develop partnerships with higher education

Shortly after Principal Sallie Polk identified funds to build the first technology lab at Murray-Wright High School, she helped develop a partnership with the University of Michigan to build a second lab in the school.
Motivated to increase the pool of qualified minority applicants, the university developed a program that not only paid for equipment, but also funded professors and university staff to develop a student-to-student mentoring program between university and Murray-Wright students. Murray-Wright students e-mailed essays to college students for comments and suggestions to improve writing skills. The grant also paid for Murray-Wright staff development in portfolio assessment.

 

Work with corporate programs
In 1998-99, Murray-Wright High School became a part of the IBM Reinventing Education: Wired for Learning program in Detroit, a program to enhance parent involvement through building electronic networks between schools and neighborhood housing developments.


The program provides tools for teachers to create Web pages for their classes, threaded discussions, and an online conference center for teachers and families to communicate. Parents can access the environment from the two computer labs located in the Jeffries and Park Side housing developments.
Seek government grants
Bogan High School's principal, Linda Pierzchalski, has been alert to opportunities for funding from outside organizations. Pierzchalski advises: "Write a lot of grants and do a lot of proposal writing because, no matter how much you get from federal or the district, there are always more needs."
Bogan participated in three Technology Literacy Challenge Fund grants. One of these paid for Bogan's first T1 line and its Web server. Bogan has also received a grant from the Annenberg Foundation to do staff development on the use of technology with two elementary schools.

 

Link students to outside opportunities

The principal at Renaissance High School, Irma Hamilton, knew the school lacked resources to offer technology facilities to students. While seeking funding for a lab, they developed a partnership with the Detroit Free Press.
Journalism students use the Free Press offices to design and lay out their student newspaper. In addition, a number of art students participate in the Scoop Program at Wayne State University, in which students use video editing equipment to produce videos. Others have learned animation at a city art school. Recently, Renaissance students did a tribute piece on Gordon Parks that was shown at the Detroit Art Institute.