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2005 CoSN Compendium
The third edition of CoSN's Compendium focuses on:
- Best Practices for CTOs: Lessons Learned by District Leaders - Over the past year, the CoSN CTO Council has conducted a series of
Leadership Forums at which technology leaders from districts around the
country have come together to discuss CoSN's Essential Skills of the
K-12 CTO Framework, to talk about the challenges they face, and to
share the best practices they’ve discovered in their day to day work.
This monograph examines the best practices identified for each of the
nine Essential Skills.
[Executive Summary] (PDF)
- Becoming an Advocate: Advice for K-12 Technology Leaders - Education technology leaders know that all one has to do to witness
the power of technology to improve K-12 learning is walk into a wired
classroom. However, Congress's profound cuts to education technology
programs reveal that many lawmakers in Washington do not understand the
fundamental connection between technology and improved K-12 learning.
To bridge the gap, education technology leaders must go beyond their
traditional roles as facilitators of technology in schools and become
advocates for technology on the state and federal levels.
[Executive Summary] (PDF)
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Partnering For Success: IT and AT Together - This monograph examines the factors that have hindered IT-AT
cooperation in the past and offers practical suggestions for building
effective partnerships to move beyond the challenges and bridge the gap
between these two communities for the benefit of all students.
[Executive Summary] (PDF)
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What Could Go Wrong? Talking to District Leaders about Cyber Security - Security is a difficult topic to address. K-12 technology leaders
are often not certain they fully understand it themselves, much less
feel confident explaining it to others. Meanwhile, superintendents and
other district leaders can feel overwhelmed. Technology is not their
primary concern, and it's easy to be seduced by "you're better off not
knowing." Even though everyone is working in an educational setting, it
can be hard to reveal how much you don’t know. So technologists don't
talk, and superintendents don't ask, and everyone ventures into
insecure territory with eyes half closed.
[Executive Summary] (PDF)
- You are Not Alone: Options for Data Management - With data an increasingly integral part of K-12 instruction and
operations, a school district's technology infrastructure has become
mission critical. Easy access to quality data gives teachers tools to
monitor and shape student progress, helps administrators identify
what’s working and where more resources are needed, and allows the
district to demonstrate compliance with NCLB requirements.
[Executive Summary] (PDF)
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From TCO to TVO: Measuring Total Value of Ownership for K-12 Technology - Total Value of Opportunity is emerging as a means of demonstrating
the value of investments in technology. As a more sophisticated measure
than Total Cost of Ownership, TVO is not a single metric but rather a
portfolio of frameworks that provide a multi-faceted view of the value
proposition. TVO is a quantitative and qualitative value methodology
that applies a standard set of concepts and models to answer key value
questions about existing or potential IT investments.
[Executive Summary] (PDF)
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Primer on Open Technologies for K-12 Education - The words "open," "source," "standards," "interoperability," and
combinations of these terms represent specific ideas cherished by
various communities. This monograph begins to sort out the emerging
standards, their respective sponsors, and terminology associated with
each. The goal is to help readers investigate and answer some initial
questions regarding these standards and their relevance to
infrastructure questions.
CoSN members, access a free PDF through MyCoSN
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