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Back in December I wrote about the EdTechup conference and the wonderfully balanced energy in the room among both entrepreneurs and educators.  We just celebrated the one-year anniversary of EdTechup here in Boston and it was a huge hit – on a Friday night no less.  I was lucky enough to be asked to speak to my experiences in growing a startup in education technology – in Boston.

I essentially captured 3 lessons learned over the last two years in growing iCreate, all focused on how to gain grassroots traction in schools, which is what we’ve been able to do.

1)   Freemium is key.  There are so many new technological tools out there how is any teacher or school supposed to gauge what works for them?  Well, by offering a free version – perhaps it’s limited feature or limited time – then the teachers can actually take the opportunity to try it out!  This is huge for teachers that have limited budgets to spend.

2)   Focus on just one thing to change.  We are all generally frustrated about the purchasing process in schools, but to be honest, if your company is not focused on changing that process, then don’t spend energy trying to change it. Focus the energy on the offering you have and then do whatever you can to accommodate the purchasing process.  It will make life less stressful for all involved.

3)   Make sure the tech director is happy.  If you’re integrating new technology into the schools, it’s obviously important to be sure you have your teachers on board, but you also need to absolutely make sure the tech director is in the know.  They are responsible for implementing and supporting all things technical and if you don’t make it easy for them, and/or don’t keep them in the loop, adoption and general support for your tool will be significantly more difficult.

There are countless other tips and best practices for building a small edtech company in K12, but these have been my 3 main take-aways and I hope they are helpful to others beyond the Edtechup gatherings.

We cannot get away from the fact that we need to measure outcomes.  Sure, it’s not that fun, we all hate tests, but it’s just one of those things in life that can be right up there with taxes.  It’s just something we have to do.  We are cognoscente of the reality in schools, which are needing to have some form of measurement.  For that reason, we’ve been trying to do a better job of pulling together things to help with that.  The activity guides are hopefully on that track, along with the rubric and overall guidelines of topic areas and 21st century skills particularly applicable to what our tool offers to a classroom environment.   We sincerely do not believe that what we’re offering is a ‘nice to have’ but a method of achieving the markers we hold ourselves up against.  Whether it is through the innate teamwork and collaboration that happens as a result of our tool or the iterative process in creation or the repeated visualization of the concept, each student ideally discovers his or her way of retention, and as a result excels in assessment.  Check out these updated resources on our Teacher Resources page!

With the recent explosion around Khan Academy, I’d like to ask:  SO?!  Yes, videos for explaining things in a visual way are great, but come on, instructional videos are not new.  This is similar to those studies that come out saying, “It’s better for you to eat fruits and vegetables daily.”  [gasp]  Really?!?!

Why are we enamored by a “new” way of content being fed to students.  There is still an element of passive learning… it doesn’t matter that they “answer questions” after the video.  What about doing?  What about exploring?  What about tinkering?  What about all of those aspects involved in active learning where we are at the center, pulling together our own knowledge about the world and trying to make sense of it all around us?  What would happen if we let students start to grapple, fumble, discover their own way through content and create the video themselves?  Active learning would happen.

Take a look at this video.  Yes, well-done by high schoolers out of New Hampshire.  It’s phenomenal actually.  Case in point on what our students are capable of creating if we give them the space, time, tools, and faith to create!!

Let’s change the one way street of content … our students are more than able and willing to be the creators.  And this is what makes learning exciting!

What sticks with you the most from grade school?  Learning about volcanoes with that vinegar and baking soda experiment or the weekly spelling tests?  My hunch would be the popular volcanic simulation. Well, the knowledge of volcanoes in this day in age is not particularly useful day-to-day, but that’s what we remember because we made something happen with our hands!  And it was awesome to watch.  And we begged the teacher to please, please let us do it again because it was so cool and we could make something happen right there in the classroom….and it was even a bit messy!  Now… imagine if we could do that for fractions.  Or the immune system.  These topics are a bit more useful to our day-to-day actions, but let’s be honest, most of us do not have those vivid memories around learning those topics growing up.

But, what if instead we could literally split a pizza in 2 then 3 then 4 and we could actually capture the process with a camera in a way that we could play it back, visually recording and reiterating what the addition, subtraction, division of fractions looks like. Or, what if we could make little white pom poms move along the edge of the desk slowly “attacking” purple beads, again, documenting each step of the way as if we were filming an Academy Award Winning production.  Suddenly these topics literally come to life and we had a magical hand in that process.

We are challenging ourselves to inspire vinegar-and-baking-soda experiments in every topic area in the classroom.  And the best part is that we can inspire learning and increase content retention without even having to smell the stench of vinegar!

Animating the Whole Classroom

One of my favorite anecdotal stories around the use of our tool in the classroom was one that involved the solar system, and there were actually two separate movies created from the project.  The first project was implemented on the desktop, where all students were assigned a planet and had to move the planets according to their natural speed in the solar system.  This first video involved some Styrofoam balls, yarn, and scaled speeds reflecting the movement of planets in the real solar system (see below).

Well, this particular classroom decided to spice things up a bit and create a life sized solar system, mounting the camera on the ceiling in the room and assigning the students various sizes of large balls – kickballs, basketballs – and running in and out of the camera viewing circle to slowly move the planets through the orbit.  This application in life-size form is certainly something we hadn’t seen implemented regularly in the classroom before and turns out it was a phenomenal hit with the students!