About Anthony Picciano

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ABOUT DR. ANTHONY PICCIANO

Anthony G. Picciano is a professor in the Education Leadership Program at Hunter College and the Ph.D. Program in Urban Education at the Graduate Center of the City University of New York (CUNY). He is also a member of the faculty in the masters program in Quantitative Methods in the Social Sciences and the doctoral certificate program in Interactive Pedagogy and Technology at the CUNY Graduate Center, and the CUNY Online BA Program in Communication and Culture. In 1998, Dr. Picciano co-founded CUNY Online, a multi-million dollar initiative funded by the Alfred P. Sloan Foundation that provided support services to faculty using the Internet for course development. He was a founder and continues to serve on the Board of Directors of the Online Learning Consortium (formerly the Sloan Consortium). Dr. Picciano’s research interests are leadership, education policy, Internet-based teaching and learning, and multimedia instructional models. Dr. Picciano has conducted major national studies with Jeff Seaman on the extent and nature of online and blended learning in American K-12 school districts. He has authored numerous articles and  speaks/presents at conferences on education and technology. He has authored twenty books including:

  • Moskal, P., Dziuban, C., & Picciano, A.G (2024). Data Analytics and Adaptive Learning: Research Perspectives.   New York:  Routledge/Taylor & Francis, Publishers.
  • Picciano, A.G. and edited by Elaine Bowden (2022). The computer wasn’t in the basement anymore:  My fifty + years in education technology (1970-2021).  New York:  Bookbaby Publishers.
  • Picciano, A.G., Dziuban, C., Graham, C. & Moskal, P. (2022).  Blended learning:  Research Perspectives, Volume 3.  New York:  Routledge/Taylor & Francis, Publishers.
  • DeMichele, Gerade – pen name (2020). Our bathtub wasn’t in the kitchen anymore. New York: Bookbaby Publishers.
  • Jordan, C. & Picciano, A.G. (2020). The community college in the post-recession reform era:  Aims and outcomes of a decade of experimentation.  New York: Routledge/Taylor & Francis, Publishers.
  • Picciano, A.G. (2019). Online Education: Foundations, Planning, and Pedagogy (1st Ed).  New York: Routledge/Taylor & Francis, Publishers.
  • Picciano, A.G. & Jordan, C. (2018).  CUNY’s first fifty years:  Triumphs and ordeals of a people’s university.  New York: Routledge/Taylor & Francis, Publishers.
  • Dziuban, C.D., Graham, C.R., Ko, S.  Moskal, P.,  Pacansky-Brock, M., Picciano, A.G., Rossen, S., Stein, J., and Ubell, R.  (2018).    Online & Blended Learning: The Complete Volumes.  New York:  Routledge/Taylor and Francis.  This is an anthology of books on online learning.
  • Picciano, A.G. (2017). Online education policy and practice:  The past, present, and future of the digital university.  New York:  Routledge/Taylor & Francis, Publishers.
  • Dziuban, C., Picciano, A.G., Graham, C. & Moskal, P. (2016). Conducting research in online and blended learning environments: New pedagogical frontiers.  New York:  Routledge/Taylor & Francis, Publishers.
  • Picciano, A.G., Dziuban, C., & Graham, C. (Eds.) (2014). Blended Learning:  Research Perspectives, Volume 2.  New York:  Routledge/Taylor & Francis, Publishers.Picciano, A.G. & Spring, J. (2013).  The Great American Education-Industrial Complex:  Ideology, Technology and Profits.    New York:  Routledge/Taylor & Francis, Publishers.
  • Picciano, A.G. (2011).   Educational Leadership and Planning for Technology  (5th Ed.).  Boston:  Pearson Education.
  • Picciano, A.G. and Dzuiban, C. (Eds.) (2007). Blended Learning:  Research Perspectives.  Needham, MA: The Sloan Consortium.
  • Picciano, A.G. (2006). Data-Driven Decision Making for Effective School Leadership.  Columbus, OH:  Pearson Education.
  • Picciano, A.G. (2006). Educational Leadership and Planning for Technology (4th Ed.). Upper Saddle River, NJ: Pearson/Merrill/Prentice-Hall.
  • Picciano, A.G. (2004). Educational Research Primer. London: Continuum Press.
  • Picciano, A.G. (2002). Educational Leadership and Planning for Technology (3rd Ed.). New York: Simon & Schuster/Prentice-Hall.
  • Picciano, A.G. (2001). Distance Learning:  Making Connections across Virtual Space and Time.  New York: Simon & Schuster/Prentice-Hall.
  • Picciano, A.G. (1998). Educational Leadership and Planning for Technology (2nd Ed.). New York: Simon & Schuster/Prentice-Hall.
  • Picciano, A.G. (1994). Computers in the Schools: A Guide to Planning and Administration. New York: Macmillan.

Dr. Picciano was elected to the inaugural class of the Sloan Consortium’s Fellows in 2010, in recognition of “outstanding publications that have advanced the field of online learning.” Dr. Picciano was also the 2010 recipient of the Sloan Consortium’s National Award for Outstanding Achievement in Online Education by an Individual in 2010.

Visit Dr. Picciano’s website at:  http://anthonypicciano.com

17 comments

      • My dad’s father, another Anthony, was from Manhattan – the East side in near where the UN is now-One of 10 kids. His parents arrived around 1890 from Campochiaro Campobasso. Grandpa Tony was a conductor on the New York Central Railroad. My dad grew up in Queens Village and went Manhattan College on the GI Bill after WW II. My parents married in QV. I know there were some other Picciano relatives up in Westchester Co and around the NY-NJ area and also PA. My older brother and I were born in Queens and lived in New Hyde Park until Dad moved us upstate to Endicott where I grew up and went to Cornell. In DC area since then. How about you?

      • Lorette,

        Thanks for the background.

        My grandparents on my father’s side also came from Campobasso in the late 1880s or early 1890s, I don’t know for sure. I never saw my grandfather (Pietro) who died twelve years before I was born in 1947. My grandparents settled in Brooklyn in East New York. They had three children: my father (Amadeo) and his siblings (Ralph, James, Amelio and Lena) were born and raised in East New York. My father moved to the South Bronx when he married my mother, Philomena, where I was born and raised. My father had one uncle (Pasquale) who likewise was from Campobasso. He settled in Lodi, New Jersey. He had three daughters, one of whom was named Loretta. My brothers Donald and Peter, were the first in our family to go to college. My brothers went to Fordham University and I to Hunter College. I subsequently received a PhD from Fordham University. I have been working at City University of New York, both as an administrator and faculty since 1970.

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    Enjoy your weekend.

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