NETWORKS FOR LEARNING RENEWAL
THE CENTER FOR COLLABORATIVE EDUCATION
and
INSTITUTE FOR LEARNING TECHNOLOGIES
COLUMBIA UNIVERSITY IN THE CITY OF NEW YORK
The Eiffel Project
New York City's Small Schools Partnership
Technology Learning Challenge
Version 1.2
September 1996
Institute for Learning Technologies
Teachers College · Columbia University
November 1999
Contents
Abstract
Introduction
Appendix 1: Eiffel Project
Consortium Members Appendix 2: Eiffel Project Partner
Schools Appendix 3:
Project Directors
A consortium - led by the Center
for Collaborative Education (CCE) and the Institute for
Learning Technologies (ILT) at Columbia University -
joins through the New York City Board of Education to
demonstrate how children contending with poverty,
discrimination, and urban crowding can achieve
world-class education standards when liberated by
fundamental efforts at school reform, empowered by the
full use of advanced digital information.
In its fifth year, the Eiffel
Project will directly benefit at least 67 schools,
engaging 30,000 students, most from African-American,
Latino, immigrant, and economically disadvantaged
families, with 1,350 teachers. The project will further
serve numerous parents and community members accessing
it through 10 community-based organizations in areas
where the need for technology is acute.
- Vision for Improved
Education: As the Eiffel Tower showed the world a
century ago how architects could use new materials to
break existing architectural constraints, now digital
technologies loosen long-lasting constraints on
education, constraints which have shackled many with
limiting opportunities. Digital technologies are for
education what iron and steel, reinforced concrete,
plate glass, elevators, and air conditioning were for
architecture. The Eiffel Project will show how the
small schools reform movement, empowered with advanced
media, can break the constraints of the traditional
school, thereby enabling all children to achieve
unprecedented levels of excellence.
- Convergence with the Small
Schools Reform Effort. New York's school reform
movement has support from the Annenberg Foundation;
the Mayor, City Council, and Board of Education; the
State Board of Regents; the teachers' unions; key
universities; and major civic and corporate partners.
All recognize that large schools have too often been
alienating institutions, mediocre as places of
education and most effective in keeping kids off the
streets. The small schools reform movement is
transforming big, impersonal schools into smaller,
autonomous learning communities, scaled to nurture the
child, to provide face-to-face meaning for both
students and teachers. The Center for Collaborative
Education has been a leader of this movement since its
inception, in New York City and in the nation at
large.
- Uses of Technology. Digital
libraries, multimedia educational programs, and
wide-area networking make advanced media a powerful
engine for equity. The digital library and digital
museum bring an unprecedented wealth of resources to
the desktop in school and home. Educational
experiences, activated by multimedia simulations,
appeal to many learning styles, engrossing students of
all backgrounds in cooperative, inquiry-based study.
Wide-area networking ends classroom isolation through
desktop video conferencing and group work in a
content-rich context. All these media make digital
portfolios effective educational tools. For the past
decade, the Institute for Learning Technologies has
prototyped progressive uses of these technologies in
urban schools.
- Evidence of Effectiveness.
School reform and technology strategies for the Eiffel
Project have been developed and tested by CCE, ILT,
and their collaborators through prior projects. CCE
has pioneered use of portfolios and exhibitions of
student work as a means of assessment and a key
graduation requirement for students. Through the
Dalton Technology Plan, the Living Schoolbook Project,
and the Harlem Environmental Access Project, ILT has
introduced advanced media in diverse urban schools.
- Consortium Membership and
Contributions. In addition to the conveners, CCE and
ILT, over twenty organizations participate in the
consortium. Key corporations (Kodak, NYNEX,
Time-Warner) will provide resources to develop
technology-based portfolios, high-bandwidth networks,
advanced media centers, and digital libraries. Centers
and Institutes from diverse components of Columbia
University and other organizations such as Junior
Achievement will provide mentoring, expertise, and
intellectual content to enhance this effort;
specialists from NCREST, NYU, and Teachers College
will evaluate it. Large community development projects
such as the Upper Manhattan Empowerment Zone and
smaller ones such as the Harlem Parents Tutorial
Project will help link school reform to homes and
communities.
The Challenge Grant for
Technology in Education provides funding of $7 million
over five years, with $11 million required from
consortium partners in order to meet the project
challenge. The consortium seeks to double those goals
through additional fund-raising, and to extend the
project at least five years further into the 21st
Century, in order to have transformative effects on
educational achievement in New York City and the region.
In the
1889 Paris World's Fair, the Eiffel Tower rose far above
the scale of any existing building, demonstrating to the
world how engineering design, working with new materials
and techniques, could break prior constraints on
architecture. Digital information technologies are for
education what iron and steel girders, reinforced
concrete, plate glass, elevators, central heating and
air conditioning have been for architecture. Digital
technologies break significant, long-lasting constraints
on educational activity, constraints that have suited
too few and shackled many with limiting opportunities.
The objective of the Eiffel
Project is to meet progressive expectations with a high
profile, large scale project that will demonstrate that
the small schools reform movement, empowered with
advanced media, can break the constraints of the
traditional school, thereby enabling all children to
achieve unprecedented levels of excellence.
A consortium -- led by the
Center for Collaborative Education (CCE) and the
Institute for Learning Technologies (ILT) at Columbia
University -- will join in a large scale demonstration
of how children contending with poverty, discrimination,
and urban crowding can achieve world-class education
standards when liberated by fundamental efforts at
school reform, empowered by the full use of advanced
digital information. The Eiffel Project will bring the
intellectual, cultural, and human resources of a major
research university, one committed to improving the
quality of life in New York City, to bear on the complex
problems of urban education.
A depressed urban semi-circle --
Harlem and Upper Manhattan, the South Bronx, Queens,
downtown Brooklyn -- experience the persistent problems
of inner cities in America. These communities surround
the commercial core of Manhattan, which harbors an
immense wealth of cultural, technological, and financial
assets. The objective of our coalition is to show that
the combination of school reform and technological
resources can solve the persistent problems of education
associated with urban adversity.
Marshall McLuhan's suggestive
phrase, "the medium is the message," is most apt in
thinking about schools. Large, bureaucratic schools that
treat students and teachers as depersonalized,
interchangeable agents who perform routine, fragmentary
tasks along the production lines of instructional labor,
impart the wrong message. To advance equity and
excellence, educators must reshape the school itself, so
that it conveys a more expansive, liberating message.
This conviction grounds the small schools reform
movement, which seeks to scale down the size of schools,
to make them more autonomous and self-directing, to
concentrate on what teachers, parents, and children find
important and moving.
In New York City, a
school-reform movement has taken root, with support from
the Annenberg Foundation; the Mayor, City Council, and
Board of Education; the State Board of Regents; the
teachers' unions; key universities; and major civic and
corporate partners. Large schools serving the urban poor
have too often been examples of the school as factory
and warehouse -- big, impersonal institutions, mediocre
as places of education and most effective in keeping
kids off the streets. The small schools reform movement
seeks to transform big, impersonal schools into models
of autonomous learning communities, scaled to nurture
the child, to provide face-to-face involvement for both
students and teachers. The Center for Collaborative
Education has been a leader of this movement since its
inception, in both New York City and the nation at
large.
The Center for Collaborative
Education gives the Eiffel Project a firm base in the
small schools reform movement. The project will work to
extend and strengthen this base, stressing smaller class
sizes, cooperative learning, interdisciplinary study,
and strong parent and community involvement. In 1987,
the NYC Board of Education agreed to support the work of
CCE, which provides on-going leadership to a growing
number of schools that are restructuring on the model
Deborah Meier created through the renowned Central Park
East Schools. In 1995, the Annenberg Foundation awarded
a "Networks for Learning Renewal" grant to four groups
pioneering small schools reform in New York City -- CCE,
the Manhattan Institute, ACORN, and the Fund for New
York City Public Education. As part of the Eiffel
Project, CCE is developing an association of
restructured public schools across the City -- the Small
Schools Partnerships, clusters of three to five schools
within one or more community school districts. By 2001,
CCE will directly support restructured educational and
governance practices among 13 Small Schools Partnerships
in all five of the City's boroughs, serving 22,000
students and 1,000 teachers.
Building on the Small Schools
Partnerships, the Eiffel Project will additionally
develop a second ring of schools that are restructuring
according to the same fundamental principles but are not
receiving direct Annenberg support through CCE. Some
receive support through other Annenberg grantees,
particularly the Fund for New York City Public
Education, a consortium partner in the Eiffel Project.
Several will be schools reshaping on small schools
reform principles through projects that ILT has
initiated such as the Living Schoolbook, the Harlem
Environmental Access Project, and Reinventing Libraries.
A few will be Schools under Registration Review that
seek to reverse cycles of school failure by changing
scale and using advanced technology. In all, n its fifth
year the Eiffel Project will directly benefit at least
67 schools, engaging 30,000 students, most from
African-American, Latino, immigrant, and economically
disadvantaged families, with 1,350 teachers. The project
will further serve numerous parents and community
members accessing it through 10 community-based
organizations in areas where the need for technology is
acute.
