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Are You Teaching the Right Stuff Panel Discussion

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Title: Are You Teaching the Right Stuff Panel Discussion


1
Are You Teaching the Right Stuff? Panel
Discussion
Wednesday, January 21, 2009, 10 AM
ESTDial-in 312-878-0211 Access Code
331-340-122 Webinar ID 461-210-238
Host James Stanger, Ph.D. Chief Certification
Architect,CIW Program
2
About our Host
Dr. James Stanger Chief Certification
Architect, Certification Partners
  • James is the primary visionary,
    evangelist and developer for the CIW, CTP and
    CCNT certifications. His wide range of expertise
    includes certification development, curriculum
    design, Web design, network security auditing,
    and Linux system administration. An award-winning
    author, James has written titles for OReilly,
    McGraw-Hill, Prentice-Hall, IBM, Wiley, and
    Elsevier. His writings have been translated into
    over a dozen languages. He has designed
    certifications and curriculum for Symantec, IBM,
    CompTIA, and the Telephony Industry Association
    (TIA). Currently, he is Chair of the Linux
    Professional Institute (LPI) Advisory Council and
    sits on CompTIA's Network Advisory Committee.
    James received a Bachelor of Arts degree and a
    Master of Arts degree from Brigham Young
    University, and a Doctorate from the University
    of California, Riverside.

3
Agenda
  • Who are we?
  • CIW
  • Today's panel
  • A look at today's IT workplace
  • How do I make students competitive?
  • What skills deserve my focus?
  • Some answers from our panel . . .
  • Individually
  • As a group

4
About CIW
  • Skills-based education program
  • Courses and certification exams
  • Web development
  • Web design
  • Vendor neutral
  • The best vendor applications, as judged by
    industry
  • Open source
  • Competency-based approach to education
  • Globally accepted
  • Over 175,000 courses and exams delivered
    worldwide
  • Over 120,000 certified individuals

5
More About CIW
  • The CIW (Certified Internet Web Professional)
    program is the world's fastest growing
    vendor-neutral Internet certification for the
    knowledge economy. More than a certification or a
    curriculum publisher, CIW is a Web technology
    standard adopted by academic institutions,
    governments, and businesses worldwide. CIW
    includes applications and competencies, but our
    core curriculum focuses on the foundational
    standards that sustain the infrastructure of IT,
    i.e., Web design, security, administration,
    networking, databases and enterprises.

6
Shaping the discussion
  • Perspectives
  • Community college
  • Learning center
  • University
  • All of the above use advisory councils and other
    measures to keep pace with technology
  • Technologies
  • Web design
  • Internet marketing and SEO
  • Web development, databases
  • Security
  • How to teach
  • What skills should students have today?
  • What challenges exist in teaching today's
    students?

7
About our panel
  • Gay Bryant
  • Community college perspective
  • A true artist
  • Gifted designer and educator
  • Suzanne Ricci
  • A view from the learning center
  • Has forgotten more about Internet marketing than
    most will ever learn
  • Expert in e-commerce technologies and strategies
  • Daniel Benjamin
  • What on-line universities teach
  • Builder of IT education programs
  • Has insights into the IT security profession,
    gained from real-world experience
  • Sandy Cobb
  • The for-profit university perspective
  • Instructional design master
  • Distance learning expert

8
About our panel (continued)?
Panelist Gay Bryant Web Technology, Pellissippi
State Technical Community College (PSTCC)
  • Gay has taught for 35 years in
    post-secondary education as a business educator
    and Web design instructor. Currently, she manages
    the Web design curriculum and Web Technology
    faculty at PSTCC. Gay was instrumental in PSTCCs
    adoption of the CIW curriculum and certifications
    into their Web Technology program, and in
    establishing a state-wide articulation agreement.
    She has published several word processing
    textbooks with Time-Warner Inc. and has served as
    president of the Tennessee Business Education
    Association. Gay has degrees from the University
    of West Georgia and the University of Tennessee,
    with additional graduate work from Tennessee
    State University. She is also a studio artist,
    working as a printmaker and a painter.

9
About our panel (continued)?
Panelist Suzanne Ricci Director of
Education LaSalle Computer Learning Center
  • Suzanne has taught Web Design, E-commerce
    and Internet marketing classes to organizations
    and individuals for over a decade. As her
    education and career progressed, she became an
    accomplished Web designer with a concentration in
    SEO. Suzanne is currently writing an
    instructional book on marketing-oriented
    Web-design that emphasizes incorporating SEO into
    the initial design of a Web site. Formerly a
    corporate trainer, Suzanne has been key to
    designing LaSalle's success as an instructor-led
    training center. She is a CIW Certified
    Instructor and Microsoft Certified Trainer and
    holds seventeen IT certifications. Additionally,
    Suzanne has an Associates degree from the Fashion
    Institute of Technology, a Bachelors degree from
    the University of Miami, and a Masters in
    Education from the University of South Florida.

