I prefer Dark Lord of the WAN, myself.

But seriously, as the size of schools grow, it is more and more difficult to 
maintain a network environment and have any other day to day involvement with 
the school.


---------- Original Message ----------------------------------
From: "Richardson,Tony" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Reply-To: info-tech@aea8.k12.ia.us
Date:  Tue, 6 Mar 2007 11:19:59 -0600

I gotta agree with you... where did the term Tech Coordinator come from?
Shouldn't it now be changed to Network Administrator? After all we don't
change the light bulbs in light fixtures and that's technology isn't it?

 

________________________________

From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of George Tuttle
Sent: Tuesday, March 06, 2007 11:14 AM
To: info-tech@aea8.k12.ia.us
Subject: [info-tech] forced updates

 

Techs:

 

            Thanks for all the responses to my posting. That was my last
"stirrem up" posting before retirement. As some of you know, I am
retiring completely on June 30th. I will be able to spend more time
driving my 30 "A" and no time worrying about "forced updates". My first
computer class was on a mainframe terminal in 1965 so I've seen a lot of
changes in 42 years. I assumed a part-time tech coordinator (I never did
know where that title originated) role in 1980 and the rest is history.
It's been a fun and sometimes stressful run. I'm kinda glad its over and
yet I'm sure I will miss it. I have a couple of concerns as I pass on
the baton.

            There are a few people left that started out as teachers and
then for various reasons, became computer coordinators. The
microcomputer swept through our society like a firestorm! Schools as
well as society in general were caught off-guard. Schools were called on
to "teach" our society about microcomputers but had no staff or hardware
to do it. No standards existed. To assume the title of computer
coordinator, all you needed was a little knowledge and a lot of guts.
The one good thing was that most computer coordinators were classroom
teachers at one time or another. Although many mistakes were made, much
of the beginning work was based on educational principles. For example,
applications were not taught for many years. I taught programming
(anyone remember Applesoft BASIC or CP/M BASIC) and moved on to PASCAL
and different versions of C.

            After a few years, applications such as Wordstar, Visicalc,
and dBase started to dominate the commercial market. Schools were then
expected to teach applications. The third year I taught Applewriter,
PFS-file, and Advanced Visicalc. The fourth year I taught /// E-Z
Pieces, the forerunner of Appleworks, on Apple /// computers. Here I
was, a person who could hardly type 20 wpm, teaching students how to
type. Fortunately that corrected itself with the elimination of
typewriters and the introduction of computers and Wordperfect which
ruled the business world. I moved from teaching into keeping the
computer systems running that were used to teach applications. 

            Since 1991, I have spent the lion's share of my time
supporting computers and gradually shifting to the most time supporting
our network. I went from the red books of Novell through all the
versions of NT server, 3.5, 3.51, 4, 2000, and now 2003. Through all of
these major transitions I had to keep reminding myself that supporting
sound education was really my job. In other words, the schools' computer
network was not there to provide me with a job but to make the school
staff more effective in doing their job. Herein is my biggest concern.
As the role of computer coordinator has shifted more to the technical
side, I see the possibility of losing focus on the real reason we have
computers and computer networks in schools. Just a caveat.

            Enough ranting. In the eternal words of Bob Hope, I think,
"Thanks for the memories."

 

George



 
           
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