arvind s. grover

arvind s. grover

I am a progressive educator, a podcaster (EdTechTalk.com/21cl), a blogger, and dean of faculty of JK-11 school (building a high school) in New York City.

Taking a pulse in roiling online world - article on @zephoria

Some form of privacy regulation is inevitable, in Boyd’s view. Yet she also cautions that once enacted, laws are difficult to repeal. One example is the 1998 Children’s Online Privacy Protection Act, which Congress is considering renewing. The law restricts websites from collecting data from anyone under 13 years old. As an unintended consequence, said Boyd, parents now coach their kids to lie about their age so they can visit the Skype website to video chat with their grandparents.

danah boyd, one of my go-to people when it comes to kids online, is featured in the Boston Globe's technology section. They mention her upcoming book (which I can't wait to read) and some of the issues she'll be covering including busting myths about kids and online realities. We are so in need of that with all of the fears that are swirling around out there.

Some things I am thinking about:
What do parents and schools really need to be concerned about?
What is the best way to educate our kids for safe, healthy lives online?
Is there any trustworthy research out there that we can rely on?

Thanks, @zephoria for keeping young people's best interests at heart.

@wstites is dead right on tech directors being project managers

For a while after I graduate college and would get together with my friends from college I would ask…

What are you doing now?

They would answer with something like the following…

I’m a project manager for an insurance company where I manage…

I had a hard time figuring out what it was they actually did.  But now, as we are trying to do more and more at our school, I find that I am coming to understand the thing that had once confused me. My role as Director of Technology has less to do with actually “doing” things; instead, I am called to manage all of the pieces involved in getting things done.  Unfortunately, the shift means I am no longer able to be as hands-on as I once was.

I recently saw a cartoon from ProjectCartoon.com that really put things into perspective for me and gave me a good understanding of what all of this meant.

The series of cartoons outline the step taken in managing a project and what everyone hears throughout the process… it’s like the old telephone game you used to play as a kid where you said one thing to someone and they said it to the next person and by the end the message has changed significantly (and often hilariously).

The ideas, the thoughts and most importantly the EXPECTATIONS change by the time you reach the end.

This point – that of managing expectations – is now the key to my job.

As I move from step to step in my projects, having conversations and meetings, I have found that keeping expectations in line and realistic is crucial to the outcomes of the projects.  And I’m not saying this expectation management is easy.

What is said and mentioned in passing or during a casual conversation can turn into a deliverable and when the developer(s) or project engineers aren’t aware of that deliverable, problems ensue.

Most challenging is that no one is really at fault.  Much like in the telephone game, each person believes that he/she heard and/or said the right thing, so how could he/she be wrong?

If you write things down, whether that be in a functional specification or something in an email just be sure t0 get it documented.  This will be you best course of action if you have any questions or problem.  It won’t get the job done any sooner, but it will give you something to reference down the line.

There are a number of good project management pieces of software out there to help you manage all of this.  I have used both 5pmWeb and BaseCamp and while these will both help you keep track of projects and manage them as well, they are only as good as the pieces that go into them.

In the end this job which once seemed very vague to me is now becoming clearer.  As I come to grips with the fact that I can’t be as hands-on as I once was and actually need to manage the resources involved in any given project, I have also realized that it’s more about getting the job done well than being the one actually doing it.  it’s the management of these projects that means to most and making sure that all of the people involve, from those doing the work to those the work is for clearly understand what is needed and required throughout.

A great read on the skillset that modern technology directors need to master to be successful. It's one of the most challenging and most important parts of our roles.

Learning is amazing

Today I came home from work and just as I arrived home it started to drizzle. By the time I got up to my apartment it was raining solidly and there were lightning bursts everywhere. I am fascinated, albeit scared, of lightning and I thought to myself, "let me take a picture of this!" But then I realized I didn't really know how to do that, so I thought like a student and Googled "take a photo of lightning." I clicked on the first link, quickly skimmed the article, and grabbed my camera.

I realize I didn't have a tripod at home, but had a small gorillapod. I also had a remote timer that SpecialKRB had recommended to me, so I grabbed that to. I set up the little tripod on top of my grill and tried to keep my camera out of the rain (not easy). I also tried to get over the railing on the terrace (also not easy). In 5 minutes of shooting, I got one cool strike of lightning (although admittedly the composition stinks). Then it was dinner time (it's a school night after all), so I came inside with my now-wet camera.

The beauty is that I feel fully ready for the next time I see a lightning storm. I know what I'll do, the mode my camera will be on (manual, ISO 100, aperture ~8, shutter speed set to bulb mode) and where I'll set up.

I love learning.

No wonder I love teaching.

A happy end to a long day...

AirDropper - request a file from anyone - super elegant

What a beautiful concept and executed product. AirDropper lets you ask someone to send you a file, gives them a web interface for doing so, an automatically lands the thing in your DropBox account. If you're not using DropBox, why not? It's amazing. It lets you have 2gb of storage space free (or more if you pay) and syncs that space up on any computers you own. Automagically.

DropBox is a product that I'm coming to realize I couldn't live without.

Watch the most touching video I have seen in a long while - a cancer survivor wishes his wife a happy birthday

This video made by Kristian Anderson is so touching it is difficult to watch. Beautifully made, set to stirring music. Thoughtful, direct, heartfelt. What can I say? Just watch this video.

It's a testament to love, but also makes me think much about the power of video and how we should be enabling students to use tools like video to communicate their emotions.

via @cacrandall