U.S. gives CSULB $1.3 million for teaching training
By Jason Kosareff
Summer Forty-Niner
Cal State Long Beach received
a $1.29 million federal grant to train teachers in the
use of technology in the classroom, a university spokesman
announced.
A U.S. Department of Education
program called "Preparing Tomorrows Teachers to Use
Technology" provides $43 million in grants to 100 college
campuses across the country to educate teachers in computer
technology, according to CSU spokesman Ken Swisher.
Eight other CSU campuses
received funds for the same program, he said.
The grant money will be
used for "helping teachers to better use the Internet"
as well as teaching power point presentations and other
computer programs, Swisher said.
The program will train
200,000 new teachers across the country to become technologically
proficient, according to California Department of Education
criteria, by midsummer of 2002, according to Swisher.
"The world is changing
very fast, and universities don't always change that
quickly," said Robert Berdan, chair of the educational
psychology, administration and counseling department.
"The focus of the grant
is not directly on teachers," Berdan said. Rather, it
is on developing a curriculum for training teachers
to learn new technology. The grant money will be spread
broadly across campus, but administering the curriculum
will fall under the newly created Technology for Teaching
Consortium, Berdan said.
Faculty will be able to
get assistance in learning computer technology, such
as Power Point or assigning homework on the Web.
"Some of us as faculty
need to learn things we haven't learned before," Berdan
said.
Faculty members can prepare
a "personal technology plan" and come to the consortium
for coaching, Berdan said.
Education students will
also benefit as well, and by 2003 they will be up to
date with the standards the California Department
of Education has set for new California teachers, Berdan
said.
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