Reprinted from the CDA Press/ Business Journal August 30 – Written by Devin Weeks
Geographically, the Northwest Council for Computer Education, NCCE, is helping integrate educational technology and the internet in classrooms from Avery to US Virgin Islands.
NCCE members used Palm Pilot portable computing devices to conduct their work in the early days.
CEO Dr. Heidi Rogers has been along for much of this journey.
“We started with Palm Pilots, and look where we are now,” Rogers said. “Cloud-based computing, Microsoft Teams, Google. All these focused apps that focus on specific learning tools.”
Rogers, a proud Oklahoma State University graduate, celebrates 20 years with the Northwest Council for Computer Education in September, a nonprofit organization founded in 1971 dedicated to supporting practical uses of technology in education.
“Our not-for-profit organization teaches K-12 educators and administrators how to use technology, so students are engaged and learning,” Rogers said. “We also provide professional learning at the university level.”
NCCE partners with the Idaho Association of School Administrators and the Idaho Education Technology Association. It recently partnered with the Idaho STEM Action Center 2022 Summer Institute to provide a keynote speaker for every location across the state and to provide instructional speaking sessions in Idaho Falls and Pocatello. NCCE also partners with organizations across the cou
ntry, including the Coalition of Oregon School Administrators, School Administrators of Montana, the International Society of Technology in Education, Girls Who Code, Common Sense Media and Staples. It is the largest global training partner for Microsoft and a partner in education for Google.
When Rogers began with the Northwest Council for Computer Education, she was in a volunteer role. She simultaneously worked for the University of Idaho Coeur d’Alene for 25 years. Early with the U of I, she helped launch a model technology program, Classroom 2000.
“Coeur d’Alene School District students used the UI Classroom 2000 during the day; teachers were trained in the evenings and on the weekends,” Rogers said.
This was in 1992.
“I remember plugging in the internet,” Rogers laughed.
Then she was hired by the Northwest Council for Computer Education to lead the member organization and host ed tech conferences in Spokane, WA, Portland, OR and Seattle, WA.
“I was the first full-time employee,” she said.
Today, NCCE has more than 100+ on its team, including professional learning specialists and full-time employees in over 24 states.
“I have the best team and board in the world, and they work across four time zones,” Rogers said. “We worked remotely before remote was mainstream.” Our volunteer board is made up of educational representatives from ID, MT, OR and WA.
Even though the organization’s mission began in the Northwest, its impacts are far-reaching.
“I’ve always said ‘Northwest’ just depends on where you’re standing,” Rogers said with a smile. “We’ve gone from New York City to Gallup, New Mexico. The work became so broad across the country. There are times we could be in 40 states in one year.”
The Northwest Council for Computer Education, headquartered in downtown Coeur d’Alene, hosts a large annual conference that connects educators and presenters across the country. Hundreds of sessions help attendees enhance their knowledge about how different technology and programming can transform learning experiences in the classroom.
Rogers said NCCE was the last to hold a conference in the Seattle Convention Center before COVID-19 shut down everything in 2020.
“I can solve any problem, I’ve always said,” Rogers said. “If we don’t have enough bandwidth at a conference, then we can buy more bandwidth. I can buy more pizza or more coffee. I can be a cheerleader. But that was a health risk. It was extremely hard.”
As an organization that helps people understand how to use technology, the abrupt requirement for remote learning made workload explodes during the COVID years. Rogers said when Kansas sent its teachers home, the staff had plenty of work to do.
“What happened was our team shifted to professional learning by remote. It was fascinating,” she said. “I hope society realizes that teaching isn’t easy. Our kids spend a lot of time at school. For teachers to pivot to remote learning in 2020 – now that was uncharted territory across the nation. They’re worried about their own family and kids. It just changed the whole learning environment.”
Prior to the pandemic, the Northwest Council for Computer Education began offering a full-service E-rate program to schools and libraries in Alaska, Hawaii, Idaho, Oregon, Montana, and Washington in 2016. It served both the largest district in Alaska and the smallest district in Montana — and everything in between.
Rogers said she recalls helping a rural school in Montana link to the internet.
“If you think about that wheel that goes and goes and goes, their lessons and the videos came so fast,” she said. “They were in awe.”
The Avery School District E-Rate project in 2019 brought fiber connectivity to another rural district for just less than $2.8 million. The Northwest Council for Computer Education worked with the district for more than three years to get fiber from Plummer to Calder.
Rogers said it was a game-changer for Avery School District and the 9,000 people living along the 35-mile connectivity route. We were happy to partner with the Avery School District, State Department of Education, and E-Rate resources to make this happen.
“Not only will Avery students have access to the same quality of education as other students in the state, this may also allow the school district to grow and prosper,” Rogers said.
In 2021, the council expanded its program to include support for districts applying for Emergency Connectivity Fund support.
As of 2022, the Northwest Council for Computer Education E-Rate program has impacted more than 100,000 students, served 45 clients in six states and returned $7.8 million to school districts.
While orchestrating professional learning is at the core of the Northwest Council for Computer Education, people are at its heart. It’s not just about connectivity — it’s about human connection.
“What I have enjoyed most is the people,” Rogers said. “There’ve been times when teachers light up about a product, tool, or success. It’s the ‘Aha!’ moment for teachers and students of the power of technology and how it can help them learn math, science, history, and anything. It’s just not computers. It’s just a tool.”
Rogers said she feels blessed to have fallen into this ever-changing career and be able to raise her son, Weston, in northern Idaho. “I love Coeur d’Alene and this community!”
“It was through great mentors that I fell into what I did,” she said. “In all the technology of the world, it’s the human side that drives me.”