Is there a possibility of structuring more like the unions and keep the
goals and ideals in tact?  Set up locals and the local officers are
responsible to make it to the meetings at Heartland or to get the
information out to the members of the local.  Just $.02.  I would love to be
able to attend meetings at Heartland, but no matter how I slice it, it's a
4-hour (or better) drive from Waterloo.  

 

From: tech-geeks-boun...@tech-geeks.org
[mailto:tech-geeks-boun...@tech-geeks.org] On Behalf Of Hunt, Jeffrey
Sent: Tuesday, September 14, 2010 8:22 AM
To: tech-geeks@tech-geeks.org
Subject: [tech-geeks] IL CTO

 

Thanks for the discussion about IL CTO membership and participation.  Right
now the group's membership is mainly focused in DuPage, Kane, Lake, and Cook
counties, with other members peppered across the state.  The individuals -
Guy Ballard, Jim Flanagan, Jim Gerry, Connie Hodson, Pete Knopf, Jeff Romani
and me -- who wrote the organization's goals, formed the original
corporation, and gained 501 (c)(3) status work in these counties.  We met to
address professional development needs of our peer CTOs.  In our jobs we are
asked to provide professional development for many groups in our districts,
but it seemed as though nobody was interested in our professional growth.
In meeting we promoted the group with our geographic peers.  From early in
the organizational meetings we knew addressing the professional development
of all Illinois K-12 CTOs would be difficult.  There is a large potential
group across the state.  We've tried a variety of means of bringing in CTOs
who are not from the area.

 

In those early discussions, several of the founders were at or nearing
retirement, but we thought that we could anchor the start-up of the
organization and hand it off to the next group of CTOs for growth and
stability.  Only three of the founders are left on the current board of
directors as this handoff occurs.  Jim Flanagan encouraged Jim Peterson to
run for the board.  Jim P is the president-elect and will serve his term
starting in 2011.  Keith Gillette, the current president, has several goals,
including improving member services on the web site, expanding membership,
and providing consistent electronic connections to the on-site meeting.  The
first step is immediately outside the membership area - that means the
northwestern part of the state and north central; so the proposed meetings
at Starved rock and Bloomington.

 

On April 15, 2011, the group, through Jim Peterson's guidance, will be
meeting at Heartland Community College as an outreach to potential members.
Sure, that's far from Belleville, but not much farther than a drive from
Waukegan.  We have members in the Chicago area who have never attended a
meeting, but they think that membership is important.  Proximity has nothing
to do with participation.  Do you want to be part of a group that is about
CTO professional development?  Personally, I belong to several professional
organizations, volunteer on their committees, and participate through the
Internet and the telephone, but I do not attend their conferences. 

 

We've had discussions about having remote sites where members can collect to
network with peers and participate in the meeting.  It takes somebody at a
location to reserve the room, order lunch, set up a projector and connect
their computer to the Internet and the meeting.  We have one open board slot
in 2011.  Several have written about their motivation, interest, and issues
of resistance on this list about joining the group.  Jim Peterson, as the
coordinator of the slate for board elections, may be calling you to run for
that position.  To be a board member, you have to be a member of IL CTO.
Your first step to bring meetings farther south is to be a member.  Join
today!

 

-=-

Jeff

 

Jeffrey L. Hunt, Ed.D.

Director, E-Learning

Treasurer, Illinois Chief Technology Officers, NFP

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