Lib-Tech Department Notes 6/1

Submitted by: Karyn Silverman

The following notes are from the joint Library and Educational Technology Departments. We work closely and will have only five faculty between the two departments across all three divisions next year, all of whom were present at this meeting.

Positive movement regarding DEI initiatives:

Although this has been a complex year to navigate, true for all but specifically for Library and Technology complicated by lack of access to our spaces (both libraries and the Tech Commons at 6th Ave were repurposed to accommodate distancing and space requirements as dictated by the DOH), we are happy to report that we did manage to move forward in several target areas.

From a content access perspective, the librarians continued their work building  a more inclusive, diverse collection; publishing has centered specific stories (generally focused on white, American, cis-het characters) and our collections have reflected that bias in available material. The recent explosion of greater diversity in the authors and experiences being published allowed us to significantly overhaul areas of concern. Specific areas of focus this year were picture books at the 6th Ave campus and the romance collection at the Charlton campus. Focal areas in picture books were greater representation of POC and female characters and authors. In romance, focal areas were greater POC rep and less heteronormative focus.

The librarians also significantly expanded our digital holdings, particularly recreational reading material in e and audio formats. This has been an on-going initiative, but was particularly critical this year to support fully remote students. There was some overlap between fully remote students and race and fully remote students and socioeconomic status, and increasing these collections meant those students were not further disenfranchised by lack of access to school resources. Expanding the audio collection is also a boon to neurodiverse students. Digital literature also allows students who may be working through questions of sexuality or gender to read freely without fear of anyone being aware of what they are reading, although we don’t know how significant an issue that is for members of our community.

Finally, we examined what books we promote passively and actively, and we began the process of auditing the books selected for readalouds (6th Ave) and promotion on the library Instagram (Charlton) and increasingly expanding the representation in the books we center. As part of this process, for the 2nd year running, our HS summer reading list focuses on generally underrepresented voices (works in translation, works set in other countries, works by and about authors and characters of color across all genres, greater representation of LGBTQ+ authors and stories, and almost all books available in audio as well as print and e-print).

From an equipment access perspective, this year marked a hige increase of getting devices into the hands of lower and middle school students. We hope to be able to continue this level of access and support even as the pandemic draws to a close.

When it comes to information access and awareness, the HS digital and information curriculum for grades 9 & 10 has continued work on finding sources that show women and POC in the fields of information science and digital studies. Our focus on teaching media literacy continues to use current and topical case studies that reflect an issue of social justice (e.g.: connecting cultural appropriation in TikTok to copyright; studying algorithms through the lens of human biases and social inequity). 

 Challenges:

The biggest challenge has been working within patriarchal systems of communication. We are a predominantly female department (whether considered jointly or separately) and our work is often complicated or stopped by a lack of communication from male administrators. Regardless of intent, the impact is that we feel left out of important conversations, and that our expertise in our content and pedagogy is neither respected nor included in policy and decision making.

Lack of materials: we continue to be frustrated that we cannot always find research materials that center experiences other than white, cis-het, usually male perspectives; this is a particular issue with databases.

Looking forward, the lack of staff will be a challenge. Fewer staff means a lack of equity for our students. The libraries (which at 6th Ave encompasses the Tech Commons) have long been spaces that allow students to stay at school until 5 or 6 pm. For students who may not have printing or robust internet connections, or a quiet workspace at home, this access is crucial to their academic success. Looking beyond the academic, the long hours have also allowed students who live far from the school and far from one another to spend social time together. With the staffing reductions in our library faculty and staff next year, we will not be able to provide this level of access.

Ways we would like to be supported: 

  • More training in facilitating DEI conversations
  • Regular meetings to talk through what it means to de-colonize research materials, something we know needs to happen but is hard to do when the easily available resources are not always what we want
  • Regular conversations about equity and access in materials (tech, research materials, books) and access (facilities, equipment)
  • Help in identifying other ways that we can advance schoolwide DEI initiatives through our information and digital literacy curriculum, and technology integration in general.

What to know about our department:

We are thrilled Kalil will be joining LREI and looking forward to working with him!

We work well together and prefer to work collaboratively, whether with each other or with our divisional colleagues. Our focus is on learning — our own and that of others — and our modality is support and connection.