Throughout the Eiffel Project,
the key criteria for inclusion are the willingness of
teachers at each school to take responsibility for
shaping the curriculum and educational program and the
commitment of all involved -- students, teachers,
administrators, and parents -- to working at a scale at
which interpersonal, face-to-face recognition of each
other as autonomous agents, responsible for their
actions, is the controlling norm. Technology can greatly
facilitate such efforts. Digital libraries, multimedia
educational programs, and wide-area networking -- three
related and maturing technologies -- make advanced media
a powerful engine for equity. These technologies have
great educational significance, and the Institute for
Learning Technologies has been a leader in their use and
development. The libraries of the very richest schools
represent minor academic resources compared to those of
the digital library and digital museum, which become
accessible at the desktop in school or home with
appropriate connections to the Internet. Educational
experiences, activated by multimedia simulations, can
appeal to diverse learning styles and engross students
of all backgrounds in cooperative, inquiry-based
educational work. Wide-area networking can enable
desktop video conferencing and group work in a
content-rich context, and these new forms of educative
communication can overcome the traditional isolation of
the classroom, bringing youthful minds actively into the
laboratory, the archive, the field station, the theater,
the museum, and the office. With these technologies
fully deployed, all students can attain an unprecedented
improvement in educational quality.
Implicit in their chosen scale,
small schools encounter significant limits, particularly
in large cities. Urban schools, large or small, must
cope with significant diversity among students. In CCE's
Brooklyn New School, students speak 36 different
languages. Throughout the City, students draw on
disparate experiences and aspire to diverse visions.
Small schools must cope creatively with complexity, and
consequently networking -- interpersonal and
technological -- has become essential in the school
reform movement. Networks of and for small schools can
provide deep and diverse resources to suit the
remarkable range of human difference. The Small Schools
Partnership is developing these sustaining interpersonal
networks, and Columbia University will augment these
with digital information networks adapted specially to
serve small school reform. The interconnection of
school-based personnel will also be supported by Media
Centers, discussed at length in section 3b. These will
exist as nodes on the electronic network and will form
the connective tissue between school-based activities,
community involvement, and overarching systemic
management.
In pursuit of better
possibilities, it is time to move from isolated pilot
projects, which merely suggest the potential of new
technologies, to implementing a large, decisive
demonstration of their power. We believe the
cost-benefit equation to be achieved with thorough use
of advanced media in education, particularly in support
of the school reform movement, will be advantageous for
the whole society, but it will be a difficult equation
to demonstrate in the arena of public discourse. The
reason is simple: the benefits of small schools
strengthened with advanced media will be very, very
great relative to the current state of schooling, yet
those benefits can be realized only by a significant
reordering of expenditures on education. Can we persuade
the public and its leadership to make a significant
reallocation of resources? Evaluation studies of pilot
programs -- showing incremental gains in a traditional
subject in one or another grade -- will not suffice to
make the needed point in policy debate. A sustained,
dramatic, large-scale, decisive demonstration,
concentrated in a prominent locality that embodies the
recalcitrant difficulties of contemporary life, can
infuse the policy debate with new vision. The City of
New York is the place to produce that demonstration --
the Eiffel Project.
By itself, technology is a limp
educational resource. To benefit complex persons and
communities, effective educational ideas and actions
must inform use of information technology. The Eiffel
Project seeks to infuse technology with powerful
pedagogical ideas, and to empower those ideas with the
force of technical innovation. We explain our pedagogy
in two sections. First, in "The School and the Child,"
we present our convictions about how the reform of
schools combined with the astute use of technology can
liberate the child to learn more effectively, more
deeply, more meaningfully. Then, in "The School and
Society," we examine how the reformed school opened to
the world through digital networks will help children be
more effective and sure as they encounter the
complexities of public life, the workplace, and the
culture.
To achieve its educational
objectives, the Eiffel Project needs to make them real
in the educational experience of participating students
and teachers. Our mission is the radical improvement of
educational experience for thousands of students and
teachers, and as they model new educational
possibilities, for millions more. Education is the end;
reformed schools and new technologies are the means.
In this section we discuss four
established educational elements - libraries, experts,
project-based learning, and portfolios. Significant
change is possible because information technology
strengthens their educational power. Technologically
transformed, these all loosen the intellectual
constraints operating in the school and thereby expand
the educational potentialities of the child.
Digital libraries -- the
distributed, on-line collection of texts, images, sound,
video, simulations, and data, along with powerful tools
for using them -- radically reduce constraints on
cultural and intellectual participation that
traditionally operate in educational institutions.
Columbia University is drawing out the implications of
digital libraries for the advancement of learning
through design initiatives by the Center for Research on
Information Access, the Center for New Media, and the
Center for Image Technology for New Media, and through
implementation projects in art history, history,
chemistry, earth sciences, journalism, and so on. Within
this overall effort, the Institute for Learning
Technologies (ILT) directs application of work on
digital libraries to the reform of K-12 education.
Digital libraries can
significantly loosen the constraints that have
historically determined the spectrum of possible
educational achievement by the young. Digital libraries
are a key, emerging agency that makes feasible the basic
aim of enabling students growing up under conditions of
adversity to attain unprecedented levels of excellence.
Whether modeling El Niño effects with data from the
Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory, researching
Renaissance portraiture with the Columbia Art Humanities
digital image archive, or comparing Orson Welles' and
Roman Polanski's interpretations of Macbeth using a
multimedia database constructed by the New Lab for
Teaching and Learning, students can be engaged in
serious disciplinary study when they have access to
digital libraries. To enable students and teachers to
make full use of digital libraries in their daily
educational work, we will concentrate on four tasks:
- Infrastructure. Extend local
area networks into classrooms and link these to the
world's information infrastructure by very high-speed
connections, permitting small groups of students to
work collaboratively to employ digital libraries in
responding to significant questions and difficult
problems.
- Content. Work with scholars,
practitioners, teachers, and community leaders to
develop comprehensive and specialized collections;
tools of analysis, synthesis, and simulation; and
strategies of engagement to make the digital library a
routinely accessible and easily usable resource in the
educational work of students and teachers.
- Support. Provide schools and
teachers with effective professional development
experiences that will enable them to adapt to the
emerging pedagogical possibilities and provide
students with tools to consult hierarchies of on-line
expertise that will sustain an inquiry-driven learning
process.
- Evaluation. Engage in the
continuous formative evaluation of such efforts in
order to assemble a record of practical experience,
which can then lead through progressive reflection to
improved practices and an understanding of guiding
principles.
One-on-one adult mentoring is
tremendously effective in helping young people cope with
the complications of integrating all the disparate
elements of human development. Wide-area networking can
greatly lower the cost in money and time that such
mentoring entails. Multimedia, wide-area networks, and
desk-top videoconferencing will likewise enable
problem-solving groups in schools and communities to
interact with diverse strata of experts, who can help
the groups advance their efforts. The Eiffel Project
will work to design and implement ways to use digital
technologies to enable working groups of students to
interact, frequently and easily, with mentors and
experts.
To make interactions between
students, mentors, and experts sustainable and
effective, it is important to recognize and respect the
constraints inherent in adult responsibilities. Mentors
and experts cannot ignore imperatives of their own work
to take up the concerns of children. Rather, the
educational work must synchronize with their
professional efforts or it will become a complicating,
distracting chore. The Eiffel Project will work with
both the business community and the academic community
to design ways to enable their members to work
educationally as mentors and experts while minimally
deflecting them from their primary goals.
Junior Achievement of New York
City, a strong chapter of a national effort by business
people to provide volunteers to teach children at all
levels about the economics of work and life, will join
in the Eiffel Project to use advanced media to
facilitate their mentoring work. Currently, Junior
Achievement volunteers go to a school to teach specially
designed courses and to provide counsel and advice. This
procedure has limits arising from the constraints on the
volunteer's time and it leaves the student at a distance
from the world of practice that the volunteer
represents. As schools become wired, so do businesses,
and it becomes possible for the students to gain virtual
access to the operations of the work world, with
volunteers from it acting, not as emissaries, but as
hosts. Junior Achievement will work through the Eiffel
Project to implement these possibilities as an important
means of strengthening the understanding of economic
life that children in participating schools develop and
as a productive way to improve the school-to-work
transition.
Small groups of students,
working to solve difficult problems, often need to
discuss their ideas with people who have greater
expertise than they, or their teachers, may have. Wisdom
and skill are scarce qualities, however, and eminent
scholars would be overwhelmed were every curious novice
to take his questions directly to the highest possible
authority. Through the Eiffel Project, we will use
distance learning technologies to create a relationship
between schools and universities that enhances
educational processes in each domain without deflecting
people in either from their proper concerns. Students
will develop the capacity to judge when someone else has
satisfactorily helped to clarify their questions. If
responses to queries have been sufficient, students
should go on to other matters, and if they have not,
they should push on with their inquiries, seeking other,
more productive interlocutors. On the university side,
responding to school-based queries can become an
important enhancement to learning in higher education.
Consider the academic cliché that someone never learns
anything so well as when he must teach it.
