Description: Tags: 1995awards
Description: Tags: 1995awards
Description: Tags: 1995awards
California
The Triton Project will improve student performance in mathematics and science, using a
combination of technologies in an active learning curriculum with an ocean exploration
theme. San Diego public schools will be networked with each other and with several area
museums, research centers, and aquariums. Partners include: Sea World; Scripps
Institution of Oceanography; Pacific Bell; San Diego State University; San Diego
Supercomputer Center at U.C. San Diego; the Naval Command Control and Ocean
Surveillance Center; and San Diego Data Processing Corporation.
Working through a consortium known as Smart Valley Inc., the Silicon Valley community
is transforming its education system into learning communities that prepare students for
the 21st century. Reform plans developed by teams of high schools with their feeder
elementary and middle schools will receive infrastructure support from Silicon Valley’s
high-tech corporations. The Challenge Grant will support curriculum development and
teacher training to meet the objectives of Goals 2000. Seventeen corporations have each
pledged up to $1 million in resources over 3 years in support of school reform. They
include: Adobe Systems; Apple Computer; Applied Materials; Cirrus Logic; Hewlett-
Packard; Robert Noyce Foundation; Silicon Graphics; Wells Fargo Bank; Bank of
America; Intel; Logitech; NetManage; Network General; Symantec; Pacific Bell; Sun
Microsystems, the 21st Century Education Initiative; and the Bay Area Multimedia
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Technology Alliance. Other partners include: SRI International, the Institute for Research
on Learning, and Customers and Technologies.
Delaware
Illinois
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Indiana
General Motors, the largest industry in Anderson, recently announced it will have no
unskilled jobs at its Anderson facilities by the year 2000. In a community where
education has not been highly valued in the past there is now a strong demand for all
children to meet high academic standards—leaving school with strong language skills,
mathematics competency, mastery of new technologies, and collaborative work skills.
The project will expand on the "Buddy" project to link homes and schools with
computers and modems so that parents, teachers, and students can work together on
improving education. Teachers will receive support as they develop new curriculum and
instructional strategies. Partners include: Anderson Area Chamber of Commerce;
Anderson Federation of Teachers; National City Bank; TCI of Central Indiana; the
Corporation for Educational Technology; Public TV; three local institutions of higher
education; and the Indiana Department of Education.
The Learning Cooperative, consisting of Indianapolis Public Schools, the Chicago Public
Schools, Walled Lake Consolidated Schools, the North Central Regional Education
Laboratory, and Ameritech, will develop an affordable, scalable, and equitably distributed
telecommunications infrastructure to deliver instructionally sound curriculum and
technical support to schools, as well as effective professional development to all teachers
in these schools.
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Louisiana
Maryland
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Michigan
Newaygo County School District, the county government, the Gerber Memorial Hospital,
the Newaygo County Multi-Agency Consortium, the public libraries, and five other
school districts will form a network to improve educational opportunities and social
services in this extremely rural, low-income community. Local area networks in every
school building will provide workstations and training for every teacher. A fiber optic
network will link the schools, libraries, and over 40 community service providers in a "no
wrong door" approach to services. The Fremont Area Foundation will fund construction
of the fiber optic network, and the Gerber Companies Foundation will provide significant
project support.
Nebraska
Westside Community Schools and Prairie Visions: The Nebraska Consortium for
Discipline-Based Arts Education will use telecommunications and digital technology to
link urban and rural schools to the art collections of five major museums across the
country. Activities include: an Electronic art museum in the classroom, computer based
instruction, curriculum design, and professional development. The project will begin with
five Nebraska school districts and extend to schools across the United States. Partners
include: The Smithsonian National Museum of American Art; Joslyn Art Museum;
Sheldon Memorial Art Gallery; The Getty Museum; The Kennedy Center for the
Performing Arts; Pacific Imaging Center, Inc.; M. Power, Inc.; Digital Visions, Inc.;
Apple Computer; Far West Laboratory; Prairie Visions (a consortium of 100 school
districts, 3 museums, the Nebraska Art Teachers Association, and others); five school
districts; and nine other art education institutes and teacher organizations.