We are in the midst of a massive reorganization; this is a moment of flux and we are struggling to navigate the balance between growth and function. This reorganization has left us understaffed to a degree that will slow our forward momentum on DEI work. We are eager to do the work, but we feel limited by external institutional factors (staffing and money; structures that disempower our department). We are deeply embedded in the pedagogical and progressive mission of the school and responsible for many services that support students and faculty across all divisions, which means that if we cannot keep our momentum, we risk stagnation or backwards movement that will effect many other departments, particularly in as regards entrenched dominant and supremacist voices in research and reading material and as regards access to technology that can be used to support mission-drive, project-based progressive teaching in the classrooms.

EdTech Department Meeting 3/4/21

Submitted by: Clair

Ordering for Next year

  1. Celeste
    1. I’d love to turn the tech lab back into a lab for things like Yearbook, tech lessons, etc. 
      1. Having just a few students in there would be great (so socially distanced)
      2. Is this a possibility with the CDC saying things don’t really spread on surfaces
    2. If not
      1. Can we get laptops– we’re down to like 4 out of what was 20+
      2. Everytime a device breaks or we have a coverage person, we give them a device from the circulation cart– we need more here if we can’t use the Tech Lab for tech 
    3. Printer
      1. Can we get a new color printer for the tech lab? 
        1. Or an in-between model that would offer both scanning and color printing that’s a bit more robust than lab scanner
  2. Clair
    1. Is there one single inventory of all of the devices that went out last year, this year, and where they are now? 
      1. Candace’s laptop is a perfect example– did we know that was outstanding? 
      2. If we do this for next year, we need to get everything back, cleaned, inventoried, and accounted for
      3. Hotspots? Other devices? 
    2. I’d like to collect them all for summer. They need to be wiped, cleaned, and prepared; 5-8th grade. 8th grade devices can be retired for the most part, or put in backup 
  3. Joy
    1. The status of minis? 
      1. Do we have any for the HS/can we get the ones that are having issues in the LS/MS wiped and reset? That would help bolster the circulation numbers up again 
      2. Can we get them wiped and upgraded?
    2. If we continue to use the library as a classroom next year
      1. Printing needs to be thoughtfully examined
        1. Right now printing is happening in the faculty lab for the kids
        2. Are we going to move those printers to a different space? If we have them in public space they need to be in a place that’s not a classroom and won’t be a traffic issue
      2. We don’t really have a way to circulate equipment right now
        1. Matt has kids drop/pick off devices in a red basket behind Adria’s desk– this is a pretty big security issue
        2. We don’t lend chargers, we don’t lend mice, keyboards, etc.– is it even necessary?
      3. Matt is handling laptop distribution and management
    3. Summer agreement in the HS for devices– if someone breaks it over the summer, they have to pay for it
      1. How will we manage summer devices this year? 
    4. We need a master document of all of the equipment that is being handed out and what’s in every room
      1. When were certain minis installed? How old are they? What are their serial #s and specs? 
  4. Cross-Divisionally
    1. We would like an inventory system that’s a database: we need one centralized system where what we know what everyone has, where things are, and what their information is
    2. Can we plan for what the summer will look like? Can the young alum be hired for the summer to check on, maintain, upgrade and provision devices?
    3. What does the classroom sound look like for next year? With the idea for next year being no remote teachers but still possibly stome remote students, what might that set up look like? 
    4. Can we design some sort of cross-divisionally remote survey– what has your experience been like? What are the issues you’ve had and how are they now? What is your emotional experience like too? 
      1. If the audio isn’t making them feel more connected, what would? 
      2. Remote only pods? 
  5. ECFS Conversation with Joy
    1. Surveyed students about cameras on or off
      1. Mixed bag– wide range of feelings 
      2. Some students felt like they didn’t want people in their homes, body image or gender dysmorphia
    2. Opt In policy allows students to decide today we’ll have it on, and they don’t have to ask to turn it off
      1. Some resistance from the teachers you’d expect
      2. They had some resistance from families at first 
        1. Had a series of meetings to explain why we’re doing this, and what it means for their education, how you can support them
        2. Working with teachers who are used to lecturing that they need to do something different
      3. We might be in a good position to try this
        1. Most HS teachers are teaching in models that aren’t purely lecture based
      4. They’re meeting with their faculty next week to hear about how it’s going and talk about it with them all. We are welcome to go/invited
        1. Joy is talking with Alison and Margaret about it as well 
        2. I brought it up with Susannah as well as part of her support team role and learning specialist expertise
        3. LS– the norms here are cameras on; ECFS has it for all three divisions
          1. If a kid has their camera off and aren’t doing the work, there needs to be another way to assess that they’re not doing it other that “their camera is off” 
      5. They are planning on there being some remote learning next year