10
About our panel (continued)?
Panelist Daniel Benjamin IT Department Chair,
American Public University System (APUS)
  • Daniel has over fifteen years of
    experience providing IT and management education
    and consulting solutions in the public and
    private sectors. His clients include the White
    House, the U.S. Senate, the Department of
    Defense, the Department of Treasury, the Federal
    Aviation Administration, and the Department of
    Education. He implemented the IT Department for
    APUS and developed five degree programs. An
    author of published books on Java and Oracle,
    Daniel developed the implementation strategy for
    President Bushs CFO Act of 1990 and a SCORM
    compliant, learning-objects-based e-learning
    solution in support of President Clintons
    Distance Learning Initiative. A teacher of
    database, analysis, enterprise application
    development, and IT management, Daniel has a
    Masters degree from the prestigious Indian
    Institute of Technology.

11
About our panel (continued)?
Panelist Sandy Cobb Curriculum Manager, School
of Information Systems Technology, Kaplan
University
  • Sandy has been professionally involved in
    technology, administration, pedagogy and
    instructional design for over 10 years. She has
    written training manuals for custom software,
    designed a computer-training center, and designed
    a virtual classroom serving 40 branch offices
    with on-demand training. Additionally, Sandy
    implemented a program of study for Web site
    design and has been heavily involved in designing
    custom training solutions for college
    instructors. She continues to design and update
    curriculum for community college students of Web
    technologies, and is an accomplished writer and
    editor for various publishers including McGraw
    Hill. Sandy received a Bachelor of Science in
    Information Technology, Graphics and Multimedia
    from Capella University, and a Master of
    Education in Learning Systems Technology from the
    University of Arkansas.

12
Today's workplace
  • Salaries lower, jobs tougher to get
  • Students want killer app skills from us
  • How do I give them those skills today?
  • What skills deserve our focus as educators?
  • How do I best teach these skills to an
    increasingly diverse group of students?
  • We've got some answers from our panel . . .

13
Individual and Panel Questions
14
Gay Bryant
  • Today's designer usually needs to know more than
    a couple of applications or design steps. You're
    in a unique position as both an artist and an
    educator. What skills are most relevant to
    designers today?
  • Web designers are in the business of
    communicating.  No matter how beautiful or snazzy
    a site is, if it doesn't communicate your
    message, it is not doing its job.  A
    well-designed site needs to have seamless
    navigation--this should be intuitive and
    subliminal.  A book we use in one of our design
    courses is Don't Make Me Think by Steve Krug, and
    that should be a mantra of good design. Good
    designers need to tip their hats in both
    directions--have a lovely, functional site that
    draws you in but loads fast and doesn't make you
    think about the platform, graphics, visuals,
    fonts, navigation, etc.  The basic skills we
    teach to give students the tools they need are
    HTML, XML, CSS, Photoshop, Dreamweaver,
    Fireworks, PHP/ASP, Acrobat, and Flash, with
    courses in project management, audio/video for
    the web, ecommerce, and accessibility.

15
Gay Bryant, continued
  • Job placement is very important to Pellissippi.
    As your students graduate and look for jobs, what
    kinds of skills are employers asking for?
  • The cadre of courses and applications we
    teach is based on what our area employers are
    saying we need to teach. Our Program Advisory
    Board, made up of area professionals and
    educators in web design, meets twice a year. We
    count on them to let us know what they demand
    from potential employees in our area and what
    skills and applications we should be
    teaching. For example, we started out with our
    curriculum 8 years ago emphasizing two tracks 
    web design and web development.  Outsourcing and
    other factors made web development jobs scarce,
    so we changed the curriculum to emphasize only
    design.  Last year, our board recommended adding
    back the web development option--with courses in
    ASP/PHP (with CIW's Server Administration
    certification exam), XML, XHTML, DHTML, which we
    have, along with courses in web accessibility. 

16
Gay Bryant, continued
  • How should a designer supplement his or her
    skills base to remain relevant in the workplace
    today?
  • Continual professional development and
    networking with other designers are excellent
    ways.  We have many working designer students who
    take courses to update their skills or knowledge
    of applications, or to get the CIW certifications
    to enhance their resumes.  Our college graciously
    provides all online Web Technology students a
    subscription to the lynda.com video training
    library--a wonderful resource to learn the latest
    version of a software or to train in something
    new. Webinars like this provide a good format to
    exchange ideas and network, as do on-ground
    conferences such as the annual CIW Conference. 
  • We require our students to complete an
    internship doing real web-design for a company
    before they graduate. Social skills, meeting
    deadlines, and project management skills take on
    a whole new meaning when it's 'for real' rather
    than fabricated in a classroom. Not only do the
    students refine their technical skills, but they
    have a chance to hone their soft skills, as well.