Undergraduates will advance their study of a subject by
helping children in schools answer difficult questions,
interacting with them through distributed learning
technologies. Queries that the undergraduates find too
difficult to help with, they can refer to graduate
students, and from there, if necessary, to research
scholars, professors, and other professionals. A team
from the Institute for Learning Technologies and the
Center for Imaging Technologies for New Media has
developed a prototype desktop videoconferencing system
by which universities can announce the availability of
respondents, and students in schools can initiate
exchanges as suits their inquiries. As part of the
Eiffel Project, we will develop the prototype into a
working system and test it in key subject areas.
As it exists, the school
separates the fabric of learning into discrete strands
according to grade, subject, period, and lesson, and the
curriculum converts powerful intellectual means into the
operative ends of educational work -- e.g., whereas the
historian uses chronology, the high-schooler learns it.
Advanced media in education permit the reintegration of
intellectual activity in the school, as students use
powerful on-line tools and work with the contents of the
digital library to pursue answers to the questions and
issues that animate scholarship, science, and
professional practice. How can a major research
university, collaborating with diverse schools, shift
the process of curriculum development away from
packaging prescribed epitomes of answers to be learned
by cohorts of pupils toward a process of selecting and
putting powerful questions worth engaging all students
in the effort to answer them?
A successful response to this
question must meet key constraints - 1) development
costs need to be limited; 2) a unified set of changes
affecting the educational process from beginning to end
needs to be introduced; 3) changes need to be on one
side radical and thorough, yet on the other relatively
well-aligned with existing practices; and 4) educational
results need to be dramatically better than those of the
status quo ante. The Eiffel Project, through its
relationship to Columbia University, will use advanced
media to develop a pedagogy of project-based problem
solving designed to meet these constraints. This effort
will build on a range of prior work by the New
Laboratory for Teaching and Learning at the Dalton
School developing powerful curricular prototypes such as
Archaeotype, at the Ralph Bunche School with
Internet-based inquiries such as The Great Penny Toss,
and through ILT's Harlem Environmental Access Project.
Basically, the new curricula
will have three components -- questions or problems
requiring solution, tools or intellectual strategies for
working on the problems, and resources or data and
materials upon which the tools can operate. The first
task of curriculum design is to lay out highly
generative sets of questions, put forward without
answers, which students can address at one or another
level of sophistication:
- FAQs, or Frequently Asked
Questions, pronounced "facts." For any subject there
are many FAQs, which can be organized according to
difficulty and scope. A FAQ requires a clear,
informative response. In educational experience, it is
useful to work up answers to many FAQs, developing in
the process a clear overview of a subject.
- HAQs, or Hotly Argued
Questions, pronounced "hacks." HAQs generally elicit
more heat than light, and the challenge to the student
is to understand why the question so provokes the
passions. In educational experience, a HAQ should
elicit a clear presentation of all sides of the
argument, with a dispassionate weighing of the
strengths and weaknesses on each side. Such treatment
of a HAQ will develop perspective and intellectual
independence.
- LUQs, or Largely Unanswered
Questions, pronounced "lucks." The object in engaging
with a LUQ is not to try heroically to answer it, but
to ascertain what aspects of it are subject to
comprehension and to be able to explain why the
question remains largely unanswered. In educational
experience, a LUQ leads the student to reflect on the
limits of knowledge and to set his sights on extending
it.
- PIQs, or Profoundly Important
Questions, pronounced "picks." With a PIQ, the key is
to grasp the importance of the question and to feel
the urgency of developing a response to it, as well as
the import of that response. In educational
experience, a student comes to realize that a PIQ can
affect the fundamental prospects of life, personal or
collective, as operative answers to PIQs contribute to
defining what it means to live and to be
human.
Tools and resources gain meaning
in relation to such sets of questions because tools and
resources are what a problem-solving student employs in
seeking to respond productively to questions that have
been effectively posed. On-line tools and resources suit
a problem-solving pedagogy because they are
comprehensive and unbounded, sustaining the questioning
process without extrinsic limitations. We believe that
academic groups can be very helpful curricular resources
for students and teachers in schools by identifying key
sets of questions, building powerful tools with which
students can address those questions, and opening paths
to significant resources, grist for the educative mill
of inquiry.
Initially, scholars from
Columbia's African Institute, researchers from classics,
history, and archaeology, and scientists from the Black
Rock Forest Consortium, Biosphere II, and the
Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory will work with students
and teachers in the Eiffel Project to develop and test
this model of problem-solving curriculum development. It
allows for high-level academic involvement in the
process while keeping operative control of inquiry and
learning in the hands of teachers and students at the
school level. Each year, academics will lay out a
distinctive set of questions for their respective fields
and they will work to provide a growing repertoire of
tools and resources useful in pursuing generative
questions from each field. But organizing and putting
questions so that collaborative groups embark on a
course of problem solving, and activating and using the
tools and resources, will remain the work of teachers
and students, done distinctively in each school. We
envision the University annually publicizing its
technology learning challenges across a variety of
fields, posting sets of FAQs, HAQs, LUQs and PIQs, along
with continually developing sets of smart tools and
intellectual resources linked to them. Collaborative
groups of students, with teachers on site and mentors
and experts at a distance, would use the on-line system
of tools and resources to develop their unique responses
to these learning challenges, posting them to the world
on their local websites. As the Eiffel Project proceeds,
we will extend this pedagogy across all the areas of
learning as quickly as resources permit. We believe that
such a pedagogy can meet the four key constraints
indicated above and lead to the radical restructuring of
the curriculum in ways that will be highly conducive to
effective learning by all students.
Portfolios are an educational
resource that can enable students to tie together all
the lines of experience indicated in previous sections,
using networked multimedia tools to create a public
persona that expresses the cumulative character of their
studies, achievements, and interests. In Coalition
schools, the portfolio constitutes a representation of a
student's total academic experience, either within one
course or across many. It assembles academic work that
exhibits the student's development through his studies.
As for the professional, so for the student: a portfolio
presents cumulative accomplishment through assembled
work. As such, the portfolio -- along with the
accompanying exhibitions or performances -- stands as
documentation of where the student has been and what the
student has done through reflective action.
A networked, multimedia
information environment extends and reconfigures the
portfolio as a curriculum tool in three important ways:
First, as the student works in
more diverse media, the palette of tools with which he
may engage his subjects broadens. In the print-based
school, most activity is limited to reading and writing
textual material; in a digital school, students work
with image, audio, video, and text more freely and
continuously. They learn the "grammar" of video and
audio editing, just as they always have the grammar of
text. Two key partners, the Educational Video Center,
which has pioneered use of video production as a means
of education, and the Institute for Learning
Technologies, which has done the same using web-site
production as an educative tool, will join to integrate
these techniques into the project's portfolio designs.
Second, as the student works in
a networked information environment, he can extend the
audience for his portfolio as widely as the student or
his teachers desire. The networked school thus connects
two fundamental concepts in the small schools effort --
portfolio and exhibition. Exhibition ceases to be set
apart and becomes inherent in the portfolio, through
which students and teachers can engage each other's
work. Work can be shared asynchronously; students can
make their work accessible, allowing others in the
virtual community to comment, advise, respond at their
convenience. In a sense, work is always on exhibit
except where workers feel it is not ready for public
view.
Third, as the student works
through the inherent web-like structure of a hypermedia
"document," the portfolio ceases to be an assemblage of
finished works. The virtual portfolio becomes a dynamic
combination of refined, polished works with
works-in-progress, notes, annotations, and even passing
thoughts. In this sense, the hypermedia portfolio is a
fuller realization of the basic notion of the portfolio
because it easily allows the student to document all his
thinking, and it allows the student to keep active the
total corpus of his academic and other intellectual
experiences and acquirements throughout his academic
career as the portfolio is built over time.
In the context of the Eiffel
Project, the portfolio will be a central structure, used
in novel ways that build on past successes. One of the
participating Partnership schools -- the Central Park
East Secondary School (CPESS) -- has been at the
forefront of graduation by portfolio for many years. In
June 1996, CPESS graduated its sixth high school class
by performance-based assessment. Students must prepare
and defend 14 different portfolios of material to
graduate. We will build on this experience with
portfolio assessment in order to use it in new ways in
new schools.
For instance, in addition to
dissemination of project work within the network of
project collaborators, students, teachers, and schools
can begin to disseminate their portfolios and share
their knowledge and ideas on a national, and even a
global, scale. Working with Eastman Kodak Company, our
consortium will use digital imaging to experiment with
the documentation of multimedia portfolios in CD-ROM
format. Since few members of the larger educational
community enjoy the broadband network connectivity that
makes high-speed multimedia networking feasible, CDs
represent a simple, and increasingly inexpensive, means
for teachers and students to exhibit their work. Of
course, students will mount this work on the Web, as
well, to promote easy use by those with adequate
connections.
Portfolios and exhibitions not
only enable students to integrate their educational
experience: they equally enable the Eiffel Project
itself to integrate its pedagogical accomplishments and
present them to the general public. The portfolio
process can play an integral role in teachers'
professional development and in program dissemination as
well. As CPESS students can represent their work in
multimedia portfolios, so too can their teachers.
Through such documentation, parents and the public can
assess, critique, exhibit, and acclaim teachers' work.
