As I am writing this, I am staffing an information booth for iQ Academy at Discovery World Museum in Milwaukee, WI and it occurred to me that this is a perfect example of using technology to support education (in this case, educating parents about the virtues of virtual education). There is communication going on here in the form of a printed promotional booklet (created using word processing and desktop publishing applications), an Internet connected laptop to demonstrate how online courses work (check it out at www.iqacademywi.com), and good old fashioned conversation.
We are also engaging children (and some curious adults) in a puzzle cube activity that requires some critical thinking skills to solve.
Puzzle Cube in a jumbled state |
Solved Puzzle Cube |
Planning our participation in this event also incorporated technology supported communication in the form of emails, phone calls, faxes and a web conference. The key assessment metric would be, "Did our presence at this event increase public awareness of virtual school options in Wisconsin and more specifically, did it increase enrollment in iQ academy Wisconsin?" The first part is nearly impossible to measure, but by collecting the names of prospective students I spoke with today and comparing that to students who apply for open enrollment and actually enroll at iQ, I can see if my efforts today had any measurable impact. I can use that research to direct my decision making when it comes to scheduling recruitment activities next year.
Here comes a family that looks interested - gotta go!