November 18, 2024

How to Talk Tech with Your Superintendent

Author: marquita.brown_tC0Z
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How to Talk Tech with Your Superintendent
marquita.brown_tC0Z
Wed, 11/13/2019 – 15:28

Running a district IT department becomes increasingly challenging as more technology enters the schools, classrooms and students’ hands.

That’s why, when I was an IT director, one of my biggest concerns was building and maintaining an open line of communication with my superintendent. Other IT administrators often ask me how to do that, and my answer touches on trust, curriculum priorities and community. It all comes down to one unifying intention: relationships.

Technology departments support all district functions, from financial systems and student information systems to instructional software at the teacher and student levels. A trust-based, working relationship between district IT administrators and superintendents ensures technology decisions and overall strategy align and are articulated appropriately to constituents who make broader budgeting decisions.

The relationship also matters because superintendents rarely have experience working in a school technology department. Instead, they’re expected to possess a more holistic view of the school and district, rather than technology-specific knowledge, which means superintendents often must rely on IT leaders to make informed decisions about technology purchases. 

The typical superintendent needs school board approval for any tech initiative or large purchase. It’s important that such purchases are made with the tech department’s recommendations for how best to support the curriculum, students, and business functions of the organization.

MORE FROM EDTECH: Check out the creative ways IT leaders make the case for network upgrades.

Let Curriculum Be the Driver of Tech Purchasing Decisions

Technology should not determine curriculum; curriculum should determine technology. All too often, districts embark on large technology initiatives without establishing how it ties into the curriculum. When technology is implemented inconsistently with curriculum enhancements — such as learning platforms and classroom management solutions — the chances that teachers successfully use the technology to improve education decrease.

IT administrators should tie technology initiatives to curriculum or instructional best practices, and be able to articulate why a purchase is being proposed and how it supports curriculum goals.

Technology leaders should listen to the needs and wants of those developing any large curriculum initiative, such as a one-to-one deployment, and use that feedback to recommend the best device and network upgrades to support the initiative. They should also have a plan for funding the initiative before making a technology recommendation to the school board.

This prevents overspending and uninformed technology acquisitions and increases the chances the superintendent and school board will approve the initiative. 

MORE FROM EDTECH: What might Wi-Fi 6 mean for K–12 network upgrades? Read this to find out.

Proactively Offer Information to Build Trust

School boards are charged with approving large purchases, and board members often question superintendents about technology costs. A superintendent may need to explain, for example, why an enterprise network requires more advanced hardware than a home network. This type of request makes the relationship between the superintendent and tech department paramount.

Tech departments should provide the superintendent with the information they need to answer basic questions from the board. The superintendent should bring in trusted technology representatives only when needed for passing an initiative. 

School boards often task superintendents with preparing documentation to inform long-range planning and support technology decision-making. IT administrators can help prepare superintendents by creating a list of hardware and software that are compatible with district technology, such as Chromebooks, other laptops, web resources and classroom management tools.

Proactively helping the superintendent increases the odds that administrators can get what they need to better serve their students, parents, board members and school community.

Kevin Dorsey

Kevin Dorsey is the educational technology adviser at GoGuardian and a former teacher, instructional technologist and technology director. He oversaw the largest one-to-one program in Pennsylvania. After almost a decade in district leadership, Dorsey joined GoGuardian to help districts utilize best practices in educational technology.