Thus the teacher portfolio is a professional
development, a dissemination, and an accountability
mechanism all in one. Whole schools can use the
multimedia portfolio in similar ways to exhibit their
innovations and disseminate successful programs and
projects.
Such online resources will
enable the Eiffel Project to engage parents more
productively. For instance, through a carefully placed
network of off-site nodes, available at hours outside
the typical 9:00 to 3:00 school day, parents will be
able to access teachers and school web-sites and
portfolios, enhancing their role as stakeholders in the
education of their children. As we add schools, so will
we add such community service providers, for instance,
the Harlem Parents Tutorial Project, with a 25-year
history of parent training, as key in administering
off-site parent access to the network and the adult
involvement in the education of their children that the
network provides.
Educational accountability
remains an intractable public problem largely because
the work and fruits of education are hidden from view
behind classroom walls. What the Eiffel Project enables
students and teachers to accomplish with respect to each
of its pedagogical objectives will be visible to anyone
who cares to look. How students and teachers work as
educators -- how they develop the small schools ethos,
use digital libraries, collaborate in learning, interact
with mentors and experts, synthesize knowledge while
solving problems, engage in civic issues, seize
workplace opportunities, create cultural meanings from
multiple traditions, and integrate it all into
expressions of unique personhood -- will be public
knowledge, evident through the portfolios of project
participants. The school and the child leads through
emerging networks to an entirely new relation between
the school and society, one that opens innumerable
opportunities, enabling children to develop their
capacities to the fullest possible extent.
Conditions of social, economic,
and cultural life deeply affect educational work, and
the Eiffel Project must not ignore these realities.
Educational initiatives alone cannot solve social,
economic, and cultural problems, even though these
problems often lead educational initiatives to fail. A
powerful pedagogy must go beyond the school, beyond the
educational process in the narrow sense, to work in
concert with broader civic, economic, and cultural
initiatives. Education cannot solve social problems, but
a community that acts in concert to overcome its
difficulties presents children with a deeply educative
context and a resonance can build between enlightened
educative effort and visionary social action.
In search of such resonance, the
Eiffel Project will work closely with the Upper
Manhattan Empowerment Zone (UMEZ), and in our scaling up
efforts additionally with the Kingston-Newburgh
Enterprise Zone (see Section 5). Technologies that can
empower school reform can also enable more integral,
effective social action. Networking technologies will
enable people who live under difficult circumstances and
face complex, many-sided problems to link in their
everyday perception challenges and resources that they
now encounter as seemingly separate sectors of activity
-- schooling, employment, health, housing, safety, and
the environment. A powerful pedagogy should empower
people to see action in one sector as an action
contributing to the whole ensemble, which in its
complexity determines the quality of life.
We have four basic strategies
for extending new pedagogical resources to children in
inner-city homes and communities: educating parents to
help them understand the new pedagogical resources;
making technology resources in school available to
parents and community members after school, weekends,
and during summers; providing access to those resources
through community-based organizations; and helping
economically disadvantaged families acquire advanced
technologies in their homes. Here are examples of ways
in which consortium members have initiated distinct
efforts to implement these strategies. We will expand
and add to these beginnings as the project develops.
- Innovating schools need to
make special efforts to help the parents of their
students understand their pedagogical efforts. This is
particularly true in inner-city settings where parents
often have difficulty getting access to educational
information. The CCE Schools have pioneered regular,
pro-active efforts to educate parents about the
schools' educational principles. Such cultivation of
parental understanding and involvement is becoming
standard in NYC's small schools movement. It will be
the foundation for work extending the Eiffel Project's
benefits to homes and communities.
- An important mission of the
Media Centers in Eiffel Project schools is to afford
parents and community members a fuller understanding
of the educational principles of the effort. These
centers will host regular meetings with parents,
showing them how their children are using technology
to augment their educational opportunities. In
addition, the Media Centers will provide parents
opportunities to use these resources in work
preparedness programs, for many parents need to
upgrade their skills to succeed in an employment
market that is increasingly knowledge-based.
- In Columbia's Harlem
Environmental Access Project (HEAP), a building block
of the Eiffel Project, the Countee Cullen branch of
the New York Public Library has been equipped, along
with participating schools, to afford children,
parents, and the community access to HEAP outside
school facilities and hours. Likewise, CCE is
collaborating with branch libraries in the South Bronx
and East Harlem to develop programs for parents of
children in its schools and will deal with
technology-based pedagogies along with other
educational matters in these.
- In mid-August, a
community-based partner in Eiffel, the Harlem Tutorial
and Referral Project, submitted a proposal to the
Corporation for Public Broadcasting for "Project
P.A.R.E.N.T. - Parents Accessing Resources by Engaging
New Technologies." This project, developed with ILT,
seeks $81,000 from CPB and will roughly match it in
kind. As the project proposal states, "In an area with
some of the lowest educational performance levels
anywhere in the country, this project will offer new
technological resources to parents as a means of
redressing their inability to gain vital information,
and hence become constructively involved in the
education of their children."
- The Lander Street Project in
Newburgh is a direct effort to extend new pedagogical
resources and communications technologies into the
homes of children in low-income families. Housing
units in the Lander Street Project will be wired
(ethernet), equipped with networked computers, and
connected to the servers of the Newburgh Enlarged City
School District nearby, which will in turn have
Internet access through the Columbia system via a T1
connection. The Eiffel Project will provide Lander
Street tenants training and support in using the
home-based technologies and it will evaluate whether
these resources help children in these families
benefit from expanded educational opportunities. This
effort seeks to build a case for making advanced
technologies integral components of 21st century
low-income housing projects. We are working to arrange
for a similar New York City trial, currently at a
Harlem site on 116th Street.
- High on the Eiffel Project
agenda for implementation in collaboration with the
Upper Manhattan Empowerment Zone is a program
permitting families to acquire home computers at very
low-cost through used-equipment donations. Already,
the Ralph Bunche School is maintaining a small dial-in
modem pool, connecting home-based users to its servers
and the Internet. Preliminary experience here has
uncovered hidden costs in such plans: the combination
of old equipment and unskilled, novice users leads to
substantial support problems. Before embarking on a
large donation program, we want to make sure that they
are not less cost effective than they appear to be on
the surface.
In addition to such ground-up
efforts to provide families and communities access to
advanced media in education, it is important to address
key structural issues that affect how well people can
benefit from improving educational resources. The
discussion below, under 2b3) Achieve Productive
Potential in the Workplace, is integral to extending new
pedagogical resources to children's homes, as it is
essential in motivating effort for everyone, including
students and their families, to address the long-term
secular shift in the New York Metropolitan Region from
an economy offering good industrial jobs to one in which
manual labor is shrinking steadily while high-skilled,
knowledge-based employment is growing.
Through the project, students in
schools should be able to engage with representatives of
their communities, to work on health, environmental, and
social issues, to develop habits of service and
involvement, and to form a sense that they face
significant choices and that they command significant
resources with which to put their choices into action.
It is particularly important that children growing up
under difficult circumstances learn to engage in the
effort to take control of those circumstances, to
experience life as a series of challenges to which
people can respond purposefully. Through the Eiffel
Project we intend to seek out diverse opportunities to
use information technologies to engage children in
thinking and acting on real civic concerns. In this
project, we will work with the UMEZ and other groups
seeking to effect long-term social change and human
betterment in health, housing, employment, safety, and
environment, to apprise children of serious issues and
to engage their participation in deliberation and
action. We have piloted these practices through ILT's
Harlem Environmental Access Project by using wide-area
communications to encourage students to recognize the
breadth and diversity of concern for the environment.
For instance, using data provided by the Environmental
Defense Fund, students investigate the effects of
different solid waste management systems. Just as the
technology supports their research efforts, so it
supports their reporting. Through web-mounted hypermedia
presentations, students offer their findings to the
world at large, staking out well-documented policy
positions they can link to those of professionals. Thus,
they use the technology to address the public about what
is to be done, to model effective initiatives for it,
and to engage in the give and take of trying to persuade
people with power to act in different ways. These are
invaluable lessons for anyone to learn about the
relation of thought and action.
Also in Harlem, Eiffel is
developing collaborations with a number of
Community-Based Organizations (CBOs) in order to support
their technology-based programs. For instance, a planned
technology-based skills-development program sponsored by
the New York City Chapter of 100 Black Men and the
Church of the Master will link with the extensive
technology facilities nearby in the Ralph Bunche School.
Extending school technology facilities to CBO's after
normal hours can effectively make sophisticated
technologies available to people who cannot afford to
acquire them for their homes. So too can developing
project technology facilities directly in CBO's. ILT is
collaborating with the Harlem Center for Digital
Technology to help provide connectivity, curricular
resources, and training opportunities for their Digital
Apprenticeship Program, which "addresses the issue of
technological equity by providing poor youth with a
structured process to earn while acquiring digital
competencies, character development and work
preparedness" during summer and after school and on
Saturdays.
If the information economy
exists anywhere, it is the economy of the New York-New
Jersey-Connecticut Metropolitan Area. The Eiffel Project
should deploy information technology in the schools
with, for, and through the diverse employers in the
region who constitute that information economy in
communications, media, publishing, banks, universities,
medicine, and government. The Eiffel Project will use
high-speed digital telecommunications to build
continuous, powerful connections between participating
schools and the information economy of the City, region,
and world, and its volunteers from Junior Achievement
and elsewhere will work with students and employers to
ensure that these connections provide learning
opportunities and apprenticeships that will enable
students to achieve their full potential within the
information workplace.