Ed Tech Department Meeting Notes – February 23rd

Submitted by: Clair Segal

  1. Check In About the Year So Far Curricularly
    1. Celeste’s work with the 3rd and 4th grades
      1. Pod system makes it tricky to work with other grades (so no coding in K this year or touch typing with 2nd)
      2. Yearbook has been going with 4th grade, both in person and as a club when remote
      3. The exposure concerns are real and having to pivot often is exhausting for everyone and makes “burn out” a frequent occurrence
      4. Chromebook maintenance (keyboards) on new devices has been an issue (keys stop working); there’s a lot of failure on these for some reason
    2. Clair
      1. What to buy for next year– same CB model? Something elser? 
        1. I’m going to post out to the NYCIST list serve and slack
      2. What’s causing the issue where 70% of them work fine, but 30% don’t, with no consistency through devices/models
      3. The push out of apps→ is that causing issues? 
      4. Joy– maybe there’s a more consistent brand we could use? 
    3.  Programming class
      1. 5th grade once a week
        1. Lightbot→ Scratch→ CodeCombat/Ozaria
    4. Joy’s ongoing work with the HS
      1. No one has wanted to do any new curricular work this trimester but have discussed a potential new course with Ann next year
      2. The Opt-Out policy ideas from ECFS
        1. Everyone wants what the teacher needs– the cameras on– but is that what the students need. Both options disadvantage one group over another.
      3. Everyone is very burnt out
      4. Lots of issues with anxiety/social emotional health
        1. A lot of this is showing up in cameras off, and having to figure out what’s “wrong with their wifi” when nothing is actually wrong with the wifi

 

  1. Check in About DEI Work
    1. Celeste
      1. Being conscientious of examples we use during typing lesson– identifying people of color and women in texts
      2. Showing them examples of Perseverance and technology
        1. The message on the MARS parachute
      3. Weaving in what’s happening in the world today
        1. The person who narrated the landing was female and Indian– talking with the kids about “have you seen this before/who scientists are/etc.” 
    2. Clair
      1. Restorative Justice Group work
      2. What would that look like in terms of the RUP
        1. Joy– the context of someone hurting another person
        2. A lot of our policies are “don’t do this thing that’s bad” but the harm is more abstract than “I punched someone/etc.” 
        3. A lot of the HS RUP consequences are monetary (you broke this, you have to pay for it, etc.) There’s not a lot of gray area. 
      3. Identity shares in the MS and in 5th grade in particular
    3. Joy
  2. Questions that we Still Have
    1. If we still have to do some version of hybrid in the fall, what should we do differently? How can we be in more of the decision-making conversations? A lot of stuff just happened at the high school and when the audio equipment (specifically) fails I can’t help at all.
      1. A bunch of the mics don’t work/have stopped working in the HS and MS spaces
      2. Since they’re not numbered, there’s no way to report them in an effective way to help desk
    2. Clair shared a “reference chart” she created for MS with regards to tech set up in spaces – I (Celeste) will definitely want to do this for LS as well – thank you Clair! But it would be great to have a laminated “how to” in each space as well, so that whoever teachers in those spaces can troubleshoot without having to email HELP or text the hot line phone number https://docs.google.com/document/d/1jBMlW7j4F_22wumdoxHKwVqmTx_kUfdfITjjEzbJ1Ho/edit
    3. Future of printing on campus (both student and faculty)

ED Tech Department Meeting

Submitted by: Clair Segal

Ed Tech: 

We discussed: 

  1. Our work in the past through a DEI lens
    1. A one to one program versus BYOD and the role equity plays in that
    2. Our tech efforts during the pandemic in working alongside Jacob to make sure all students have adequate wifi and tech access during LREI@home
    3. Discussions with students around
      1. Big Data and how it uses grouping to artificially perpetuate stereotypes and assumptions about groups (recommended reading: Automating Inequality by Virginia Eubanks)
      2. Photoshop ethics and how whiteness is perpetuated as a beauty standard around the world and how that’s problematic
      3. How there are few people of color in programming and why that’s a problem (Google and Apple not being able to recognize faces of color; facial recognition as a whole being biased; police facial recognitions having false-positives.) 
      4. Yearbook and representation– what do we do/what does it mean when the cover has all white superheros
  2. Our plan going forward into this year: 
    1. Joy- Being scheduled in departmental meetings in the HS has been great and a big help to understanding their curricular projects as they unroll and being able to have a hand in them from the beginning. Additionally, finding videos and making a conscious effort to show how-to and explanation videos that represent non-cis, non-white experts explaining a topic.
    2. Clair- Using access to other classes as an integrator to support and work towards debiasing our capstone projects. This work is also being supported by Ana and the MS plan to have smaller groups that focus on including restorative justice and debiasing the curriculum.
    3. Celeste- Examining the texts used in class for things like copy and pasting, typing practice, etc; in the past it’s been Dr. Seuss– what other authors and non-white, non-cisgendered examples can we use? 
  3. Ongoing DEI concerns
    1. Joy- it seems our students of colors are disproportionately represented in the remote contingent of students. What does that mean? And are we best serving their needs at home? 
    2. Would it be possible to get two additional copies of Automating Inequality purchased by the school? 

