Friday, May 28, 2010

Exams and Wii bowling: The last day

Had a wonderful last day today with my students. I noticed a few singing and dancing along with the surround sound system "Our song is the slamming screen door...". The jubilee that is the end of any school year. I remember the liberating feeling of the great release of stress as your stressful exams are finished and you have the whole summer to look forward to. I was very excited to receive some goodbye letters and even a collective group gift box with goodies in it. You guys rock.

Thanks to my tech students for making my job so fun. You're a great group, and would love to hear from you in the future after all your hard work pays off. Look me up in 5-10 years.

Tuesday, May 25, 2010

Stay Focused Seniors...

Just had a few seniors drop by to say goodbye (I'm referring to YOU bright yellow shirt and Hurley). Of course, it goes without saying that I wish success towards all of the graduating seniors.

I encourage all of you to stay focused on what your biggest goals are. It may be a certain degree followed by a certain job. You probably know some people that did NOT stay focused on those goals and got distracted by the many *ahem* opportunities that presented themselves at college or in their new living scenarios.

"Just having some fun" ruined a lot of great potential careers, so stay focused. I want to hear from you all once you have a great job (and free tickets to cool events, I accept those too.)

Mr. Suter

Monday, May 24, 2010

Bittersweet Goodbye's

I've been notifying students today that I'm officially leaving the Green and Gold. (I don't name schools/students/etc.) It's a bittersweet thing, as I've enjoyed and appreciated the staff and students so much. I hope the students here realize how good they have it, and how big of an opportunity it is to learn without distractions like drug raids, daily fights in the classroom/hallway, and gang affiliations.

To the tech club members, and tech class students: stay in tech! Regardless of who teaches it next year, there are opportunities for you if you just keep working with the technology every chance you get...in class is one of those chances. You'll be missed dearly, and would love to hear from you guys in the future.

Never stop being a student, even after you graduate high school, college, or beyond.

Mr. Suter

Sunday, May 16, 2010

Digital Natives, Immigrants, and Aborigines



I read Aldon Hynes’s article (Reflections of a Digital Aborigine) that discusses several areas that could effect my high school computer tech class students.

Hyne's explains the (somewhat tired) concept of digital natives and digital immigrants, and considers himself therefore a digital aborigine given that he has been programming since the 60’s. The interesting part was the reference to a case in which some “digital native” high school girls beat a girl who was “trash talking” on MySpace, filmed it, and put it on the Internet. When teacher John Herman discussed the event in his class with his students, they said what the girls did wrong was video tape it and put it on the Internet. That’s what they did wrong? How strange that they beat the girl, and the worst part to these students was the videotaping of it. My (not research supported) feeling is that these digital natives should be re-categorized as naturalized desensitized digital squatters. Some of them assume ownership of these powerful technology with a misguided vision of what technology is, can do, and outght to be used for. I say misguided as they are products of their environments as much as their upbringing (Psychology students: see Nature vs. Nurture).
 Maybe They have been so overrun by the pace of the technology that they don’t appreciate the humanity of people that exist behind the 1’s and 0’s.

On another tangent, Hyne references the original “did you know…” video on YouTube. I followed that to the 3rd rendition, located here:

Near the end of the video, it says “By 2013, computers will have the computational ability of the human brain”.  That’s wonderful if I just need to add numbers. The power of the computer, though proportionately enormous when compared to decades past, has a long way to go to get to the human brain. Computers can’t even reliably get past the CAPTCHA images used to keep auto registrations on Gmail. An elementary kid can do that. When the computer CAN do that, the image can change to a dog overlayed with distorted numbers/letters. “Type the name of the animal and the letters you see.” Let’s see Mr. Compuer get passed THAT one.

Monday, May 10, 2010

Adobe Certified...Students?

Link to Recording

This school in Florida has Adobe Certified Experts (ACE) that teach students Adobe products (Photoshop, Flash, InDesign, After Effects, etc.) to the level that students have the opportunity to take the Adobe Certified Associate Exam.They then have college credit and are employable right out of school...


  • Teachers are ACA or ACE certified
  • Students can take the Adobe exams at school
  • Cheaper Adobe Suite site licenses
  • Student drop out rates fall while gpa's rise accrossed ALL curriculums

Listen to the recording (uses Adobe Connect Pro Meeting):
Link to Recording