One Schoolhouse

  • FOR STUDENTS
    • Student Courses
    • Summer 2019
  • FOR EDUCATORS
    • Academic Leaders Retreats
    • Learning Innovation Blog
    • On-Demand Programs
    • Online Courses
  • FOR SCHOOLS
    • Our Schools
    • Join the Consortium
  • For Parents
  • COURSE LOGIN
    • Student Classes
    • Educator Classes
    • On-Demand Programs
  • FOR STUDENTS
    • Student Courses
    • Summer 2019
  • FOR EDUCATORS
    • Academic Leaders Retreats
    • Learning Innovation Blog
    • On-Demand Programs
    • Online Courses
  • FOR SCHOOLS
    • Our Schools
    • Join the Consortium
  • For Parents
  • COURSE LOGIN
    • Student Classes
    • Educator Classes
    • On-Demand Programs

Reflections on NAIS and a West Coast Swing

3/18/2012

0 Comments

 
PictureBrad Rathgeber, Executive Director
Late Friday night, I got home from my second trip to the West Coast in three weeks.  The first trip was for the NAIS Annual Conference and the second was to see some of the great OSG school in Los Angeles.  Both trips confirmed for me something that I have been feeling in my travels throughout the year: change is really (and finally) happening across the board within independent schools.

Perhaps paradoxically, it seems to me that this change has been sped up in the last year by a number of schools who have come to realize that there is no “silver bullet” out there to better our schools: the iPad, online learning, a one-to-one computing program, the SmartBoard, etc. alone will not make our schools and the learning happening within better.  Instead, schools are working toward harder solutions: changing faculty culture, engaging everyone in the learning process, moving to a “growth mindset,” valuing innovation, and having the hard conversations.  

This is true for the most successful schools leading the way in online learning, too.  Leading schools understand that simply expanding course catalogs through online learning does not necessarily help to better the academic program of a school.  However, if the school works with online learning programs that 1) are mission-alligned, 2) agree on general learning philosophies, 3) help fill in gaps of an existing program, 4) expand opportunities for students, and 5) work with the school as a partner not a client, then online learning can be a very valuable addition to the school.

On a macro independent school level, I have seen these ideas embraced like never before at the NAIS Annual Conference.  The Whitepaper that I recently co-wrote with my friend Michael Nachbar, the Director of the Global Online Academy, was exceptionally well received by people at the conference and in the weeks since.  There was a general buzz in the halls of the Seattle Convention Center about online learning, and the thoughtful, mission-alligned approach of the schools in the OSG and GOA consortiums.

I also thought that it was particularly telling that after the keynote address at the start of the conference from Bill Gates, the criticism from the audience (especially on Twitter) was not that he had “pushed the envelope” too far in his address on the powers of technology to help transform education, but instead there was a fairly large cry of criticism from people who believed that he had not gone far enough.  That was a sea-change for an NAIS Annual Conference.

This week in Los Angeles, I felt the change at the individual school level.  I had the chance to speak with two faculty groups this week that I had presented to last March.  Last year, when I spoke to these faculties, there was general skepticism about the Online School for Girls program and online learning, in general.  Faculty were concerned about the quality of education and, quite frankly, that their jobs were being replaced.  This year, faculty were excited by the opportunities that engaging in online learning offered both for them (through professional development and the ability to teach online themselves) and for their students.  A year into having students take online courses, the faculty had heard what the student experience was: small classes, caring teachers, personalized attention, project-driven, and, yes, challenging.  By this point, they had come to know that the Online School for Girls was created to be like them, and was really birthed from their collective efforts and those of great girls’ school educators of years past, too.  Instead of viewing OSG with skeptical eyes as the “other,” most were viewing OSG as part of them.
​
We are at an exciting time in independent school education.  Our community is working together on big issues in ways that we never have before.  And, we are tackling the hard questions – and that is making all the difference.

0 Comments

    Authors

    Brad Rathgeber, Head of School & CEO
    Corinne Dedini, Assistant Head of School
    Karen Douse, Director of School & Student Support (retired)
    ​Lorri Palko,
    Chief Financial Officer

    Archives

    February 2019
    January 2019
    December 2018
    October 2018
    September 2018
    August 2018
    July 2018
    June 2018
    May 2018
    April 2018
    March 2018
    February 2018
    January 2018
    December 2017
    November 2017
    October 2017
    September 2017
    August 2017
    July 2017
    June 2017
    May 2017
    April 2017
    March 2017
    February 2017
    January 2017
    November 2016
    October 2016
    September 2016
    July 2016
    June 2016
    May 2016
    March 2016
    January 2016
    December 2015
    September 2015
    November 2014
    March 2014
    October 2013
    August 2013
    February 2013
    January 2013
    October 2012
    August 2012
    July 2012
    May 2012
    March 2012
    November 2011
    July 2011

    Categories

    All

    RSS Feed

Organization

About
Welcome
​History
FAQs
​Calendar

Policies

Tuition & Policies
Non-Discrimination Policy
Technology Requirements & Policies
​Privacy Policy
Other Policies



Team

Team Members
Board of Trustees
Employment Opportunities
Contact Us
1342 Florida Ave NW
Washington, DC 20009
info@oneschoolhouse.org
T: 202.618.3637​
© COPYRIGHT 2018, ONE SCHOOLHOUSE, INC.. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.