17
Suzanne Ricci
  • What kind of tips do you have for job seekers,
    not only in terms of developing marketing and SEO
    skills for an employee, but in actually marketing
    themselves to potential employees?
  • Networking. Get out there and meet people.
  • What specific skills are the most important in
    today's workplace in regards to design?
  • CSS, Scripting languages, the .Net
    technologies, and Internet Marketing.
  • How has the world of SEO/SEM/PPC changed over the
    last 3 years?
  • Emphasis placed on results of a website as
    opposed to just rankings. The industry has grown
    tremendously to now include a few disciplines. We
    are starting to see people specialize. For
    example specializing in SEO or PPC or Web 2.0
    blogging, networking, etc.

18
Daniel Benjamin
  • APUS has a reputation for teaching information
    security. Clearly information security will
    remain an in-demand field in spite of our
    economic woes. What specific areas of information
    security should people focus on for their
    careers?
  • The three broad areas in Information
    Security are Information Assurance, Information
    Systems Management, and Network Security. 
    Information Assurance addresses the certification
    and accreditation of Information Systems. 
    Information Systems Management addresses
    governance, risk management, access control,
    intrusion management, and business continuity. 
    Network Security addresses the aspects of setting
    up controls and processes at the technical
    architecture level.

19
Daniel Benjamin, continued
  • You've recently adopted a Web design program
    at APUS. What two or three job skills did you
    identify as important for APUS to teach to
    students in this job market?
  • The important skills to be taught in web
    development are
  • Requirements gathering and analysis
  • Design technical and human-computer
    interaction
  • Scripting language skills (HTML, XHTML,
    JavaScript, ASP)
  • Programming language skills (C, Java)
  • Project management skills (communications and
    scope)

20
Daniel Benjamin (continued)?
  • What skills would you expect to have students
    - both young and old - to have when they sign on
    to get a degree in computer science or IT studies
    at APUS?
  • Skills that can help students enter an IT
    degree program are
  • Basic analysis or problem solving skills
    such as evaluating, analyzing, synthesizing a
    solution. 
  • Computer Literacy (games, internet, office
    applications, help desk, administration).
  • Science, technology, engineering, math
    (STEM).

21
Sandy Cobb
  • How have employer job requirements concerning
    Web technology jobs changed over the years (e.g.,
    Web design, blogging, social networking)?
  • There is demand for integration technologies
    and not static web pages. For example, most
    employees use some type of scripting language to
    develop more interactive content, be it flash,
    SQL for databases, etc. Secure access to
    employee intranets and client extranets has been
    on the rise for some time. Another area that has
    become important is the design and development of
    e-learning modules for employee training. In
    many cases, web design skills may be a base skill
    set needed for performing higher level duties,
    like e-learning development.

22
Sandy Cobb, continued
  • What areas in regards to Web design and
    development has Kaplan identified as important to
    teach?
  • XHTML, CSS, DHTML, JavaScript, animation,
    accessibility standards, Adobe Suite (cutting
    edge - CS4, Dreamweaver, Flash, Photoshop) ,
    proper website development processes, Website
    Planning, Project Management, E-commerce,
    animation, E-commerce marketing, Data-Driven
    content and working with web servers.

23
Sandy Cobb, continued
  • What are the primary challenges in teaching IT
    skills today to career changers and young
    students?
  • Bridging the gap between the two generations
    is a challenge, as well as designing for all
    learning styles. Another challenge is presenting
    material that is "cool", "hip", "buzz worthy" and
    fun for all learners.
  • Authentic or scenario based project learning
    seems to work well for students. Most people
    learn best by doing. Course level assessment is
    critical for ensuring students are mastering
    skills and concepts.

24
Panel questions
  • What steps has your educational institution taken
    to ensure that it teaches relevant skills?
  • We work with working professionals in the
    industry to ensure our students have current
    skills.
  • What advice do you wish to give to instructors
    and/or existing IT workers (including designers
    and developers to security workers) so that
    they can remain competitive in the job
    marketplace?
  • Continue to learn and practice.
  • Finally, if you had to choose one killer app
    skill to give to a student, what would it be?
  • Understanding the management of a web
    project and if you work with web design /
    development you must now know SEO.

25
Questions and Answers
  • To indicate you have a question, please find the
    Questions applet on your GoToWebinar screen,
    and send your question to the presenter.
  • For more information on the CIW Program, please
    visit
  • www.CIW-certified.com
  • And don't forget our new CIW Community page
  • www.CIWcommunity.org

26
Are You Teaching the Right Stuff?
  • See how CIW can help ensure your Web classes are
    covering the most important IT skills needed in
    todays workplace.
  • Just click below to

27
Thank You!
James Stanger, Ph.D. Chief Certification
Architect jstanger_at_certification-partners.com (888
) 303-8694
Sherylyn Klair Senior Marketing
Coordinator sklair_at_certification-partners.com (602
) 794-4134
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