Ed Tech LREI@ Home

Submitted by: Clair Segal

-What does September hold for us:

-Training wise

-LS

-Celeste is trying to set up Drive accounts for the 3rd grade right now

-How young do we go and with what software? 

-Drive for 1st and 2nd? 

-Google Classroom? 

-MS

-Connect and Email set up

-Jumprope set up/norming

-Zoom training

-I can do that via Loom explanations/one on one work via Zoom if necessary

-HS

-Teacher training

-Two new English teachers

 

-Device/Set Up wise

-What devices do we have/can we give for which grades next year? 

-What is our file installation system? Are we still using File Wave for next year? And if so how do we get those things on our devices for next year

 

-LS

-What’s the plan for the 2nd, 3rd, 4th graders? 

-could we get the 2nd graders 4th-grade iPads? 

-could we get a set of the Chromebooks for the 3rd and 4th grades? 

-11 4th graders are leaving→ how can we retrieve their devices? 

-MS

-Mark and Jacob had discussed new 5th grade Chromebooks→ 

-5th->6th->7th->8th with devices moving up with kids each year

-HS Laptops for 9th grade

Filewave solution

External mouse also?

-Could this go on a supply list as something we ask the kids to buy? 

 

-Overall Integration Work

-LS

-Teachers are feeling much better about their tech usage

-Things are finally starting to quiet down/feel balanced for them 

-MS

-Teachers are being great, super willing to dig into things

-Since Zoom isn’t super reliable, it’s actually encouraging different models of teaching that they’re looking for tools to support

-HS

-Teachers have a lot of young kids, so they’re juggling at the same time as teaching

-We need to push them to innovate more→ everyone is rolling with it, but they’re also  not going far beyond their comfort zones/trying to recreate traditional teaching via Zoom

 

Happy Hour

-Every other week is working for us as a schedule

-Joy will host the next one on the 7th 

-Celeste will do the 21st 

-What’s our general theme for the next one? 

-Synchronous tools? Since we did asynchronous last time? 

– how are you engaging students over zoom?

 

-Question for the Group: 

-End of year events/plans. What do those look like? What do we need to support? What standards are we setting? 

Lower School SeeSaw Pilot

Submitted by: Faith Hunter

Seesaw Study Group

Here is the email Celeste sent:

We are looking for a few volunteers to form as a “study group” and to “re-pilot” this online resource called Seesaw with your students. Seesaw is an application that documents students’ learning and understanding and we think that it could be a useful tool for documenting students’ work. In short, it’s like a portfolio, but a digital version.
We would work closely together to learn and explore the various ways it could be used (including the option to a visit to a neighboring school that is using Seesaw) and then after a trial period, come together to see if this is something we could use with our students as they move through Lower School and into Middle School.
Here are two videos (one from Seesaw, the other from a teacher who uses Seesaw) describing it more.
Please reply directly to me here if you would like to learn more and thank YOU for considering!

2/5/19 Ed Tech Meeting Notes

2/5/19– we discussed our frustration with the status of technology infrastructure, and with the fact that we consistently have trouble finding and communicating with Jacob Farkas to ask him for when/how work will be completed/supported. We made a plan to meet with Jacob and communicate what we’ll need for next year (infrastructure and support) and ask for realistic time frames about what we can expect.

2018-2019 Ed Tech Departmental Focus

Type of Work Focus: Documenting the “story” of the preK-12 curriculum 

Description of Work Focus:  Following our in-house retreat with the Library Department, we worked out a series of core tech literacies that we believe every LREI students should have at the end of each divisional level. We’ve identified classes for push in and collaboration where we can continue to support these skills and reinforce them throughout all three divisions. We’ll continue working and finding places to support teachers and students in these literacies, as well as continuing our conversations with Library and other departments. 

Schedule for Work: The Tuesday afternoon meeting times have worked for us, but we would also be interested in another retreat day to continue our departmental discussions.