Net widens world for high schoolers
CYNTHIA HOWELL ARKANSAS DEMOCRAT-GAZETTE
Rachel Yingling, a senior at Winslow High School,
dropped in on Amsterdam for a few minutes Friday morning, while
Aaron Collins of McNeil checked out Montreal and Daniel Clark of
Waldo toured ground zero in New York City. All the travel was the
virtual sort, done from a computer laboratory in west Little Rock.
Thirteen students from some of the state's most academically
troubled and rural school systems parachuted into international
cities taking in the live scenery through the viewfinders of Web
cameras. "There's the Golden Gate Bridge!" exclaimed travel guide
and Stanford University Professor David Fetterman. Fascinated
students peered through the early morning California fog to make
out the landmark. Seconds later they gazed at a Swedish
skyline.
Fetterman, a professor in Stanford's School of Education who
specializes in the fields of educational evaluation, ethnography
and policy analysis, was more a magician than lecturer as he
guided students through virtual classrooms. He also demonstrated
video-conferencing and tutored the design of personal Web sites
featuring photographs, maps and animation pulled from the Internet
and free software. Yingling's Web site featured a peaceful scene
from the United Kingdom and photographs of the members of her
favorite band, Weezer. She added an animated American flag from a
free animation Web site. Collins' site showed scenes from his old
hometown of New Orleans. And Winslow High student Aaron Wood
designed his Web site around his interests of off-road
motorcycling and basketball, particularly superstar Michael
Jordan. Clark, a sophomore at Waldo High School, said he's always
liked working with computers. "This has taken me a big step
further," he said about Fetterman's lessons. Clark said he intends
to use his newly acquired knowledge to help his school system of
450 students build a districtwide Web site that will be linked to
an already existing high school site. "I'm kind of excited," Clark
said about the new site. "It's going to let the whole world know
about Waldo, Ark., and what we do there."
The two-day training session at the Arkansas Department of
Education's Technology Center is one in a series of sessions that
the Education Department is offering this year primarily to
educators, but also to student leaders, in districts classified as
academically distressed because of low student scores on
standardized achievement tests. Fetterman was the featured speaker
this week. Next week, the superintendent of the Hartford, Conn.,
school district, who is also a guest lecturer at Harvard
University, will be in Arkansas to talk about turning around
low-performing schools. "I want them to see all the possibilities
for improvement," Charity Smith, the Education Department's
assistant director for accountability, said about the distressed
districts. "I want them to have access to everything that there
is," Smith continued. "They deserve the best in the country. Just
because of where the districts are located and just because they
are struggling right now doesn't mean their students can't get
access to a world-class education. That's what we want for these
children."
Waldo High School Principal Edgar Montgomery said his school
is already taking advantage of technology to provide Spanish I and
II instruction to students. The language lessons are taught via
the Internet from the Arkansas School for Mathematics and Sciences
in Hot Springs. Still, Montgomery marveled Friday at the promise
of technology demonstrated by Fetterman. "It's amazing. It's just
amazing what we are going to be doing in the future," Montgomery
said. "It doesn't matter where you are, you have access to the
world. There is no excuse for a poor child from Waldo, Ark. It's
out there for him if he's willing."
This article was published on Saturday, October 20, 2001
Copyright 2001, Arkansas Democrat-Gazette, Inc. All rights
reserved. This document may not be reprinted without the express
written permission of Arkansas Democrat-Gazette, Inc.