Thursday, December 3, 2015

Where It All Began



My hope is that this blog will serve as a road map showing others and myself where I have been. You know how in Google Maps you can see everywhere you've traveled, stops you've made, pictures you've taken, etc.? No? Little creepy?  Not if you love Google (like me) - doesn't bother me a bit! Anyways, my hope is that this blog will show the stops I've made, the struggles I've endured and the progress I make.

I've opened the digital can of worms that is coding and programming. This is a good can of worms - an intriguing, trending and interestingly complex can of worms. Working in a forward-thinking K-12 school district, I've been exposed to the need for coding in education and the opportunities that are available for our students with these skills. I've developed the desire to understand this field and learn to code myself.

My current timeline looks a little like this:

  1. Begin a pace-yourself coding camp

    I've started FreeCodeCamp and made some good progress! I started last week and got hooked. I am now trying to find time to devote to working on this camp on a daily basis, with a short term goal of creating a rockin' personal portfolio website, which comes somewhere after around 70 hours of work in the camp.

  2. Write Masters research paper
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    I have completed 29 hours of my Masters in Secondary Education. The last hour I need for my degree is my research paper, which I must have finished by May, 2016. I've got a decent start, identifying an outline and a good list of resources. I am to the point where I need to specifically dedicate the time and effort to do the research and write the paper. I'm sure I'll include the final piece on here once complete. My problem statement (as it stands - anyone who has written a research paper knows this is a revolving process of fine tuning and refining):

    What knowledge and resources do K-12 students need to develop coding skills to become literate in the language of code?

  3. Do all the above while working full time and raising a family


    I wish there were more hours in the day! The simple math (on average, not an exact science here):
      168: hours in a week
     -  56: hours of sleep (assuming 8 hours a night - this is where I will be able to find some time!)
     -  45: hours working (varies, but let's go with this for arguments sake)
     -  10: hours drive time to/from work (I live about an hour away)
     -    7: hours preparing and eating meals (again, varies, but for arguments sake)
     -    5: hours for gym/basketball/softball/general exercise
     -    4: hours for church on Sunday and volunteering (Upwards Sports ministry, etc.)
        41: hours for everything else

    At face value, this seems like a lot. But when you look at what "everything else" includes, such as raising a family and spending quality time with them, the hours disappear quickly! But, that is the game of life, right? Everyone does it! Everyone is busy, everyone either finds time or makes time for the things that are important to them.


Speaking of life and things that are important, here's a little more background on me:

  • Personal:

    • husband
    • father
    • part time basketball/softball player (once a week, if I'm lucky)
    • have-a-good-time family man
    • music man, all genres from piano tunes (including soundtrack hits - Feather is a personal favorite) to Five Finger Death Punch, pending on the day/activity.

  • Professional:

    • Official title: Administrative Assistant at the Oak Hills Local School District
      • I support our Superintendent, Directors and Administrators while being heavily immersed with the district's eLearning Team. While my official title can sometimes be misleading, I work with our Superintendent, District Directors and Building Administrators on projects and tasks, using my skills in technology and efficiency to benefit the district where possible. I do a large portion of work with our Director of eLearning and Technology, playing a big role on that team, including presenting at state-wide conferences (OETC, Ohio Google Apps Summit, etc).

    • Google Guru

      • We us Google Apps for Education. I drank the Kool-Aid. I'm hooked and could not do life (professional or personal) without Google. I support our staff on our Google journey - it's an awesome ride!
      • I am especially proficient with Google Spreadsheets and enjoy using formulas to make them work in ways people don't always think. I've also been known to format spreadsheets in ways so that they act as editable forms, clean and simple for the end user.

    • Amateur coder

      • Work in progress... stay tuned.

  • Aspiring:

    • Technology Director
    • Rock Star Coder
    • Teacher
    • Mentor
    • Coach
    • Life-long Learner
    • Greatest dad and husband in the world!

Looking forward to where this journey and the future takes me!

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