• Twitter
  • Instagram
  • Flickr
  • Pinterest
  • Presentations

LorraineKasyan.com

Humanizing our Digital Imprint

  • Portfolio
    • Sketchnotes
    • Conference Sketchnotes
    • Ed Tech Foot Soldiers
  • About
  • Blog
  • Contact

SMART Technologies SEE Summit – Inspiring Greatness 2018

July 30, 2018

GreatMinds

Imagine being invited to spend five days learning and celebrating with like-minded professionals in a stimulating setting. Imagine that your every need was considered, transportation arranged, and worthwhile activities planned without cease. Consider long-range mountain views and architectural splendor in a picturesque downtown. Street art, public transportation, and gracious citizens. This was the reality for thirty-four educators and six high school students last week in Calgary Canada at the SMART Exemplary Educator Summit.
Processes Design Group

Teachers from around the World. Erin from Minnesota, Elisabeth from Austria, myself from North Carolina, Anvi a student from New York, Kevin from Virginia and Carla from South Africa, took on the challenge to reimagine the technology solutions for the processes in education.

SMART Technologies assembled this group to give back to the people who use and help improve their products – educators. The entire organization welcomed us and let us know that they valued our expertise and understanding of their technology. Treated like equal professionals every moment of the day we chatted with marketing and development folks, support staff, and leaders in education from the United States and Canada.

SMART Executives

We were graced with a fireside chat hosted by the five top executives at SMART. They answered all of our questions.

We were organized in various groups alternating activities between testing new products, hacking current solutions to improve their functionality, or working through the design process to create technology solutions that would improve the student outcomes of either curriculum, space, processes, or schools. These activities were peppered with speakers on topics ranging from Growth Mindset to Global Education Insights and virtually everything in between. We learned about the Conrad Foundation from their chairman, Nancy Conrad, and heard from this years’ student winners in The Conrad Spirit of Innovation Challenge. I worked closely with two of these promising young people, Anvi and Philip, and was in awe of their potential. Our learning was practical and immediate, visionary and research based, and non-stop. The best type of professional development ever.

Hackathon Designers

The Developers from our Hackathon Team. There were visible thought clouds above their heads as we worked. Truth.

SMART Technologies covered all bases, met every learning need, and rewarded us tenfold. The relationships that bloomed wove our shared passions with personal interests and once germinated have created opportunities for collaborations for classrooms across the world. SMART demonstrated that they are a company poised for the long haul in educational technology. They stand behind their solutions with evidence that what their products claim to do has been done and is deliverable elsewhere with careful training and both face-to-face and digital support.

Philip and Lorraine

SEE Stars Philip Pan, the future and myself, the present and future of global technology innovations to inspire outcomes in every classroom and continent.

Thank you SMART Technologies, Kelly Miksch our talented class mom, Greg Estell, Nicholas Svensson, Jeff Lowe, Christine McGregor, Debra Milmaka Miles and all the other key players who continue to push SMART towards greatness and delivered this opportunity to a group of amazing educators who will take this inspiration into a new year. Onward.

Thursday Dinner Telus Spark

The reception held at Telus Spark‘s, Science center was the perfect final celebration of a great week. Table mates, Concern, South Africa, Nicholas Svensson of SMART, Stella, UK, and Carla, South Africa enjoyed lively conversation regarding what is next for all of us.

Sketchnoting, by Definition – Accessible to All

June 23, 2017

Gymnast

Is there a hurdle being constructed that novice sketchnoters feel they have to jump in order to share their work? Spalton, Chris (ChrisSpalton) “Now #Sketchnotes are becoming more popular there’s also a lean towards becoming more ‘academic, … adding barriers to what should be accessible to all.” 5 May 2017. Tweet.

Sketchnoting, by my friend, Mike Rohde’s definition, is all about ideas, not art. My adoption of the (movement) concept is focused on remembering those golden moments where a speaker (book/talk/event) opens your mind and your heart and changes you in an unforgettable way. In those moments, I: the learner whose life is enhanced by the occasion, want a sketch to help visceralize the event in my memory.

When I experienced the power of sketchnoting I realized that I wanted to spread it outward for students. That avenue was the logical next step but how was I going to prove the necessity? Mike and Sunni started that for me, but there was still the time spent in the classroom that took away from the all too familiar ‘testing’ fear. Wendi’s book helped a great deal. With a research based focus for educators she proved that instead of being time wasted – the energy and time spent familiarizing our students with sketchnoting and modeling visual vocabulary and connected ideas is crucial for every learner. Deepening comprehension and engendering connections that standard drill and kill tactics overlook.

First time sketching – teachers show the students their sketches.