This use of technology is
crucial. Several generations of inner-city students have
learned to distrust large, bureaucratic schools,
experiencing them not as stepping stones to
self-advancement, but as source and legitimization of
their frustrations, limits, and stigmata. Small school
reform is important in helping the disadvantaged regain
some conviction that schools present them with
significant opportunities because they encourage
students to affirm and take responsibility for their own
education, seeing it not as an external imposition but
as an inward expression of their hopes and potentials.
This shift in the subjective meaning of the school for
the child is of immense importance, but by themselves
reformed schools, however meaningful, can be too easily
left distanced from real channels of economic
opportunity when the child and the school are starved
for both capital and skills. Here digital communications
transform schooling and make it significant for
disadvantaged students, as they gain direct exposure to
the levers of power and innovation in the global
information economy and experience their education as a
matter of developing their potential for productive
action in this much larger arena. Digital technologies
will provide all with a means of entry and action in the
larger world.
Educators must be careful to
avoid a deficit model of education, especially when a
high percentage of their students are disadvantaged. New
technologies can radically alter the traditional
politics of the curriculum, which have been narrow and
exclusionary for centuries. For instance,
- Through collaboration with
Columbia's African Institute, the Eiffel Project will
use digital information resources to draw a diverse
group of interested students from participating
schools, into an ever-deepening engagement with
traditions, cultural achievements, historical and
contemporary realities.
- The Sister Clara Muhammad
School, a participant in the Harlem Environmental
Access Project, is already using its broad-band access
to the World Wide Web to greatly strengthen its basic
aim, a tri-lingual curriculum in Arabic, French, and
English.
- At the Brooklyn New School --
a CCE school participating in the Eiffel project --
students speak 36 different languages. A teacher has
high school students study westward expansion by
conducting detailed analysis of diverse American
family histories using multimedia resources. This year
investigations included a slave family, two Sioux
Indian families, an abolitionist family and a
plantation-owning family.
As the Eiffel Project proceeds,
it will build more and more channels linking the
advanced study to the world's cultures and traditions
with interested groups in the schools. It is often
incanted as cause for dismay that New York City's school
children speak over a hundred different native
languages. By building links to the full range of
cultural scholarship in universities, museums, and
institutes, the Eiffel Project will make this
multiplicity of linguistic and cultural identification
one of the great strengths of the emerging educational
system.
In this section, we seek to
explain our strategies for implementing the Eiffel
Project, with sections on the needed technological
infrastructure, development of content, and the
provision of on-going support. New York City is one of
those points where the energies and talents of the
country and the world concentrate, and we seek through
the Eiffel Project to bring these concentrated resources
to bear on the challenge of using school reform,
augmented through advanced media, to break the
constraints of traditional schooling.
In extending high-speed Internet
access to schools through the Harlem Environmental
Access Project and the Living Schoolbook Project, we
have learned the importance of adapting plans to the
unique character of each school site and working with
key people in each school to ensure that a full transfer
of technical know-how takes place. We expect to bring at
least 12 schools into the Eiffel Project each year
during the life of the project, as well as two CBOs
annually. In each location we seek to introduce
essentially ubiquitous access to a robust, manageable
infrastructure that readily accommodates future growth.
The wide-area infrastructure will use T1 connections
(1.5 megabits per second) for the most part, introducing
ATM and/or cable modem connections when and if these
become cost competitive and highly dependable. Our aim
is to progress from initial broad-band connectivity to a
fully developed technical infrastructure in the school
through a series of four stages - 1) Preparatory Access;
2) followed by Base Connectivity, providing T1
connections, library access, and one classroom equipped
for small-group problem solving; 3) Level One, equipping
one third of the school's classrooms for such work; and
4) Level Two, making one computer per five students
available in all the classrooms of the school. Early on
in the project, 12 Media Centers, with 8 more added each
year, will be created in key locations that will have
important roles in promoting communication between
localities served by the project and in developing the
links between on-line portfolios and exhibitions as a
means of assessment.
Key representatives from all
project schools will function as participatory design
teams, working with content and technical specialists.
Curriculum development should take place as close to the
classroom as possible. Our Technology Learning Challenge
will match local, corporate and foundation funds with
federal support to implement four interrelated
educational applications of new media. These include:
- On-line curriculum
development among Small Schools Partnerships
practitioners and electronic dissemination of
curriculum products via the Internet and the WWW to
interested New York City K12 schools and other
educators outside the City.
- Production and dissemination
of multimedia student and teacher portfolios and
school profiles in conjunction with the Eastman Kodak
Company, using its technology for low-cost CD-ROM
production.
- Design and implementation of
diverse professional development activities, including
Design Studios for Teachers modeled after those
conducted by ILT in the context of HEAP.
- Implementation of Media
Centers affiliated with participating schools that
will serve as facilities supporting curriculum
development, professional development, student
research, demonstrations, new media workshops, and
related research, development, implementation, and
evaluation efforts.
CCE and ILT -- two organizations
with extensive experience supporting innovative
curricular reforms in small, restructured schools --
share a fundamental commitment borne out repeatedly by
both organizations' experiences: for innovative
curriculum development to succeed it must flow from
teachers, and it must receive support and guidance from
administrative structures. That is, neither a largely
top-down nor a largely bottom-up model of design and
implementation is likely to result in curricular
innovation on a significant scale. Teachers must be
deeply invested in curricular ideas that they share in
germinating, and they must have access to informed
counsel, support resources for development, evaluation
capacity, and dissemination channels. Our proposal seeks
to realize this interaction of classroom-level and
system-level activity through the proposed Media Centers
that will function as agencies helping to manage
technology-enabled innovation at the appropriate level
-- above the classroom, but below the overarching
system. ILT's many formal evaluations of diverse
educational technology initiatives, taken together,
indicate that one difficulty mitigates the success of
new programs far more than any other -- namely,
inadequate coordination of distributed efforts. The
Media Centers will provide the crucial management and
support layer these studies have called for again and
again.
Much of the exciting educational
activity in Partnership Schools is ripe for enhancement
through new media. At one participating CCE school,
students studying momentum and deceleration in physics
explored the dynamics of roller coasters using
frame-by-frame analysis of a laserdisc. Then, they had
to design and actually build their own roller coasters.
Their designs were put to the test when a marble was
rolled along the track; if it broke an egg at the end,
students returned to the drafting table and the machine
shop. This innovative project work could be profoundly
enhanced by Computer-Aided Design tools. At Columbia's
School of Engineering and Applied Science, numerous
CAD-supported mechanical and electrical engineering
design programs have been developed that can
significantly extend these interdisciplinary math,
physics, engineering and design curricula.
Portfolio assessment is at the
core of most of this project-based curricular work at
CCE schools. Exploring the ways that networked
multimedia can enhance and/or transform the concept and
role of the student portfolio must be a process
characterized by both relatively unconstrained
experimentation and careful monitoring. Teachers and
students must be free to develop and pursue new projects
and products, guided by their imaginations and, in the
case of teachers, by their experience as educators, thus
beginning to define the curricular forms of the 21st
century. But they must also be situated such that their
experimentation is as informed as possible and is
thoroughly and formatively assessed. This means that
teachers must be in on-going contact with colleagues
experimenting in similar ways; they must have access to
emerging technologies so they can explore them and
consider possible classroom applications; they must have
technical support for development and for
implementation; they must work with formative evaluators
who can help them plan and respond to outcomes
rationally.
We envision the Media Centers as
sites through which teachers and students will lead the
way toward new curricula oriented around multimedia
portfolios with precisely these development assets at
hand. Students will use the Centers as research
facilities during the course of their work; workshops
and demos will be conducted at them; teachers will
present their work to colleagues and to other interested
parties; software development support will be provided;
teacher-in-residence programs will locate particular
teachers with strong experience in successful innovation
at the Centers to work with other teachers on projects;
libraries of multimedia resources will be housed in them
and high-speed WAN connections at the Centers will
provide opportunities for teachers to plan for a time
when such broadband connectivity is ubiquitous.
Different Centers will no doubt emphasize different
areas of activity and develop different particular
strengths. But all will be guided by the aim of
providing a locale that brings together the range of
development resources described above.