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New Hampshire
New Mexico
Integrates new technologies with curriculum reform in Bureau of Indian Affairs Schools
(BIA). Using Indian children’s real-life experiences, and building on the content of
Native American cultures, the "Four Directions" project is an indigenous education model
that will help students in BIA schools meet high academic standards.
Telecommunications will link BIA schools across the country with a variety of university,
museum, library, and Internet resources. BIA schools include: Ahfachkee Day School
(FL); Indian Island School (ME); Quileute Tribal School (WA); Takini School (SD);
Dilcon Boarding School (AZ); Laguna School (NM); Hannahville Indian School (MI);
and Fond du Lac Ojibwe School (MN). Other partners include: the Heard Museum of
Native Culture and Art; the University of Kansas; Southwest Indian Polytechnic Institute,
Intel Corp.; and Sandia National Laboratories.
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Ohio
In consultation with the Center for Leadership in School Reform, the Summit County
Office of Education and the Technology Academy will support teachers who are creating
"new work" partnerships with their students—work that meets the high academic
standards embodied in Goals 2000, work that engages children, work in which children
persist, and work that results in real accomplishments. The effort includes a technology
work experience in which high school and college students operate a nonprofit company
dedicated to rapid response support for classroom applications of technology. Partners
include: Ameritech; LOGAL; the Akron Regional Development Board; the University of
Akron; Ashland University; and Kent State University; among others.
Pennsylvania
New technologies will support a comprehensive school reform strategy in a large urban
school district (Enterprise Zone/Empowerment Community). Learning Communities
consisting of high schools linked with clusters of elementary schools, middle schools and
a college are forming "Virtual Schools," which support professional development for
teachers, and extended time and place for student learning. Partners include: Bell
Atlantic; Unisys; IBM; Public TV; five colleges and universities; and the Private Industry
Council.
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Towanda Area School District
Project Name: New Vision
Contact: Daniel Paul
938 Fountain Street
Ashland, PA 17921
Telephone: (570) 874-2365
Fax: (570) 874-3699
E-mail: dpaul@pto.net
Web site: www.partnersdl.org
An interactive network based on compressed video will connect 23 small rural school
districts in 3 states (rural Pennsylvania, New York, & New Jersey). The project will grow
to establish one of the largest (geographically) interactive learning networks in the
country. School districts will share teaching personnel, curriculum resources, and teacher
training. Schools will be linked to technical centers, museums, and colleges to extend the
resources available to students beyond the confines of classroom walls. Partners include:
Commonwealth Telephone Co.; Claverack Rural Electric; PA Rural Electric Association;
Picturetel Inc.; Northeast Pennsylvania Tech-Prep Consortium; International Paper Co.;
and 7 colleges, among others.
South Dakota
The Technology in Education Challenge Grant for Rural Education (TEC-RAM), will
integrate technology with curriculum in six community based systemic reform efforts
across the state. This statewide effort uses technology to achieve objectives of the
recently passed: Improving America’s Schools Act; Goals 2000—Educate America Act;
and School-To-Work opportunities Act. Partners include: Black Hills Special Services
Cooperative; South Dakota Department of Education and Cultural Affairs; South Dakota
Department of Labor; Black Hills and South Dakota State Universities; Spring Creek
Video Productions, Inc.; and six local school districts.
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Texas
Utah
The State of Utah Resource Web (SURWEB) will use telecommunications to provide
quality educational opportunities in low-income, rural, and culturally disenfranchised
communities. Internet resources will be integrated with curriculum reform in several
thematic areas, including: Native American Cultures, Western History, geology, and
paleontology. State Park and National Monument resources will be used to engage
students in active learning projects. Partners include: Capitol Reef National Monument;
Dinosaur National Monument; Far West Laboratory; Novell; Utah Office of Museum
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Services; U.S. West Communications; Utah State Parks; Utah State Office of Education;
several Indian Councils, and others.
Vermont
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