Tyler ISD Awarded Funding for
TARGET Grant
The No Child Left Behind
Act (NCLB), signed into law January 2002, focuses on
closing achievement gaps among students by ensuring challenging
curriculum, modern equipment, and well-trained teachers in every
classroom. In Texas, the No Child Left Behind Act
supports the TARGET (Technology Applications Readiness Grants
for Empowering Texas) grants by providing funding for proven
technology integration programs.
The Tyler Independent School
District, in conjunction with Whitehouse ISD, the Stepping Stone
School, East Texas Christian Academy, and Bishop T. K. Gorman
Middle School along with the Discovery Science Place, Caldwell
Zoo, the Texas Department of Parks and Wildlife, and the
University of Texas at Tyler, has been awarded approximately
$900,000 for year one of a 3-year TARGET grant project. The
Tyler ISD TARGET grant, the Lab-in-a-Bag project,
was written and submitted by the TISD Department of
Instructional Technology. This project builds on knowledge,
equipment, curriculum, and training gained from Tyler ISD’s
teachers.edu project, which was funded with $625,000
under the Technology Integration in Education (TIE) grant
program. The TARGET project puts technology – literally -- into
teachers’ and learners’ hands with array of hand-held technology
devices to facilitate student achievement in math, science and
communication skills at the 3rd – 8th
grades.
With an emphasis on anywhere,
anytime learning, the Lab-in-a-Bag project equips
each participating teacher with a portable math, science, and
technology/multimedia lab – literally -- in a bag. Special
backpacks hold a wireless laptop computer, a digital microscope,
scientific probes, calculators, a digital video camera and
portable scanner. On campus, participating teachers will be
equipped with a data projection device and additional technology
equipment designed to help students communicate what they learn.
The Lab-in-a-Bag project also provides intensive
training for participating educators and gives an opportunity
for preservice teachers at the University of Texas at Tyler to
participate in the project. In this way, developing teachers
work hand-in-hand in an authentic teaching and learning
environment with experienced educators.
During the first funded year of
the Lab-in-a-Bag project, selected 3rd
and 4th grade teachers from participating schools
receive technology training in the use of scientific probes,
calculators, digital cameras, scanners and wireless laptop
computers. Additionally, these teachers and a set of selected
preservice teachers from UT Tyler learn to develop curriculum
that addresses the state science, math, language arts and
technology applications TEKS. Following intensive training,
participants develop and deliver a two-week summer
school/technology camp for third and fourth grade students that
focuses on the study of animals at the Caldwell Zoo in Tyler.
Students will collect and analyze data using the hand-held
devices and develop multimedia projects to share what they
learn. Following their participation in the Lab-in-a-Bag
project, participating teachers serve as mentors, sharing new
instructional knowledge and technology skills with colleagues at
their campuses.
In the second funded year of the
Lab-in-a-Bag project, selected 5th and
6th grade educators from the participating schools
and preservice teachers, receive a similar set of technology
tools and professional development. Following their training,
these teachers develop and deliver a two-week summer
school/technology camp program for the upper elementary and
beginning middle school grades centered around a study of the
ecosystem in and around Tyler in coordination with Camp Tyler
and the Texas Department of Parks and Wildlife. Hand-held probes
and microscopes will be used to collect water, soil and plant
samples. Digital cameras, scanners, and computers will be used
as students analyze data and prepare reports of their findings.
Teachers engaged in the second funded year of the project
continue as mentors at their campuses, sharing new knowledge,
equipment, and instructional skills with fellow educators.
In the third and final funded
year of the project, selected 7th and 8th
grade faculty members from participating campuses receive
equipment and training to develop and deliver a two-week summer
school/technology camp program that focuses on physical health
among students, educators, and members of the Tyler community.
The particular math, science and
communication focus for each year of the three-year project has
been carefully designed to leverage current equipment and
programs in the schools. In the second year, for example, the
Lab-in-a-Bag project helps 5th and 6th
grade teachers and learners study the East Texas ecosystem in
depth. This supports current work with Camp Tyler and other
resources.
Participation in the
Lab-in-a-Bag project for the TARGET grant provides
improved teaching and learning across the district. Benefits to
the Tyler ISD and the community include:
• Highly trained faculty
• Strengthened partnership with
Whitehouse ISD, area private schools, and UT Tyler
• Strengthened partnership with the
Caldwell Foundation
• Strengthened partnership with the
Discovery Science Place
• Strengthened partnership with the
Texas Department of Parks and Wildlife
• Challenging science, math, language
arts curriculum and technology applications that
addresses all areas of the Texas
Essential Knowledge and Skills (TEKS)
• State-of-the-art multimedia
computers, scanners, digital cameras, and printers
• Campus-wide sets of hand-held math
and science technology equipment
For additional information regarding the No Child Left Behind
Act or the TARGET funding opportunity, visit the Texas
Education Agency website at:
http://www.tea.state.tx.us/technology/target/index.html.
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