We should make it clear that the
Eiffel Project intends to work systematically to reshape
the whole curriculum and to do this over an extended
period of time. The small schools movement in New York
City involves whole schools and it is based on the
proposition that each of those schools is responsible
for the whole of its curriculum. The Eiffel Project
proposes to develop the uses of advanced digital
technologies in support of these small schools,
facilitating their efforts to design and implement their
curricula. We are not proposing a limited curriculum
development effort targeted to specific subjects to be
housed, in part, at Columbia University, and to be
implemented in selected classes of selected grades in
selected schools. We are instead proposing a
thorough-going engagement by Columbia University and its
affiliates with a fundamental City-wide effort to
reshape the whole educational experience that children
receive in schools, using digital technologies to bring
academic and professional resources to bear in support
of small schools reform in ways that have previously not
been feasible. We expect general educational strategies,
and the uses of technology to support them, modeled by
the small school movement to scale out to the whole
system and to affect the educational experience of
children throughout it. Participants in the Eiffel
Project have an extensive track-record in changing the
ethos of schooling through changes in teaching and
learning and through technology programs that support a
wide range of curricular initiatives - the Dalton
Technology Plan (social studies, astronomy, chemistry,
paleontology, English, French, art and design, geometry
and algebra), the Living Schoolbook Project (English,
Spanish, social studies, current events), the Harlem
Environmental Access Project (earth science), the
Columbia Gateway Engineering Lab (calculus, design), the
Edison Project (chemistry), the Amiens Project and the
Museum Educational Site Licensing Project (art history),
the EarthView Project (earth science), Where Are We?
(mapping and abstraction skills), Discovery Web (general
science), the Reinventing Libraries Project and Library
Power (digital libraries in support of the school
curriculum), and so on. All of these efforts enable
students to engage primary sources and real data, to
work with powerful tools, to pursue difficult questions;
they provide an open-ended curriculum consisting in
diverse supports for student inquiry. In short, within
the limits of available resources, we expect the digital
pedagogy outlined above to affect the whole educational
experience and to integrate technology throughout the
school.
Strong, on-going provisions for
teacher development and support are essential. The
Eiffel Project will hold design workshops during summers
and will provide an on-going program of on-site support
buttressed with "just-in-time" training delivered in
classrooms over the project's desktop video-conferencing
capacities.
The Institute for Learning
Technologies has pioneered innovative professional
development programs in the context of the Harlem
Environmental Access Project that will be extended and
further developed in the Eiffel Project. Design Studios
for Teachers bring together teachers, technologists,
content experts, and even students for extended,
multi-session workshops on the development of curricular
applications of networked multimedia. These Design
Studios are more than mere technical training for
teachers. Teachers work with the advanced technologies
in the context of real curriculum development and in a
setting where ILT associates and relevant content
experts are at hand. The Design Studio is more a
collaborative research and development think tank than
it is teacher training in any particular technology.
Advanced computer tools are brought to bear on complex
educational problems by a cohort of experienced
educators and educational technologists over an extended
period of time. During the course of this work, teachers
acquire significant technical facility in a broad range
of applications and can return to their schools prepared
to lead their colleagues in novel directions with new
tools and resources. The Eiffel Project will feature
numerous Design Studios, and the Media Centers will
augment these formal workshops with less formal, but
continuous, staff development through design.
Through the Challenge Grant for
Technology in Education, the Eiffel Project will receive
$7 million between October 1996 and September 2001, and
the consortium backing it will raise $11.2 million to
complete planned initial work. The summary budgets for
the five years are as follows:
[BUDGET INFORMATION AVAILABLE ON
REQUEST]
The management structure for the
Eiffel Project will ensure that all aspects of the
project are carried out effectively. This structure
includes four main management layers: a Directorship
layer, an Implementation Management layer, a Lead
Teacher layer, and an Advisory layer. The Directorship
layer and the Implementation Management layer together
form the Project Management Group.
The Directorship layer consists
of the three Co-Principal Investigators. They will be
responsible for the overall conduct of the project. They
will convene and chair the Project Management Group;
hire and appoint staff; convene Advisory Boards; submit
annual reports; and be responsible for preserving the
vision of the Eiffel Project throughout its operations.
The Implementation Management
layer consists of three project managers: the Project
Infrastructure Manager, the Project Content Manager, and
the Project Support Manager. All three Project Managers
will be responsible for advising the Co-PIs and serving
in the Project Management Group. The Project
Infrastructure Manager will be an ILT position and will
have lead responsibility for technology options and
decisions; for preparing assessments and technology
plans for project schools; and for managing the
installation and maintenance of the technological
infrastructure of the project. The Project Content
Manager, also an ILT position, will have lead
responsibility for digital library resources and related
educational programs; for working with scholars and
professionals to develop curricular resources; and for
collaborating with participating teachers to ensure that
these resources are effective at the school and
classroom levels. The Project Support Manager, a CCE
position, will have lead responsibility for professional
development within the project; for organizing Design
Studios for Teachers; for utilizing the school Media
Centers to promote understanding of the project among
parents and community groups; and for implementing
just-in-time support via desktop videoconferencing.
The Lead Teacher layer consists
of a cohort of Lead Teachers -- one will be appointed at
each school added to the Eiffel Project curriculum
network -- responsible for helping the teaching staff at
each participating school develop confidence with new
equipment and become artful in using it in the
classroom. Lead Teachers will serve as on-site liaisons
with Project Support Teams, scheduling their visits and
setting agenda for work with them. Lead Teachers will
regularly apprise the Project Management Group of
relevant developments relating to the organizational
goals and pedagogical objectives of the overall project.
They should also serve as resource persons for the
evaluation teams. Each connected CBO will identify a
senior staff member to serve in a similar manner.
The Advisory layer consists of
two advisory boards: the Parent-Community Advisory Board
(P-CAB) and the School-University Advisory Board
(S-UAB). The P-CAB will be formed of parent
representatives and representatives of participating
community organizations. It will meet regularly,
sometimes with the Project Management Group, to discuss
community participation and to plan strategy for
enfranchising new community partners. It will also be
responsible for coordinating public events relating to
the project and its exhibition. The S-UAB will be formed
of key teachers and university personnel associated with
the project. It will meet regularly, sometimes with the
Project Management Group, to discuss issues relating to
interaction of the schools with Columbia and its
constituent schools and departments.
Eiffel Project evaluation
activity has four key interrelated objectives:
- To guide the full extension
of network connectivity to all schools in New York
City and the greater New York region in accordance
with models proven most appropriate through the
project.
- To produce a clear and
well-grounded statement of proven ways universities
can, through innovative use of new media, advance
their research and educational agendas in conjunction
with a vigorous and potent extension of resources to
their surrounding communities.
- To substantially increase
understanding of diverse pedagogical possibilities
emerging with the integration of advanced information
and communication technologies in schools.
- To provide leadership in the
definition of effective policy relating to all aspects
of the educational enterprise as they relate to the
changing global information infrastructure and
associated digital media.
To satisfy these objectives, the
project will integrate four varieties of assessment
work, each conducted by an organization skilled in that
domain of program evaluation: school performance
assessment; "sampling studies" of students' higher order
critical skills of analysis; formative process
assessment relating to administration, management, and
execution at all levels of project implementation, as
well as evaluation of the overarching development
process; and school technology audits.
School performance assessments
are an essential element of the restructuring process
for many Coalition schools. As the school's curricular,
temporal, and physical structures are re-engineered, the
school is monitored for effects on student and faculty,
and the implementation agenda is tracked as well. This
assessment activity has both a summative and a formative
dimension. Part of the aim is to document, through
rigorous methods, the educational effects of the
restructuring of the schools; the school performance
assessment is also intended, however, to provide
important formative information to individuals leading
the redesign effort of a particular school. New York
University is currently conducting school performance
assessment of many Annenberg-supported Coalition schools
in New York City, and this work will be extended through
the Challenge Grant to encompass the additional schools
and particular technological issues related to the
Eiffel Project. In particular, NYU evaluators will seek
to identify ways that Coalition schools may benefit from
participation in a large network of restructuring
schools. The effects of the new media access and
associated professional development activities on
faculty will form a second important focus of study. The
Eiffel Project's success is heavily predicated on its
strategies for empowering teachers with new skills, new
tools, and substantial support resources. Much of NYU's
school performance assessment will examine the
effectiveness of these efforts, with both formative and
summative objectives.
"Sampling studies" will help
determine the extent and nature of the projects' effect
on students' critical skills. Much of the curricular
development associated with the project will be aimed at
enhancing students' abilities to address complex
problems with sophisticated tools in diverse disciplines
and reflecting those abilities in digital portfolios. As
part of the Eiffel Project's assessment, the National
Center for Research on Education, Students, and Teachers
(NCREST) will investigate the effects of the project on
critical thinking skills. NCREST will conduct controlled
studies with samples of students. In these studies,
students will receive a battery of unfamiliar problem
solving situations, testing their approaches to the
problems. The evaluations will consider a range of
abilities, including students' ability to orient
themselves in a new problem area; to formulate a
well-conceived experimental plan; to understand
implications of findings and of new information; to
consider a question or problem from diverse
perspectives; to use, make sense of, and dismiss
evidence of various kinds; and to communicate
understanding.
In addition to formative
evaluation of particular curricular initiatives at each
school, a project of this scale demands formative
assessment of the development process at the
macro-level. Project leaders need feedback relating to
the strengths and weaknesses of the inter-institutional
collaboration; they need to understand which
administrative structures are encouraging good
innovation and which are hindering it; they need to be
apprised of emerging patterns of difficulties at the
distributed school sites and of patterns of success as
well. The Institute for Learning Technologies conducts
such process-oriented formative assessment in the
context of all its projects, and ILT will implement this
level of assessment for the Eiffel Project as well.