If shaping your thoughts through image is a way to unleash creativity, unlock new ideas, and retain knowledge, then why don’t we all do it more? To unlearn the “I can’t draw” mantra and relearn the doodle mindset is not that difficult. Once the benefits are established the end results supply the proof. Not to mention it is fun to do and sharing with others is a win/win. I found some of my favorite TED Talks through other people’s sketchnotes, learning deeply about things that I probably would not have seen. Perception that I internalized enhancing my day to day. Win/win.

Everyone has something to share and everyone has a doodler within.

Not all of us are equally talented when it comes to art and metaphor.

The same goes for sports, cooking, reading comprehension, and fashion. But that difference doesn’t stop us from playing kickball or trying a new spring roll recipe. The reason it is important to keep #Sketchnoting accessible is because the learning gains for both the practitioner and the rest of us are infinite. If you curb your sketches because you are not going to be the best in show then you have missed the point. Some of the most visually appealing sketchnotes have the least amount of information in them. Often used for self-marketing, these are all fluff and flair with no substance. Those don’t enrich my life. But, they weren’t meant for me right? Dimeo, Rob. (RobDimeo)”Sketchnoting skill should be accessible to all. The sketchnote content need not be accessible to anyone but the sketchnoter.” 5 May 2017. Tweet.  I want the sloppy, edgy, risk taking, infographics from an intentional learner.

#Sketchnotes may actually be so academic that the content is not accessible to all viewers, but the act of #Sketchnoting is and must stay accessible to all, because as @ChrisSpalton and @SunniBrown contend, “The more thoughts and ideas are documented (however roughly) the better the world becomes.”

Bettering the world through doodles – see you there.

Neutron Scatterers

March 16, 2017

NIST Symposium

We’re not in Kansas anymore.

When one of the participants began his question with; “If I’m giving a talk to a bunch of neutron scatterers…” I knew I was breathing different air. The opportunity to meet my Sketchnoting community in person, facilitated by Rob Dimeo with Mike Rohde and Professor Michael Clayton as participants, was one extended to me by a surprising invite and I was still in disbelief of my good fortune.

I was arriving at Reagan International Airport Friday evening to spend the next few days at the National Institute of Standards and Technology in Gaithersburg, MD (NIST), with a group of Sketchnoting friends and enthusiasts. An incongruous group of global Twitter friends – collected from far and wide all gathered together to share our styles and passion with a team of scientists, chemists, engineers, librarians, physicists and yes, neutron scatterers. It was a mind opening experience.

But first, a stop at a panel discussion held by six of these folks and given at AIGA Blueridge which walked an eager design community through the basics of sketchnoting. My Lyft driver dropped me (and my luggage) at the door exactly on time. The audience was packed, but I got to say hello to my Sketchnoting tribe right before taking my seat and sitting in awe of the expertise of the panel. And then the journey began.

The next day we met at NIST to deposit our passports to the guards and receive official clearance and a nametag to the facilities. Wow. Cleared, we drove together in a caravan through the campus and to the building that would be home for the next few days. Introductions and coffee aside – we crowd-sourced the topics European style, with what Marianne called a bar camp. (Edcamps here in US education.) Basically all attendees posted sticky notes with their preferred topics, things they wanted to learn about, and things they were willing to ‘share’. Marianne Rady and Steve Silbert (our resident Scrum Masters) categorized our notes and created the schedule. It was the picture of democratic diplomacy as topics were announced and facilitators beckoned. Really. It was seamless.

Mike Rohde

Mike Rohde – Sketchnote – State of the Union

That first day started with a Visual Vocabulary warm-up where we quickly drew ten objects without pause (a traditional opening activity for us) and then an exploration of ideas that were more difficult to capture. The two Mikes responded to this live – it was dubbed: Stump the Mikes and we all drew together as the audience suggested difficult terms: open mindedness, project, empathy, teamwork, impact and illusion were our mix and the results were fascinating! For me, the images for impact were the most transforming. The Mike’s portrayed different scientific images (Newton’s cradle and a meteor cascading towards Earth) while I was busy trying to depict a can drive for a local food pantry. Our symposium had begun and already my mind had expanded.

Rather than sharing a play-by-play, let me share an anecdote. Our host was discussing the nuances of saved pens in Procreate for the iPad. Rob Dimeo had shared Procreate layers and pens with all of us, but here he was talking to the group about designing a brush that would have a different thickness based on the pressure of the pen stroke. A brush that would resemble a true cartoonist’s ink pen. Rob began to speak to the scientists and instinctively created an analogy for them. He called the brush shape anisotropic – or he attempted to. We laughed at the pronunciation as he answered a question from one of the non-scientists among us, explaining the electromagnetic concept of particles that are not equally dispersed in a substance. Luckily, I understood the brush, ink, and result in Procreate, but I had to know more about anisotropy.

