“By deconstructing learning science and making the connection to technology, Hess and Saxberg have outlined key strategies for school leaders as they work to transform traditional practices in schools. Whether it is whole-school reform or targeted interventions, principals will be motivated to rethink or're-engineer' the use of technology to optimize teaching and learning.”

—Gail Connelly, Executive Director

National Association of Elementary School Principals

“Everyone touching education—from educators to school leaders and from investors and philanthropists to entrepreneurs—needs to understand how to think like a learning engineer and read this book. Technology holds unbelievable promise to be a part of the solution to transform education, but it won't happen unless all parties attack its implementation smartly. Breakthrough Leadership in a Digital Age points the way forward.”

—Michael B. Horn, Co-Founder & Education Executive Director

Clayton Christensen Institute

“Too often, our current structures fail to promote and support learning engineering. Rick Hess and Bror Saxberg have designed a compelling guide for the road ahead.”

—William Hite, Superintendent

School District of Philadelphia, PA

Reboot student learning the right way!

Today's most successful school leaders are truly “learning engineers”: creative thinkers who redefine their problems and design new ways to better serve kids' success. Technology has a critical role, but it's the creative reinvention of schools, systems, and classrooms that has to come first. In this powerful book, best-selling author and education policy expert Rick Hess and chief learning officer Bror Saxberg show you how to become your school's learning engineer. Using cutting-edge research about learning science as a framework, you'll: Identify specific learning problems that need solving; Devise smarter ways to address them; Implement technology-enabled, not technology-driven, solutions

Reengineering with Technology

Reengineering with technology

Technology can be a powerful lever for rethinking schools and systems. But it's the rethinking that should occupy the spotlight. As education leadership authority Michael Fullan has noted, “There is no evidence that technology is a particularly good entry point for whole system reform.”1 Technology can provide tools to help deliver knowledge, support students, extend and deepen instruction, and refashion cost structures. Unfortunately, too many educators, industry figures, and technology enthusiasts seem to imagine that technology itself will be a difference-maker.

Jared Covili, a professional development trainer in Utah who helps schools integrate technology, sees many schools buy technology without a strategy for use. The result: Nothing really changes. He says, “A school might run out and buy 200 iPads ...

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