Dr. Matthew Haas, Deputy Superintendent of Albemarle County Public Schools, today announced that Ira Socol, who has been serving as the school division’s interim Executive Director for Technologies and Innovation, has been named the division’s Chief Technology and Innovation Officer. The appointment is effective immediately.
“Last July, we asked Ira to lead our technology department in its focus on providing quality holistic learning environments to support teachers and students. That includes not just the application of forward edge technologies in the classroom, but also how space is designed and utilized. The influence of his work is reflected in learning environments now more closely aligned with individual student interests and needs and an increase in the broad array of choices students have in how they learn,” Haas said.
Socol will continue to oversee the division’s Department of Learning Engineering, Access, and Design (LEAD) in its strategic direction and in the use of technologies and programs that improve the access students have to a wide range of learning resources.
“Our mission is to create environments in which contemporary learning for every child can flourish,” Socol says. “All of us in LEAD are engineers and educators. In our partnership with teachers and administrators, our goal is to increase opportunities for students, expand their potential for future success, and close current opportunity gaps,” he added.
Among the programs Socol is supporting is the division’s High School Center pilot that is opening in August. The center will focus on project-based learning and student internship opportunities.
“There will be no bells to signal the end of a class or structural limits on the learning experiences offered to students. An important part of our approach is a redesign of the environment, both in terms of the physical space and where and when learning actually takes place,” he said.
He also is managing the division’s countywide initiative to bring broadband access to student homes not currently able to access this service.
Socol joined Albemarle County Public Schools in 2013 in support of the division’s Design 2015 initiative, which focused on project-based and collaborative learning programs across schools. A year later, he became the division’s Assistant Director of Educational Technology. In that role, he shaped the installation of software packages on student computers adaptable to individual learning styles and needs. Examples include multiple text-to-speech reading and speech-to-text dictation programs, multiple calculators, and creative tools for art and music. He also helped develop strategies for teachers to engage learners through interactive technologies, connectivity, project/problem/passion-based learning, and student choice and comfort in the classroom.
Socol was selected in 2017 by the Center for Digital Education, a national organization whose mission is to “nurture a community of thought leaders who are rethinking education with technology as the catalyst,” as one of its 30 top technologists, transformers and trailblazers. He is known internationally for his “Toolbelt Theory,” a systemic approach to providing Universal Design for Learning, and has presented his research on globally open technology and contemporary learning spaces.
He has taught at Michigan State and Grand Valley State universities and at Pratt Institute. He also was a consultant for assistive technology for Michigan’s Vocational Rehabilitation Agency. He received his Bachelor of Arts from Grand Valley State University and holds certifications in Assistive Technology from the University of California at Northridge and in Employment Training from Michigan State University.