Rob Dimeo

Touring the NIST facility with Rob Dimeo

When we broke for lunch I scooted my chair back to ask for clarification of the NIST employees. I had to add something understandable to my sketchnote after all. Their explanation was fascinating. Bob explained that Isotropic had to do with the disbursement of particles in a substance and Anisotropic meant that they were unevenly distributed. Eric, sitting beside him, clarified. He thought of it like a brick. “The difference of one end appearing like a square and the other side like an elongated rectangle.” That, I could understand – it was actually brilliant, but Bob needed to clarify that the concept talked about the distribution of particles within the makeup of the brick. There is no way that I can explain this discourse intelligently. Their conversation was as fascinating as the analogy was to begin with. It worked for me. I understood that electromagnetic elements of a substance are sometimes unevenly distributed which changes the appearance or density. The concept as it applied to their work escaped me. My delight as an educator was the opportunity to hear the analogy, to share in the understanding, and then to witness colleagues discussing their own definitions to each other through me – a liberal arts, sketchnoting friend.

Twitter Friends

Twitter Friends

Changing the way we see things gets harder and harder as we age. The reason for this seems to be the lack of opportunity to hear from and share conversation with others outside of our training, vocation, profession, or even geographic residence. The NIST Sketchnote Community Symposium, gave that opportunity to all who attended. My Twitter friends could not wait to meet each other in person to celebrate our community and our good fortune. Our new NIST acquaintances gave us a refreshing benediction to #Sketchnoting.

I am infinitely thankful for this opportunity, one that revealed diverse viewpoints and backgrounds in a transcendent way. We were introduced to entire fields of research and science of which I personally had no prior understanding. Sketchnoting leveled the playing field if only for one weekend. We learned, stretched, shared, evolved, and grew at NIST.

 

 

“Doing the Right Thing” The Inspiration in Teaching

January 15, 2017

Stepping out of the classroom in a support role for teachers and students felt right for me in my professional journey. The allure of new challenges and continued advanced learning was the obvious next step in my career. Mostly, it has been truth. Time away from grading papers affords me the opportunity to deepen my understanding of new technologies and how they fit into sound Instructional Design to benefit all learners. Helping plan and deliver robust professional development to hundreds of teachers as they prepare to embrace instruction in a 1:1 environment has been an honor.

Classroom teaching continues to mesmerize me. I have watched for over 22 years as policy changed, methods came in and out of favor, silver bullets morphed in name and color, the only constant being the human component. That essential element of teacher and student, and the trusting supportive relationship that must be established for learning to occur.

Increasingly in my role as technology facilitator I encounter teachers who endeavor, with everything in them, to meaningfully engage their students. Lamenting often that they have simply run out of time. Early adopters of tech are the hardest on themselves. These educators are also consummate learners. Invigorated by their content and eager to learn new technology both for themselves and for their students. This year, with my bullet journal ready to go and a working plan for each of my ten schools I visited one of these educators to relay the availability of an enhanced whiteboard platform. We had explored the tool together, but I cautioned him to wait till the district had populated his classes with students before building a workspace to share. The time had come and we were both excited to test it out when he said something that has really resonated with me.

“This year I am really trying to do the right thing. The magic is to make sure there are meaningful tasks, you know, inquiry based learning. But there isn’t enough time to do it all.”

He clarified to let me know that he always tries to do the right thing, but this year seemed different. This year with his content firmly under his belt, and Canvas, our learning management system clearly helping him reach his students and their parents both in school and at home, he wants to shift the in class experience to something even more vibrant. This teacher, always eager and interested, creating wonder all around the room with circuits, lights, convection currents, and buzzers, always offers to help his peers. He is kind, polite, inclusive, genuine and consistent with his students.

He did not have to clarify his intentions to me. In this new year of continued cuts and insults to the world of education that we both hold so dear, it is I who will reaffirm that yes, I too, am really trying to do the right thing. There is no one size fits all in education, for students or for teachers in professional development. To be the change we must inspire.

Education: A Collaborative Treasure Hunt

August 14, 2016

Inspiration in the everyday – teachers, caring for their students, collaborating with one another, sharing ideas, brainstorming solutions, giving back and growing too. The best of education can give me the kind of goose bumps that last a while. Working with Mrs. Jackie Dirscherl is that kind of good. Let me tell you a story.

First, quite a few months ago I was working at the office when one of my colleagues, Pam Johnson shared an iPad app she was exploring with me. She was looking at it for a K-3 elementary school that had a 3D printer and needed an entry level program to start building with kindergartners. The app was called PrintShop and it worked with the Makerbot machine. Students draw simple line drawings to tell a story, take a picture in the app and save to the library in a Makerbot account. As I had not been working with that age level yet it was immediately intriguing to me. I downloaded the app and vowed to remember it.

