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2000 Challenge Grant Award Projects Overview

This document provides information on 2000 Challenge Grant Awards given out in Colorado, Florida, Indiana, and New York. It summarizes each award, including the project name, contact information, funding amounts, and brief descriptions of the focus and goals of each funded technology integration project. The Colorado project focuses on on-site staff training to provide skills for integrating technology into the curriculum. The Florida project focuses on staff development, collaborative learning, evaluation of tech-enhanced instruction, and a curriculum resource database. The Indiana project proposes developing a learner-centered, problem-based 6th grade curriculum in collaboration with universities and partners. The New York project links over 500 districts with informal education providers to deliver enhanced curriculum resources through technology.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
62 views3 pages

2000 Challenge Grant Award Projects Overview

This document provides information on 2000 Challenge Grant Awards given out in Colorado, Florida, Indiana, and New York. It summarizes each award, including the project name, contact information, funding amounts, and brief descriptions of the focus and goals of each funded technology integration project. The Colorado project focuses on on-site staff training to provide skills for integrating technology into the curriculum. The Florida project focuses on staff development, collaborative learning, evaluation of tech-enhanced instruction, and a curriculum resource database. The Indiana project proposes developing a learner-centered, problem-based 6th grade curriculum in collaboration with universities and partners. The New York project links over 500 districts with informal education providers to deliver enhanced curriculum resources through technology.

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anon-845637
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2000 Challenge Grant Awards

Colorado

Mountain Valley School District


Project Name: REMOTE Rural Mountain Organization for Technological Enhancement
Contact: James Barron, Superintendent
P.O. Box 127
Saguache, CO 81149
Telephone: (719) 655–0267
Fax: (719) 655–0269
E-mail: barronj@[Link]
Web site: [Link]
Funding: 1st year: $830,261; 5 years: $3,549,449

The REMOTE Project focuses on onsite and ongoing technology staff development to
provide skills and knowledge in technology integration within five curricular areas. The
educators who will participate in this grant are located in six districts in rural and remote
southwestern Colorado where the barriers to staff development are distance,
transportation, and access. This grant proposal solves these problems by providing the
districts with onsite and ongoing training over the 5-year grant period.

Florida

Bay District Schools


Project Name: Beacon Learning Centers
Contact: Barbara Eubanks
Telephone: (850) 872–7321
E-mail: eubanbg@[Link]
Web site: [Link]
Funding: 1st year: $2 million; 5 years: $10 million

The BEACON Learning Center and Teacher Resource Consortium will focus on four key
issues: providing ongoing staff development in effective strategies for technology
integration and related curriculum and instructional techniques, providing opportunities
for collaborative learning for staff, evaluating the use of technology-enhanced instruction,
and developing a central databank for housing curriculum resources aligned with
curriculum standards.

1
Indiana

Crawfordsville Community Schools


Project Name: Tech-Know-Build: Indiana Students Building Knowledge with
Technology
Contact: Kathleen Keck
612 South Water Street
Crawfordsville, IN 47933
Telephone: (765) 362–2992
Fax: (765) 364–3219
E-mail: kkeck@[Link]
Web site: [Link]

The Crawfordsville project proposes to develop and implement a learner-centered and


problem-based curriculum, beginning in the sixth grade. The curriculum, developed by
teachers, will focus on collaborative construction of knowledge, in authentic contexts and
will align with local, state, and national standards. The project will also create a network
of electronic mentors (preservice teachers, parents, and community members) who will
collaborate with students and teachers to design, implement, and evaluate students’
problem-solving activities. Collaboration and leadership from two leading universities,
one large urban school, one small rural school, the Indiana Department of Education, and
business partners will provide models for curriculum reform and professional
development that can be disseminated and replicated.

New York

Schenectady City School District


Project Name: Virtual Informal Education Web (VIEW)
108 Education Drive
Albany, NY 12222
Telephone: (518) 370–8100 ext. 107
Fax: (5l8) 370–8l73
E-mail: falcoj@[Link]
Web site: http//:[Link]/
Funding: 1st year: $2 million; 5 years: $10 million

Project VIEW spans a consortium of more than 500 public school districts and nonpublic
schools across New York state linking them with a rich tapestry of partners, including
informal education content providers (museums, libraries, cultural and community
organizations), corporate, and higher education partners. Project VIEW includes
nationally recognized partners, such as the Smithsonian Institution, Philadelphia Museum
of Art, Ellis Island, and National Baseball Hall of Fame.

VIEW partners share a common goal: To deliver world-class education to students by


using interactive educational technology to access content-rich resources and activities.
Building staff development structures created by five extant New York State Technology

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Literacy Challenge Program collaboration hubs, the project partnerships will facilitate an
exchange of ideas and collaborative program development among teachers and informal
education providers.

The educational programs and products resulting from this will provide interactive
curriculum resources that will enhance student achievement in mathematics, science,
technology, language arts, Social Studies, and the Arts. Project VIEW will produce:

• A replicable model for informal educational providers and K-12 teachers to


collaboratively engage in development, testing, and delivery of content, rich,
interactive videoconference resources and programs;
• A customizable template of staff training components which build capacity to
replicate that collaborative model, and/or participate in the programs produced by
the VIEW project; and
• A coordinated Internet Web site structured as a Web hub to showcase, promote,
and provide educators easy access to VIEW projects and related archives and
resources.

Products developed under VIEW will directly impact and improve the capacity of public
and nonpublic schools. Evaluation activities will document quantifiable changes in
teaching and learning. By the end of 5 years, this collaborative will:

• Provide intensive professional development to a minimum of 1,780 teachers;


• Transform educational practices throughout the collaboration via mentoring and
turnkey professional development to over 17,000 teachers; and
• Expand learning capabilities for nearly 400,000 students across New York state
by offering opportunities to work on self-directed, technology-integrated,
standards based curricular projects linked with the resources of museums and
cultural institutions.

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