SEMTEC The SE MN preK-12 Technology Coordinators
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Could you post a copy of it in this online forum?
Just some thoughts: 1:1 also still has to show its merits. If it's done incorrectly, it can be a money-pit disaster. Dollars also do need to be ongoing in some manner (though there is a thought about resolving that in that proposal that I'll try to find), and there HAS to be a major shift in the way teachers handle technology. They HAVE to become front-line troubleshooters/tech support, able to solve basic issues that go along with 20-35 laptops running at once, and that come and go from the building on a daily basis. They have to learn how to teach to a classroom of students that will have devices that can and have created challenges with security and distraction. Stillwater's experiences, as well as those documented by Maine and Michigan (Maine's first-year report: http://usm.maine.edu/cepare//Reports/MLTI_Impact_Digital_Divide.pdf , Michigan's Freedom to Learn Analysis from 2005: http://archive.techlearning.com/techlearning/events/techforum06/Les... ) need to be looked through thouroughly. There is also the issue of students having access from home with their laptops, which has spurred some discussion about funding Municipal Wi-Fi access (last check, that was $110,000 per square mile of coverage using the Cisco Matrix technologies) to support 1:1 initiatives. If we write to our respective representatives, we have to be prepared to answer questions about the benefits as compared to costs. The potential expendiatures will be the primary area that they will look at.
Another thought - if the schools wouldn't be responsible for Maint and repair, who would be? The parents? What happens if a student busts up the laptop, or it is otherwise inoperable? Can a school actually completely free itself from Maint and repair issues?
I'm wondering if a 1:1 initiative with a multitude of different computer types will work at K-12 levels, even with published minimum standards. Invariably, some won't get a computer with the stated minimums, and how does a school maintain network security with that many laptops that aren't under school control? How does software licensing work under that scenario? Who's responsible for installing that software, and troubleshooting issues or handling updates? I'd be in favor of a plan that perhaps split costs of a lease program between school and students with an agreement that the school controls the laptop until the end of a specified time period (3, 4 or 5 years - whatever the lease agreement can be set to be), and then the parents can buy the laptop outright by buying out the lease, or the laptop can be replaced and a new laptop comes in (depending on the grade-level of the student). This idea is a part of the proposal that was out there a few years ago.
"how does a school maintain network security with that many laptops that aren't under school control?"
-How do colleges and universities do it?
"How does software licensing work under that scenario?"
-If we use Open Source software we won't have to worry about licensing. Districts could publish links to recommended open source software on their websites. Then, teachers teach content, not software. Students choose the software (or cloud app) that can accomplish the stated assignment/learning objective. This shifts us from focusing on specific tools and back on crafting quality authentic assessments.
"Who's responsible for installing that software, and troubleshooting issues or handling updates?"
-Who is responsible for doing this on people's home computers? This is the tech equivalent of sharpening pencils. Do we really need a certified person to do this?
"I'd be in favor of a plan that perhaps split costs of a lease program between school and students with an agreement that the school controls the laptop until the end of a specified time period"
-The problem with this is if the district owns the machines for a given period of time then all maintenance costs and care issues are the responsibility of the district. With this you run into the same problem that plagues the Stillwater 1:1 program. If a student owns the computer they are more likely to take good care of it. Just look at how high school students treat textbooks compared to college students.
Bryan Berg said:Another thought - if the schools wouldn't be responsible for Maint and repair, who would be? The parents? What happens if a student busts up the laptop, or it is otherwise inoperable? Can a school actually completely free itself from Maint and repair issues?
I'm wondering if a 1:1 initiative with a multitude of different computer types will work at K-12 levels, even with published minimum standards. Invariably, some won't get a computer with the stated minimums, and how does a school maintain network security with that many laptops that aren't under school control? How does software licensing work under that scenario? Who's responsible for installing that software, and troubleshooting issues or handling updates? I'd be in favor of a plan that perhaps split costs of a lease program between school and students with an agreement that the school controls the laptop until the end of a specified time period (3, 4 or 5 years - whatever the lease agreement can be set to be), and then the parents can buy the laptop outright by buying out the lease, or the laptop can be replaced and a new laptop comes in (depending on the grade-level of the student). This idea is a part of the proposal that was out there a few years ago.
Let’s say you make your students purchase their own laptop and you expect that you’ve done all the planning in the world and that you have now absolved your responsibility of supporting those machines beyond some small technical support issues.
The scenario you run into is a student comes in to school and tells their teacher they spilled juice on their computer and all of their data was on that computer. Ok… No problem right? You have told students they are responsible for everything on their computers. But now what? We can have a temporary computer for the student until theirs gets fixed but what happens when Mom or Dad decides they don’t have money to fix or replace the computer? If we are at a 1:1 and their computer goes down in essence that student cannot participate in class now without a computer. How long do you supply a computer for that student until parents buy a new one? Can the school require them to buy a replacement? That’s a tough one for me. I think if you’re going 1:1 you need to supply the computers as a district.
I’m not a big fan of the 1:1 right now. I think with the budgetary issues we as a state and nation are facing adding more computers into a classroom is not going to make these students pass the MCA tests or the GRAD tests or make them better prepared for anything critical in life right now. I think we need to focus on infrastructure for schools first as that has been lacking. Let’s get districts good connections to Internet, state and federal network access, Wireless, good servers, good technical support staff and managers, etc. Get that in place and learning will operate much more efficiently than trying to get a thousand computers to connect on a 3-5MB internet connection.
How about we request our lawmakers push to increase the mandatory dollar amount communities must pay per child on a yearly basis. How can we have such a huge difference in funding levels from community to community? Why are there so many communities that have gotten away with funding their schools well below the state average and now we are expected to accommodate them as they fail now because these schools can’t afford to operate and the communities voted down possible consolidations when the district was actually a benefit to someone and now when they are in SOD nobody wants to touch them.
I think 1:1 on a statewide or nationwide standpoint is not even something we really need to spend a lot of time on. Let those schools that are well organized work on it and figure out what works. Throwing more technology at kids and expecting them to pass a GRAD test because of it isn’t the answer. If you can afford to do it as an individual school you need to pay for it yourself and you need to know how you’re going to pay for it once the first set of laptops is beyond its life expectancy. Planning is key and I don’t think the government developing a plan of how to do this is going to work. I won’t be writing my representative or senators as I don’t support it as a whole and don’t support it for my district. Perhaps in few years I will be on the 1:1 path but not yet.
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