Technology in the Classroom 2003 Contest
Announcing the Winners!

Grand Prize Winner
Good Nutrition Webquest
Joyce Burns
Egg Harbor Township Intermediate School
(Webquest for Grades 3 to 5)

Category 1: Grades Pre-K to 2

Long-term Project – First Prize
My Arctic Adopted Animal
Teri Gragg and Maureen Guenther Baldwin
Brigantine Elementary School
Category 2: Grades 3 to 5

Short-term Project – First Prize
Grandparents R Great
Kathy Fox
Brigantine North Middle School

Long-Term Project – First Prize
Box of Chocolates - Math is Sweet!
Karen Antunes
Brigantine North Middle School
Category 3: Grades 6 to 8
Long-term Project First Prize
WWII Living History Project
Sherry Liepe
Attales School
Absecon School District
Short-term Project First Prize
Using Nets in Geometry

Carla Hockenbury
Davies Middle School
Hamilton School District
Category 4: Grades 9 to 12

Long-term Project – First Prize
Marketing and Promoting Business
Monica Masi
Atlantic County Vocational Technical School

Other Entries

Paying Monthly Bills
Anne Walters
Greater Egg Harbor Regional High School District

Writing to a Picture for English as a Second Language (ESL) Students
Mary Emilie Steinacker
Brigantine North Middle School

Integrating Black History with Math, Science and Technology
Miriam Martin
Pleasantville Public School District

My Prediction is.... I Present to You!
Kaisha Medina
Washington Avenue School
International Email
Mary Rydzewski
Somers Point Public Schools
Million Dollar Project
Carol Ferguson
Northfield Community School
Internet Intro
Craig Kahn
Ventnor Public Schools
Alphabet Autobiographies
Carol Brown
Ventnor Middle School
Photoshop Colorization
John Booth
Brigantine North Middle School
Shifting, Stretching and Reflecting Functions
Charles Walters
Greater Egg Harbor Regional High School District

The Southern Regional ETTC encourages the creative incorporation of technology in the classroom to meet the New Jersey Core Curriculum Content Standards (NJ CCCS). The ETTC wishes to build on the many exciting ideas and resources available today in South Jersey, and also wants to foster the growth of new ideas on how technology fits in K-12 education. The annual contest has brought us a bountiful harvest of great ideas - browse the winning ideas from past years at www.ettc.net/contest/

Deadline: April 28, 2003

Guidelines Criteria Online Application Evaluation Rubric

Contest Guidelines

The contest attracts entries that are brief lessons designed to last just a few days as well as large-scale projects that span a few months. Teachers can submit entries to be judged in one of three separate technology integration concepts:

1. Best Teacher-Created Webquest
2. Best short-term lesson (5 or fewer class periods)
3. Best long-term lesson (more than 5 class periods)

Teachers can submit entries in one of four categories:

1. Instruction suitable for Grades Pre-K through 2
2. Instruction suitable for Grades 3 through 5
3. Instruction suitable for Grades 6 through 8
4. Instruction suitable for Grades 9 through 12

If sufficient entries are received and the judging panel determines that entries are of high quality, one first-prize winner may be chosen for each category and concept grouping. One grand-prize winner will be chosen from among the first-prize winners. Second and third-level prizes will be awarded only if a significant number of entries are received within a particular category and concept.

The ETTC expects to award first prizes valued at approximately $500 and a grand prize valued at approximately $1,500. Prize details will be posted on this page.

The contest is open only to teachers and staff members of schools and school districts that are members of the Southern Regional ETTC Consortium.

Participants agree to give the Southern Regional ETTC rights (including the presentation of student-created supporting materials) to reproduce the entries for distribution to other teachers and posting on the ETTC website.

The contest is judged by a committee that includes several members of the Southern Regional ETTC Curriculum Committee. (Persons interested in serving as judges are encouraged to contact Ms. Anu Vedantham, Director, Southern Regional ETTC at (609) 652-4931.)

Judging Criteria

  1. Clear Objectives and Goals: The application should clearly explain what students will learn and why. Who is the audience? What does the lesson accomplish?
  2. Organization: Clear sense of beginning and ending, and orderly sequence of activities.
  3. Originality and Creativity: reflects original work by the participants. Lessons should be built around original ideas.
  4. Easily Replicated or Adapted: Reproducible in another teacher's classroom.The lesson should clearly convey to another teacher how to conduct the lesson from scratch in her or her classroom.
  5. Details/Specific Activities. The application should provide sufficient detail about proposed activities. When possible, we recommend providing sample worksheets, student activity forms and assignments.
  6. Relevance to Standards: Explanation of how the NJ CCCS are addressed. What standards are addressed? Are the connections between the lesson and specific standards clear?
  7. Technology Enhances the Lesson: Technology improves an otherwise pedagogically sound lesson.Technology should not be used "for technology's sake" - its role and contribution to the learning process should be clear. Technology use should be integrated throughout the lesson, and should not seem like an after-thought.
  8. Active use of Technology by Students: Student involvement in technology use should be clear and substantial. Activities where students actively use and learn from technology use should be prominent. Samples of student work are often a helpful supplement here.
  9. Provides Opportunity for Assessment: Assessment of students clearly defined. How does the teacher know what the students have learned? What content has been learned? What technology skills have been learned? How is learning reinforced through assessment?

Judging Rubric

The criteria below need not be weighted equally. The Judging Committee evaluates all entries on the criteria below, and determines the winning entries through discussion.

  Completely Demonstrates Mostly Demonstrates Partially Demonstrates Minimally / Does Not Demonstrate
1. Clear Objectives & Goals        
2. Organization        
3. Originality / Creativity        
4. Easily Replicated / Adapted        
5. Details / Specific Activities        
6. Relevance to Standards        
7. Technology Enhances the Lesson        
8. Active Use of Technology by Students        
9. Provides Opportunity for Assessment        

Participants can view winning entries from previous years through the main Contest Page at www.ettc.net/contest