
June 2007 > School News
UC Links Builds Foundation for Teachers,
Families
in New Orleans
| UC Links director Charles Underwood, left,
helped train Louisiana teachers in using laptops effectively
with their students. |
UC Links, in collaboration with the Virtue Foundation, conducted a
professional development conference on digital teaching and learning
at the University of New Orleans for about 50 teachers from nine Louisiana
schools districts affected by hurricanes Katrina and Rita on May 18,
part of an ongoing effort to support families and youth displaced by
the disasters.
Charles Underwood, executive director of University-Community
Links (UC Links) and Scott Woodbridge, director of
site development for the program at the Graduate School of Education,
worked with groups, and individual teachers to improve their skills
with various computer-based applications and provided training in various
computer-based multimedia tools for teaching and learning, including
digital storytelling.
Since last August, JuliAnna Avila, a 2007 GSE graduate
and an incoming professor of education at the Georgia
Southern University, has been working with the UC Links project and
several of the teachers and their students in the Renaissance Village
trailer camp, for New Orleans families displaced by Katrina, while
Underwood, Woodbridge and their UC Berkeley students connect with the
kids in various learning activities using e-mail, a blog and the UC
Links website.
Underwood says that the efforts to date have set
a solid foundation for continuing online and face-to-face collaboration
between Louisiana teachers and their students and UC Berkeley faculty,
staff and students, and that collaboration with Louisiana State Univeristy's
College of Education and the University of New Orleans enables the
program to sink deeper local roots.
“We're committed to continuing this work for the long haul,” says
Underwood. “The rewards are considerable for all of us, both
here at the University and there in the schools and trailer camps in
Louisiana.”
UC Links was invited to participate in the
New Orleans conference by the Virtue
Foundation’s Katrina Education
Initiative, a technology-focused educational pilot program, to provide advanced
learning opportunities for children in storm-affected schools. Teachers
attending the conference had received laptops from the Foundation,
and UC Links was asked to help train the teachers in using them effectively
with their students.
Started in 2005, the initiative expanded in September when the Virtue
Foundation donated laptops and software licenses from Apple and Microsoft,
resources worth more than $1 million, to schools in the nine school
districts, spearheading the development of a technology-enabled educational
model for students statewide.