Because a primary goal of the project is to marry the
academic resources of a major research university to the
restructuring program of an established reform movement,
it will be important to monitor continuously the extent
to which these interactions are occurring with good
effect. The Institute has substantial experience
exploring the use of networking technologies to support
such inter-institutional collaboration; a major focus of
this area of assessment will be building on that
accumulated knowledge through prototyping of new
arrangements, including substantial use of desktop
videoconferencing over the Internet. Finally, the
Institute for Learning Technologies will conduct full
technology audits of all schools entering the project.
These audits will be used to guide infrastructure and
hardware development plans at each site. The evolution
of each participating school's technological assets will
be documented as it unfolds by the institute, and this
documentation will contribute to overall evaluation
efforts.
We plan to disseminate the
findings of the project by drawing up two plans to
extend the Eiffel model to larger areas and by
publishing three detailed evaluation studies that will
be accessible not only to educators but to the wider
public. The two plans we will develop are:
- New York City Board of
Education Plan: This will be a validated model for
extending technology to all schools served by the NYC
Board of Education.
- NY Metro Area Plan: This will
be a plan for the entire New York Metropolitan region,
designed to maximize the use of its high-level
intellectual and cultural resources for the
improvement of K-12 education.
The three evaluation studies
are:
- Innovation Study: A study of
the processes of innovation and school change as
driven by advanced technologies.
- Curricular Change Study: A
study of the interrelationship between technological
change and curricular change, and the effects of these
changes on student learning.
- Teacher Development Study: A
study of the recommended strategies for teacher
support and staff development.
We also plan to develop a
Technology and Pedagogy Workshop, through which we will
work with advanced engineering groups and their
collaborators from engineering and technology firms, as
well as from the New York area software and
telecommunications companies, to foster the process of
what we call "pedagogy transfer" - the transfer of
pedagogical experience from the schools to the advanced
technology companies - so that their
technology-development work will become better informed
by our educational experience. In addition, we will
organize one or more conferences toward the end of the
project. Web development will proceed continuously
throughout the project, both as a mean of supporting
internal implementation and as a means of making the
project available to a broader set of interested
parties.
In our view, however, the
dominant dissemination issue for project work ensconced
within the National Information Infrastructure is how to
scale the project up. As discussed in section 2a4,
multimedia portfolios representing students', teachers'
and whole schools' work will be used to share this work
both within and beyond the Eiffel Project's network. And
participants will routinely interact with peers and
colleagues on the Internet in the course of their work.
Dissemination is part and parcel of wide-area networked
project work. The real question is how to extend the
project itself.
Winning proposals in the
competition for Challenge Grants for Technology in
Education will receive substantial funding for five
years, with the requirement to match that federal
funding, at least on a one-to-one basis, from
non-federal sources. In the case of the Eiffel Project,
the Challenge Grant is $7.1 million over five years,
with $11.2 million required from consortium partners in
order to meet the project challenge. But to succeed, the
Eiffel Project must be even larger in scale, involving
many children and teachers, sustaining its influence
over a prolonged period, showing that educational
attainment spread out on an entirely different spectrum
of achievement is both possible and feasible. The
consortium therefore seeks to double those goals through
additional fund-raising, and to extend the project at
least five years further into the 21st Century, in order
to have transformative effects on educational
achievement in New York City and the region.
Consider the key question. What
is the necessary order of magnitude -- in time and
expense -- required to demonstrate unequivocally the
feasibility of significant improvements in the
educational attainments of all children, doing it with
palpable effect within greater New York, one of the 20
to 30 large metropolitan regions in which most of the
world's population now lives? Each year, New York City
has roughly 1 million students in its public schools. We
propose to demonstrate that the educational process
those million children experience day in and day out can
become significantly more effective for each and all of
those students. What portion of the million students
does the demonstration need to influence in order to
demonstrate something feasible and significant for all
of them? Year after year, each of those million children
in the public schools is working cumulatively on his or
her whole education, which cannot really be
disaggregated into a plethora of parts according to
grade and subject. A reform of the educational process
is not necessarily a simple function of the reform of
5th grade social studies or 9th grade earth science.
What portion of the whole child's whole educational
experience needs to be encompassed within a project for
that project to demonstrate significant and feasible
reform of the educational system?
Assume the Eiffel Project
fulfills the goals reflected in the proposed budget for
the Challenge Grants for Technology in Education. What
level of demonstrative presence will it have attained?
Approximately 70 schools will have been wired to the
Internet with broadband connections and active access
through this in the library and at least one classroom
that has been adapted for small groups using computers
to learn through problem solving. Two-thirds of the
schools will also have media centers to further exploit
the connectivity, with each student being able to work
in the center about one period per week. One-third of
the schools will have equipped one-third of their
classrooms with multiple computers (on a 1:5 student
ratio), also adapting those classrooms for a
problem-solving pedagogy. Five schools would have
extended this classroom model to all its classrooms. At
the end of five years, 30,000 students, 3% of the City's
public school population, would have started to use
sophisticated connectivity about 10% of their time in
their educational program. Ten thousand of those
students, about 1%, would have started to use it about a
third of their time; and 2,500, 0.25%, would have
started to use it all of the time. Finally, at the end
of five years, the average duration of these use levels
would have been 2.5 years, not a long time in view of
the fact that we require each child to engage in 12
years of schooling, often preceded by 2 years of
pre-schooling and 4 or more years of post-secondary
education. Relative to the goal of providing a decisive
demonstration that significant improvements in the
educational process for all children in a major
metropolitan system are feasible, these use levels are
low and their duration short. Hence, although the Eiffel
Project can get an invaluable start through the
Challenge Grants for Technology in Education, it cannot
really succeed by fulfilling its goals alone. To do
that, the Eiffel Project must unfold on a considerably
larger scale and last for a considerably longer period.
For this reason, a long-term funding program is
essential.
Financial support for the Eiffel
Project will aggregate from four sources. First, the
Project will receive an average of $1.4 million annually
for five years from the U.S. Department of Education.
Second, the sponsoring coalition will provide
substantial matching resources through contributed
effort, equipment, services, and talent. Third, the
sponsoring coalition is raising funds for component
activities within the project from diverse granting
agencies -- federal, state, local, and private. Fourth,
the Eiffel Project will raise funds systematically to
support the work of the project from a wide
cross-section of New York City businesses and
philanthropies.
The table below summarizes these
funding goals.
[FUNDING INFORMATION AVAILABLE
ON REQUEST]
Examples of non-federal grants
that will be available for the first year are a $293,000
grant by the New York State Science and Technology
Foundation to the Institute for Learning Technologies
for the Living Schoolbook Project, which will be
included within the Eiffel Project; New York City
Council funding for technology to the Frederick Douglass
Academy in the amount of $200,000; and significant
portions of the Annenberg Foundation's grant to start
Networks for Learning Renewal. Many sources of federal
funds can strengthen the over-all capacities of the
Eiffel Project and we will continue to seek funding for
curriculum development, networking infrastructure,
teacher development, and evaluation projects from the
National Science Foundation, other parts of USDE, the
Department of Commerce, and other agencies.
As important as these sources
are likely to be, corporate support and private
philanthropy will probably be the most fruitful way to
expand the Eiffel Project to the required scale and
duration. The business and philanthropic communities of
the entire New York region have two strong reasons why
backing the Eiffel Project at a substantial level of
support, over an extended period of time, makes good
sense. First, competitiveness and economic health: the
strength of New York City and its surrounding region, as
well as the strength of the corporations doing business
there, depends increasingly on success in the
information economy. When it was an industrial
manufacturing center, New York needed to attract a
docile, low-skilled workforce. With manufacturing in
significant decline and the information industries its
main source of competitive advantage, the City needs a
highly educated and educable workforce, and educational
excellence, attainable by all, becomes increasingly
important to its economic strength. It is imperative to
show, through efforts such as the Eiffel Project, that
the least advantaged in the Metropolitan Region can
succeed in the complex, high-skilled, ever-changing job
markets around them by making full, disciplined use of
the new educational resources to which they have access.
Here are the numbers for New York City (from a recent
New York Times article):
| Job-base: |
3,300,000 |
over 20% held
by suburban commuters |
| Total net job
gain since 1992: |
88,000 |
1992 was a
recession bottom; net gain predominantly in
knowledge-industry jobs. |
| Unemployed in
NYC: |
271,000 |
not on welfare,
looking for work |
| Adults on
welfare in NYC: |
470,000 |
will be
required to seek work |
Second, a great cosmopolitan
center is a very effective way to attract and
concentrate the diverse, exuberant talents needed in
centers of communication and intellectual creativity. To
attract such talents spontaneously, the conditions of
life need at once to be safe and civil while pulsating
with cultural vibrancy. Such conditions will best thrive
where educational opportunities are both extensive and
excellent, and where participation in them is universal.
The City needs nothing short of the very best
educational opportunities for all its citizens.
Beyond this need, New York City
and its region have remarkable advantages with which to
become the educative leader for the 21st century. It
makes sense to concentrate large-scale effort on a
technology learning challenge here, and the sources of
corporate and private philanthropy in the City and
region are sufficient to underwrite such a sustained,
unparalleled effort. This effort is the key to scaling
the Eiffel Project into one of crucial importance to the
historic reform of education.
