Teaching Technology Education

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Franklin Said:

How do you attract and retain foreign talents in singapore? ( through education and medical field)?

We Answered:

Attracting foreigners is just like any marriage transaction. The other party looks at the benefits and sacrifices, compare it against other potential mates and makes the decision accordingly. For professionals, quality of living is important. Singapore has no 4 seasons, unbearably hot and humid, lacks critical mass for intellectual pursuits or meeting like minded people. No amount of money will keep them for long except for the 3rd rates ones. We are more likely to attract FTrash, opportunists, 4th seed sportwomen. Are there hope still? Yes. By not deceiving ourselves and giving ourselves labels like world class number one, calling Holland Village as the new Bohemia.

James Said:

What is the average teacher salary for Technology Education in SE Wisconsin?

We Answered:

Average = $35,811

Leona Said:

How to manage technology in education for effective teaching at school level? Options with low budget ?

We Answered:

To introduce technology to your school, first your teachers must be familiar with and want to use it. Identify teachers that are not literate in using PC's and other technology, and use some of what budget you do already have to start sending them to trainings, college courses, etc. Find one teacher who is very interested in technology hardware, and send him/her back to college to learn computer repair, software debugging, etc. That teacher can also be the one who develops and implements a technology class for the students.

Approach Dell, IBM, etc. and ask about their special packages for schools. Most of these companies will sell cheaper, and even donate some things, to schools because kids trained on their brand will prefer it when they buy their own computers. You have a choice in your proposal of asking for 2 or 3 computers for each classroom, or asking for 1 computer per classroom and another extra set for a computer lab. Teachers would go into the lab with their students on a rotating schedule. If you go with the lab, ask for enough computers to cover your largest class size plus a couple extra. Also ask for large, company-sized printers that the computers can be networked with. They are much cheaper on ink than individual printers. Try getting 1 for every 10 or 15 computers to start. Be sure to ask for a basic software program set that includes Powerpoint, Word, etc.

Do community fundraisers, and apply for grants from both local and international companies, to help fund additional technology purchases. Companies doing business in your area will want their future workforce trained appropriately to use technology.

Bring in a TV set for each classroom, link them together in an in-school network, and have students use a video camera to put on weekly school news broadcasts. This also allows teachers to show educational videos related to the subjects being taught.

Good, cheap educational programming that teachers can load on their class computers includes Reader Rabbit, Monster Math, Carmen SanDiego series, Amazon Trail, etc. Look around at different sites and see what you can find at a discount price. Move your lesson plans templates to Word, encourage teachers to start using Powerpoint to design in-class presentations, etc. (In a year or two you will want to pick up some Powerpoint projectors, if you don't get them in your initial package).

Once you have your computers up and running, you will need regular funds set aside each year for repairs, new educational software purchases, and additional staff trainings. Grant writing can seriously help with this.

Good luck!

Julia Said:

Technology eductaion?

We Answered:

If you want to teach at the high school level, you'll need a 4-year degree and certification. If you want to teach at a community college or technical school (more likely with that field), you'll most likely need at least a masters degree.

Here's a good site listing current jobs in higher education (i.e., above high school level). http://www.higheredjobs.com/

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