Archive for November, 2008

Scholastic Interview with Mark Robinson

November 20, 2008

From Scholastic.com:

Mark Robinson–Promethean’s Global Education Head

Mark Robinson head of Promethean’s global head of education product strategy took some time out to speak with me and get The Royal Treatment before heading back to the U.K. He has been with Promethean about 5 years and and bridges the R & D and marketing departments. He travels a lot and gets to meet customers as well. Robinson was a U. K. primary grades teacher until about eight years ago, so his leadership fits right in with Promethean’s game plan to zero in on teachers, professional development, lessons and educator sharing. Mark still brags about his teacher Web site in Northern England and proud of his work in the area of Internet safety. “I’ve been in educational technology ever since I was a teacher,” says Robinson. “I think one of the big differentiators is that many—about 40 percent of Promethean’s staff have been teachers and it gives us sort of a conscience around what we are doing.” Robinson gives a lot of credit to founder and former chairman Tony Cann for this and the legacy he wants to leave. Cann started the company as Terminal Display Systems in the early 70s. “There’s a lot of feel good confidence when Promethean approaches the market.

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“Tiny Tech Team” Earns Greenville County Teacher the Technology Innovation Program Award

November 10, 2008

seyffertGreenville, SC Deborah Seyffert calls the class her “Tiny Tech Team.” This class of five-year-olds gets music from iTunes, uses the Promethean Board for the Everyday Math Calendar, and keeps a class journal on a daily blog so parents can see what their children have learned each day.

Integrating cutting-edge technology into the classroom has earned Mrs. Seyffert, a kindergarten teacher at Slater-Marietta Elementary, the Technology Innovation Program award from the South Carolina Association for Educational Technology.

“Students in my classroom use technology every day. We start off the day singing “Good Morning,” and students read the lyrics on the Promethean Board,” Seyffert explained. “Throughout the day, students are using a document camera, laptops, and even a flip camera to record and post their work.”

Mrs. Seyffert developed the program with Erica Plessinger, her teaching assistant. They discuss student progress and develop plans for improvement with each child. Two first grade teachers, Laura Moody and Carol Isbell, bring their students together with the kindergartners so students at both grade levels can learn new skills. Media specialist Linda Bunch provides access to the same technology in the library to support classroom learning.

Using technology, Mrs. Seyffert can check students’ reading comprehension and phonology skills using the Activote Answer system, where students’ responses are instantly viewed, shared and analyzed on the Promethean Board using bar graphs and pie charts.

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