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About
Dick Parsons
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Dick
Parsons is a Professional Development Manager and Social
Studies Curriculum specialist at the Institute
for Learning Technologies, Columbia University.
Prior to coming to ILT he was a teacher, Instructional Leader
and consultant in the Public School system in upstate New
York where he taught various social studies courses for
more than thirty years. |
In addition
to his career as a teacher, Dick Parsons is a member of the National
Faculty of the Coalition of Essential Schools and served as Director
of the Westchester Regional Center for Collaborative Education.
In this capacity he was able to sharpen his skills as a facilitator
in professional development while extending his understanding
of the complex nature of institutional change.
As a teacher
he was awarded several grants intended to provide for investigations
into sensible ways to integrate the latest technologies in the
support of teaching and learning. With his students he conducted
on-line electronic seminars and recounted those experiences in
"Students in Cyberspace" (1997), published by the New
York State Association for Supervision and Curriculum Development.
Perhaps his most satisfying experience in public school teaching
occurred as a result of funding from the Westchester Educational
Coalition which provided a grant intended to initiate an alternative
environmental educational experience for high school seniors.
Students in that course spent the year investigating, documenting
and photographing the natural and human history of Ward Pound
Ridge Reservation in upper Westchester County, New York, and completed
their year by publishing their work. Their efforts appeared both
as a book and on a student-created Website: The Senior Research
Seminar in Environmental Studies. Sales from their book continue
to subsidize the course.
Dick Parsons
is currently working with teachers in the Eiffel Project to develop
technology-supported activities thoughtfully integrated into the
public school curriculum. He is also the curriculum specialist
with the New Deal Network where his attention is focused on the
development of student-centered activities using the archive of
primary materials available on the site.
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