But a Technology Learning
Challenge must also address issues of scaling explicitly
-- how can it provide a generally applicable model for
implementation elsewhere? Discussion of scaling should
identify key dimensions along which scaling proceeds. We
concentrate on four:
- Scope: How to scale across
the full intellectual scope of a child's educational
experience.
- Penetration: How to scale to
affect the whole community, not just its most favored
parts.
- Reach: How to scale out to
all locations and draw from all sources so that it is
universal in both availability and import.
- Resources: How to scale up
funding and participation sufficient to produce
historical change.
Too much technology in education
lacks scope with respect to the full process of
education as a person develops from early childhood into
a productive adult. Scaling up means going from isolated
products to changes in the whole process, changes that
encompass the entire educational experience. The Eiffel
Project will work to scale up with respect to scope by
building up coverage of more and more subjects through
digital resources, interacting with a wider and wider
range of mentors and experts, developing an extensive
repertoire of problem-solving resources, and generally
through curricular resources and intellectual tools. A
strength of the Eiffel Project as it unfolds over time
is the thorough-going involvement of a major research
university, for we need to work systematically to
reshape the whole curriculum and to do it over an
extended period of time in which the cumulative effects
of an entirely restructured educational process can
become evident and fully effective.
The Eiffel Project in its
fundamental character is an effort to scale up with
respect to penetration, for it addresses the needs of
under-served populations directly, working primarily in
schools serving predominantly African-American, Latino,
immigrant, and economically disadvantaged children,
specifically including Schools under Registration Review
among those it seeks to reach, and cooperating with key
groups such as the Upper Manhattan Empowerment Zone. As
disparities of income are dangerously increasing in
contemporary life, so disparities of education widen.
New York City can become a serious dystopia, leading the
nation to a two-tiered future of fundamental division
between haves and have-nots, if these disparities are
not ameliorated effectively in practice. New York City
must find ways to integrate its large disadvantaged
groups into the electronic future. The Eiffel Project
will address that problem and the City needs to sustain
the integrating, democratizing effort for the sake of
its long-term economic strength, and for its civility as
a vibrant human habitat.
As a specific test of its reach,
that is, its scalability to other localities beyond New
York City, the Eiffel Project is working in the
Kingston-Newburgh Enterprise Zone to see whether
educational resources we are developing in New York City
schools and locales will prove useful in the Newburgh
Enlarged City School District, specifically in improving
educational opportunities for African-American and
Latino families living in Newburgh's depressed downtown
section. Newburgh is representative of numerous small to
mid-sized cities where the affluent have abandoned
downtown areas in favor of near-by suburbs, leaving
behind a weak commercial core with a run-down housing
stock, high unemployment, and a local political impetus
to avoid and neglect these growing ghettos. Long-range
plans, for instance that recently released by the
Regional Planning Association, put a high priority on
the resuscitation of these decaying downtown centers in
order to reverse environmental degradation arising from
unchecked suburban sprawl and to energize the overall
economy, which has been left stagnant by the decline of
industry and manufacturing. Newburgh's downtown, in its
demographics, its needs, and its opportunities, is much
closer to Harlem, the South Bronx, or Bed-Stuy, than it
is to its contiguous communities. We postulate that what
the Eiffel Project does in these New York City areas
will have great relevance to improving educational
opportunity and general economic strength in areas such
as Newburgh, which, like New York, must succeed in the
information economy, and we will work with the schools
there and an innovative housing renewal project to test
this postulate. This will entail establishing high-speed
Internet connections to the Newburgh schools and
extending new pedagogical resources to children through
the schools and to their homes, particularly those
resources concerning participation in civic life,
engagement in the workplace, and developing distinctive
cultural strengths. Should it prove successful, it will
chart an important path for extending the reach of the
Eiffel Project to other places with similar problems
throughout New England, the Mid-Atlantic, and
Mid-Western states.
Resources deployed through the
Eiffel Project could expand in scale almost limitlessly:
first, by deploying a more and more complete,
state-of-the-art technological infrastructure in,
between, and around participating schools; second, by
developing all the interesting opportunities for new
curricular tools and resources that pertain to full
education of the whole person living in a complex world;
third, by providing fuller and fuller support to
teachers, students, and parents engaged in the
activities of school reform and the educational use of
technology, and fourth, by including more and more
schools within New York City, its region, the country,
and around the world, all serving children of vast,
undeveloped human potentials. The true learning
challenge is to trigger a chain reaction of further
effort by empowering key elements and energizing them to
draw more and more resources into the work.
New York City and the region
have great strengths, distinct competitive advantages in
an effort to become an essential center of educative
leadership in the 21st century -- an extraordinary
concentration of major universities, numerous centers of
corporate research, and unparalleled concentrations of
cultural holdings in major museums and libraries. The
Eiffel Project must mobilize all these advantages. It
must capture the public imagination and command its
participation. It can, by pursuing its essential
objective -- to meet progressive expectations with a
high-profile, large-scale project that will demonstrate
that the small schools reform movement, empowered with
advanced media, can break the constraints of the
traditional school, thereby enabling all children to
achieve unprecedented levels of excellence.
The Center for Collaborative
Education and the Institute for Learning Technologies,
the consortium co-conveners, seek to create an open,
growing effort supporting the Eiffel Project. To join
the consortium, please contact either Heather Lewis or
Priscilla Ellington at CCE (212 348 7821) or Robert
McClintock at ILT (212 678 3375).
Access
Information Fund, Inc. Center
for New Media Columbia
University Graduate School of Journalism Center for Research on Information
Access Columbia University Community School District Five Community School District Four Countee Cullen Public Library Eastman Kodak Company Education Solutions and Services
Educational Video Center Environmental Defense Fund Fund for New York City Public
Education Harlem Parents
Tutorial Project Image
Technology for New Media Center Columbia University Institute of African Studies
Columbia University Junior
Achievement of New York, Inc. Lander Street Partners National Center for Research on
Education, Students and Teachers Teachers College, Columbia
University Newburgh Enlarged
City School District New
Laboratory for Teaching and Learning The Dalton
School NYNEX State Education Dept./The
University of the State of NY/Albany, NY Office of New York City School and
Community Services Intra/Interagency Team Upper Manhattan Empowerment Zone
Development Corporation
[more schools will be added as
the project continues]
Benjamin Banneker Academy Bronx New School Brooklyn New School Center School Central Park East I Central Park East II Central Park East Secondary
School Coalition School for
Social Change Community Service
Academy Computer School Crossroads School Early Childhood Center Earth School Frederick Douglass Academy Henry Highland Garnet School Institute for Collaborative
Education International High
School Landmark High School Lower East Side School Manhattan New School Manhattan School for Children Manhattan Village Academy Mary McLeod Bethune School C.S.
92 Metropolitan Corporate
Academy Middle College High
School, , LaGuardia Middle
College High School, Medgar Evers Mott Hall School (I.S. 223) New School Neighborhood School New Program at P.S. 261 Northview Tech for Communications
Arts and Computer Sciences Oceanhill Brownsville School P.S. 234 Public School Repertory Company Ralph Bunche School, P.S. 125 River East Satellite Academy, Chambers Satellite Academy, Forsythe Schomburg Satellite Academy School for the Physical City School of the Future Science Skills Center High
School Sister Clara Mohammed
School University Heights High
School Urban Academy Vanguard High School Wadleigh School for Science and
Technology
Priscilla Ellington Center for Collaborative
Education 1573 Madison Avenue New York, NY 10029 212 348 7821 (phone) 212 348 7850 (FAX) Priscilla_Ellington@cce.org
Priscilla Ellington is
Co-Director of the Center for Collaborative Education,
with particular responsibility for the Elementary School
Change Services, which provides professional development
opportunities and consultation. She is a parent who
helped establish the Brooklyn New School. Before joining
CCE, she designed training tools in both visual and
print media for professional development, outreach, and
public information.
Heather Lewis Center for Collaborative
Education 1573 Madison Avenue New York, NY 10029 212 348 7821 (phone) 212 348 7850 (FAX) Heather_Lewis@cce.org
Heather Lewis has been Executive
Co-Director of the Center for Collaborative Education
since its founding in 1988. She has worked as a parent
organizer in District 15 (Brooklyn), where she helped
created the Brooklyn New School. She has been a member
of the steering committee of the Cross City Campaign for
Urban School Reform since 1993. Ms. Lewis will be a
Revson Fellow at Columbia University for academic
'96-97.
Robert McClintock Institute for Learning
Technologies Box 136, Teachers
College, Columbia University 525
West 120th Street New York, NY
10027-6625 212 678 3375
(phone) 212 678 4048 (FAX) rom2@columbia.edu
Robert McClintock is Director of
the Institute for Learning Technologies, Columbia
University and a professor in the Departments of
Philosophy and Social Sciences, and Communication,
Computing and Technology, at Teachers College. He is
Co-Director of the Dalton Technology Project, New
Laboratory for Teaching the Learning, and he has been
principal investigator for two projects that bring
high-speed networking to inner-city schools, the Harlem
Environmental Access Project, funded in 1994 by TIIAP,
and the Living Schoolbook Project, supported since 1994
by the New York State Science and Technology Foundation.
|