Fast forward several months further into the year and in one of my regular visits to classrooms I asked Jackie Dirscherl if there were any projects coming up that would allow for collaboration. She told me about a presentation she had seen at NCTIES and her hope to incorporate the project idea with the study of the Trail of Tears in her American History course. She wanted students to research tribes involved in the Trail of Tears, find out about their cultures and roles in the event, look at artifacts and photographs from the time and come up with a symbol that would represent the tribe and their role in history. She wanted the students to learn the Makerbot software and Tinkercad to transfer the drawings to 3D print designs to print replicas of the symbols as stamps. Jackie wondered if I could help with the 3D printing aspect? Jackie is a special education teacher and I had worked in her room several times before. I knew the complexities of the Tinkercad program and decided to tell her about the Printshop app. I told her I had an idea and would show her something later that day.

DesignPlan

I found a book on Native Americans in the media center, looked at images and found one of a Blackfoot eagle head worn as protection. I drew a rudimentary line drawing and took a picture in Printshop. I saved the photo in the app and created a 3D design. The first attempt printed in a little over four hours and gleaned important lessons. Lesson 1: my features (eyes and nostrils) did print, but because they were not attached to the outer lines they did not stay connected when the build was removed from the raft. Lesson 2: I had drawn the lines too thin causing the shape to flex out of shape when held. Both issues needed to be remedied for the painting and stamping activity to be a success.

I redrew the eagle head with a Sharpie this time. I changed the design slightly for the detail to connect to the edge. I took another picture, saved again and printed. This build took only one hour forty-five minutes to print and to my knowledge none of the settings were changed. (I printed at another location though.) Success! You can see in the image that the second build was much thicker and sturdier. My next step was to share the process with the classroom.

4designs

During my next visit I downloaded the app on the iPad for Jackie. She made a Makerbot account and we installed the desktop version of Makerbot on her computer. Her students were finishing up their study of the Westward Expansion and she and I brainstormed ways to move forward. Partnering in classrooms with innovative, risk-taking, and compassionate teachers is one of the most significant benefits of my work. The open sharing of ideas, content, and strategies for the needs of these particular learners, was an ongoing process. Coordinating access to the iPads and 3D printer was also part of the logistics. Jackie and I remained flexible in our contacts and created moments to meet where seemingly none existed. All while the students experienced their day-to-day lessons and marched forward in the acquisition of content standards.

The Treasure in Education

The Treasure in Education

This project will take me moving into next year. The collaboration, sharing, idea swapping, and flexibility of interested professionals make teaching an honor. Believing that there are other projects out there in my schools waiting for me to discover makes the new school year a perpetual treasure hunt.

Enjoy an album showcasing the process of this project linked here on Flickr.

 

About Me


Educator, mom, gardener, dreamer – being the change and making a difference. Instructional technology with a heart that connects through humanity and does not dehumanize through the digital immediacy of computer screens and production applications. This journey as teacher and traveler underscores the importance of human to human, gaze upon gaze. Sharing today’s tools to keep it real.

Connect

  • Email
  • Facebook
  • Google+
  • Instagram
  • Pinterest
  • Twitter

Categories

  • Be the Change
  • Bicycles
  • Collegial Generosity
  • Hamburg
  • If my Brave got Bigger
  • Instructional Technology
  • ISC17HH
  • ISTE2017
  • Life
  • NIST
  • Peace Doodle
  • Pondering Education
  • SEE Summit
  • SketchNoting
  • SMART Technologies
  • STEM
  • Uncategorized

Recent Posts

  • SMART Technologies SEE Summit – Inspiring Greatness 2018
  • International Sketchnote Camp 2017, Hamburg Germany
  • Sketching a Community – International Sketchnote Camp 2017
  • My Brave Got a Little Bigger
  • Sketchnoting, by Definition – Accessible to All

Search

https://instagram.com/kasyan.lorraine/

Instagram did not return a 200.

About Me

Educator, mom, gardener, dreamer – being the change and making a difference. Instructional technology with a heart that connects through humanity and does not dehumanize through the digital immediacy of computer screens and production applications. This journey as teacher and traveler underscores the importance of human to human, gaze upon gaze. Sharing today’s tools to keep it real. 

Get Social

  • Email
  • Facebook
  • Instagram
  • Pinterest
  • Twitter

Latest Posts

  • SMART Technologies SEE Summit – Inspiring Greatness 2018
  • International Sketchnote Camp 2017, Hamburg Germany
  • Sketching a Community – International Sketchnote Camp 2017
  • My Brave Got a Little Bigger
  • Sketchnoting, by Definition – Accessible to All

Copyright 2025 LorraineKasyan.com | Site design handcrafted by Station Seven

 

Loading Comments...