Shortly after successfully deploying laptop computers to middle and high school students in Kent, Wash., in 2006, Thuan Nguyen went to his superintendent with a surprising proposal: The technology chief for the 27,000-student district wanted a half-dozen instructional technology specialists taken away from his department and reassigned to Kent鈥檚 chief academic officer.
鈥淭he equipment was out there, the initial professional development was done, and a lot of the basics were taken care of,鈥 said Mr. Nguyen, now an assistant superintendent and chief digital strategist for the district. 鈥淚 thought it best if those resources were immediately available to the academics department so they could direct the day-to-day transition鈥 to digital classroom instruction.
School technology experts say the highly regarded Kent district鈥檚 flexible staffing arrangement represents an unusual solution to an increasingly common challenge: how to get districts鈥 academic and technology departments to forget old turf wars and start working together.
Such collaboration means a changing role鈥攁nd, more importantly, a new mindset鈥攆or chief academic officers.
It鈥檚 not necessary to become an expert on fiber-optic cable, hardware specifications, or technical interoperability standards. But modern CAOs do need to be familiar with the basics of how networks, devices, and software operate.
They also need to know what questions to ask of their technology counterparts, and be willing to listen to the answers. Perhaps most critically of all, digital-era CAOs need to embrace 鈥渟ystems thinking,鈥 making sure that technology and academic experts are working hand in hand on big decisions, said Thomas B. Ryan, the chief executive officer for the eLearn Institute, a Wyomissing, Pa.-based nonprofit that consults with districts on effective use of digital learning tools.
鈥淚t鈥檚 hard when districts are slashing budgets and departments are competing against each other to keep their funds,鈥 said Mr. Ryan, a former chief information officer for the 90,000-student Albuquerque, N.M., public schools. 鈥淏ut CAOs really need to embrace a culture that allows for a more trusting partnership and a project-management approach.鈥
Potential Problems
There can be harsh consequences when a district鈥檚 academic and technology departments don鈥檛 work well together.
The high-profile meltdown of the 641,000-student Los Angeles Unified district鈥檚 ambitious 1-to-1 iPad initiative showed the danger of unrealistic expectations and a failure to balance the desire for new technology with what鈥檚 actually needed for effective classroom use.
Mr. Ryan said there are countless other examples of districts buying new computing devices that can鈥檛 support new online tests, 1-to-1 computing initiatives that crash because schools don鈥檛 have enough bandwidth, digital instructional materials that don鈥檛 align with academic standards, and classroom-administration tools that teachers never use.
Too often, district decisionmaking involves 鈥渢echnology on one side of the table, educators on the other, and they just lob verbal bombs at each other,鈥 he said.
The position of instructional technology specialist highlights the divide. The role is relatively new. In many districts, the question of whether the people fulfilling it should be housed in academics is a source of major friction.
Partly, the debate is about what鈥檚 best for schools. Often, it reflects a larger struggle between chief academic and chief technology officers over money, power, and control.
And the friction is often exacerbated by deep-seated differences in how the two types of leaders think, talk, and operate.
鈥淎 lot of instructional people look at technology [leaders] as 鈥榯he person who is stopping me from doing what I want to do,鈥欌夆 Mr. Ryan said. 鈥淎nd the [technology leaders] see the instructional folks with their Ph.D.s and think they鈥檙e living in a dream world.鈥
For Mr. Nguyen, the Kent district鈥檚 chief digital strategist, the move to cede direct control of some instructional technology staff was a way to ensure that the input of technology experts was actually more valued when the district鈥檚 academic experts were reviewing and purchasing new digital instructional materials, drafting new training materials, and hiring new staff.
Merri M. Rieger was the CAO in Kent when the district鈥檚 staff-sharing arrangement began.
鈥淚t was an alien partnership at first,鈥 she said. 鈥淏ut I began to see that technology is a valuable tool only if you teach others how to use it.鈥
Now as superintendent of the 14,000-student Renton schools in Washington, Ms. Rieger wants to bring the same model to her new district.
And her replacement as chief academic officer in Kent, Louanne H. Decker, quickly embraced the collaborative approach of her predecessor.
The job of an academic chief is no longer about ordering 鈥渂ig boxes of books and giving 30 to each teacher and away they go,鈥 Ms. Decker said.
Now, she said, CAOs have to be on top of access codes and compatibility concerns, software updates and data-privacy laws, and the changing ways students are learning.
Earlier this school year, as Kent prepared to expand its 1-to-1 computing initiative to elementary schools, Ms. Decker agreed to pass the district鈥檚 instructional technology staff back to the IT department.
Spurring Collaboration
The U.S. Department of Education is among those trying to spur collaboration between CAOs and their technology counterparts.
A series of 鈥渇uture ready鈥 summits the department is hosting this spring will focus on helping districts develop comprehensive digital-learning plans. Participating school systems are expected to send a team鈥攊deally consisting of both academic and technology leaders.
鈥淭he best CAOs are saying, 鈥淥h, wait, I don鈥檛 have to be encumbered by the trappings of what we鈥檝e done before,鈥欌夆 said Zachary A. Chase, a technology coordinator for Colorado鈥檚 30,000-student St. Vrain Valley schools who is on loan to the federal Education Department as a fellow.
But to reimagine what teaching and learning looks like, Mr. Chase said, CAOs need to be in regular conversations with technology experts.
In the most forward-thinking districts, he said, that is happening by design. More often, it鈥檚 spurred by problems that arise after big technology purchases.
What it means to be a chief academic officer is changing as a result.
鈥淒o they need to be out there laying fiber in the ground? No,鈥 he said. 鈥淏ut CAOs need to be able to hold their own in those conversations.鈥