How To: Create a Web Site That's a Learning Community

Teachers need a site for one thing, parents for another, and students for yet something else. Here's an example of how to merge the three needs into one site.

by Leona Jamison

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This how-to article is accompanied by the feature "Fast Forward: Redefining Learning as a Student-Centered Activity."

Leona Jamison, professional-development director at Indiana's Metropolitan School District of Lawrence Township, says the district's biggest goal was for its Web site to help foster a professional learning community in which teachers can exchange ideas, support each other, and continually develop their practice. For parents and the community, the district wanted the site to be a place not just to find their school's address and phone number but to get involved as well. For students who grew up with digital gadgets, Jamison says, the site needed to help educators teach in the way kids are wired to learn.

My colleagues and I knew nothing about Web design and technology when we started. But we followed a process that enabled us to create a site that does almost all of what we wanted it to do. Here are the steps we took to make it happen:

Lawrence
Credit: Drew Endicott

Define the Need

We assembled a task force of instructional coaches, technology staff, and parents to survey all the stakeholders on what they wanted the Web site to do. Teachers wanted different levels of professional-development opportunities, from resources that they could peruse on their own time (what we call in-your-pajamas learning) to full-length interactive e-classes.

Students needed an e-desk where they could stash and access work remotely. Parents wanted to know how their kids were doing by viewing grades, assignments, and class activities.

Find Strong Partners

Not having the in-house expertise to develop such a complex site, we looked to an outside firm. We narrowed five candidates down to one -- LightSky, of Goshen, Indiana -- and assessed the company leaders' references before hiring them. What impressed us most about LightSky was that the company didn't limit our choices to a few templates. The staff was open to trying new things and shaping the site to our needs.

Over the next year, we worked daily with the company. We made the site's capabilities flexible so it could accommodate unforeseen needs and opportunities. Total development costs were around $360,000 over several years. Thanks to our task force, we had a strong vision of what we wanted, and that was critical; school districts creating an interactive Web site have to know what the stakeholders desire.

Build from the Grassroots

When the site was ready, we grappled with how to take it to the teachers. We feared they would see it as just another thing they had to learn. Seven of our instructional coaches volunteered to create the first e-classes. We teamed up with an online instructor at Purdue University (another strong partner!), who guided the coaches through developing their first course. In exchange, she got the chance to do research with our staff on the effectiveness of coaching.

Then, the first seven online teachers each taught another colleague how to build an e-class, and the next seven teachers were encouraged to do the same. Once we had a few courses available, the coaches introduced teachers to the idea and showed them how to get into the e-classes.

Make It Relevant and Easy

One surprise for us was how hard it was for many teachers and administrators to understand how to use the Web site and see that online instruction could be just as good as face-to-face teaching. Five years into the project, we're still working on this. Barbara Pace, the professional-development Web site facilitator, created a few tutorials that gave simple instructions and showcased what the site could achieve, and the response of many teachers was "Wow!"

Once the teachers saw an authentic purpose for the site, it really started to catch on. Now, we don't just have coaches; we also have regular teachers creating and facilitating e-classes with Pace's guidance. We have a bank of fifty e-classes, with around ten running at any given time; thirty or more teachers take a course each session. This fall, a handful of teachers will facilitate our first online classes for students. About 28,000 parents have a username and a password for the Web site, and 3,500 people log in each day -- all this for a maintenance cost of just $10,000 a year. (Site upgrades cost an additional $20,000 to $25,000 annually.)

If the job had been left to us administrators, the site would not be what it is today. The many minds we brought into this process -- different people from different practices within the profession -- made it successful.

This article was also published in the June 2007 issue of Edutopia magazine.


P.S. There's even more to the story

Submitted by Allen (not verified) on July 16, 2007 - 13:09.

Lawrence Township is taking the next step this fall by providing every teacher in the district (about 1,000) with a haiku LMS account.

LT teachers will return from summer break and have full use of this premier LMS 2.0 application. Using the drag & drop CMS to post online versions of their classrooms, teachers can maintain an interactive WebClass in about 10 minutes a week.

haiku LMS is available for free for limited use.

Language Learning Community Web Site

Submitted by devon (not verified) on June 29, 2007 - 02:06.

We have build a language learning community website, http://www.welang.com.

But if i read this before I start built the website, it's should be very helpful.

For me, i think 'Find Strong Partners' is the most difficult thing. I'm in charge of the technical things, It's hard for me to find a good partner who will take responsibility for other stuff.

Web Site

Submitted by saul martinez (not verified) on June 6, 2007 - 06:13.

This sounds typical of what many school districts are doing.

Has edutopia featured any innovative/alternative solutions to these solutions with such high price tags?

I'm aware the San Antonio school district is really pushing the use of Joomla and actually defying the notion that open solutions aren't practical.

I would love to see Edutopia feature more open source and alternative solutions for school/district websites than featuring these high priced options.

Learning Community Web Site

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on June 6, 2007 - 09:35.

I was excited. It's summer; I have the time and inclination. I can re-work our school web page. This article was disappointing. This was not a viable option at all. Local schools don't have that kind of money for a web page. "Web masters" don't even get a stipend!

Math

Submitted by Tyler Amidon (not verified) on June 18, 2007 - 13:47.

I would have liked a little more nuts and bolts on how to put together a Learning Community web site on a tight budget. What 3 things can the "beginner" district do to get started on that type of web site?

See Blogs, Wikis, Podcasts by Will Richardson, alternatives!!!!

Submitted by JS LOEBER (not verified) on June 28, 2007 - 13:22.

Sometimes what is easier is more effective...
See also Diane S. Albanese Cape Henlopen District Lewes Delaware has come up with based on Richardson's book,......
sites
Class Wiki http://bliptop.wikispaces.com/

Class Bulletin board http://www.protopage.com/albanesewikimasters

Mrs. Albaneses blog

http://mrsalbaneses.edublogs.org;

Open Source solutions - you're using one now!

Submitted by butterfi on June 6, 2007 - 09:04.

Open source solutions are being widely adopted by many organizations, including edutopia! IBM, Yahoo, Sony are among the major companies that are using open source content management systems.

Some education specific open source systems include DrupalEd, which is a popular CMS that has specially configured for educators. Moodle is another popular CMS aimed at educators.

You can find a ton of information about open source CMS's at http://opensourcecms.com

There are also many hosting providers that provide these CMS systems as part of their hosting package, making deployment of these systems relatively inexpensive.

Moodle

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on June 29, 2007 - 06:01.

As a classroom teacher who has used Moodle for the past two years I highly recommend checking out this CMS if you are interested in doing something similar to what was described in the article for little money. The software is free, it takes only a few hours to download and install (especially if you have a little server and database knowledge), and a it is scalable. A teacher could use it in their classroom on a small closed network or an entire district could install Moodle and let their teachers and students access it from any place that has internet access (this is what we have done). Moodle has tons of different modules that can be installed making it very customizable. If you are interested check out http://moodle.org.

web page

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on June 5, 2007 - 17:12.

The information shared in this article makes me hunger to create something similar. I only represent an individual private school. Is it possible to do something similar to help teachers, parents and students and not have a similar price tag. Of course, clarifying the need is the first step.
I congratulate the District on their success. This moves education into the future and beyond tests.

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