Features
SCHOOL CIO: The New One-to-One
2/1/2011 By:
By Ellen Ullman
“For years, everyone saw the laptop as
the magic bullet for integrating technology,”
says Lewis Wynn, director of
technology operations for Rockdale
(TX) Independent School District. “It’s
no longer about a specific piece of
technology; we don’t know what the
new tools will be next year, in three
years, or in five years. The trick is to
teach kids not how to use laptops but
how to use technology in general.”
Welcome to the new world order of
one-to-one computing. As administrators
scramble to offer ubiquitous technology
in their districts, the goal has
moved away from one laptop for each
lap to…well…a plethora of alternatives.
“Districts should be focusing on providing
high-speed wireless networks
and devices for those that cannot
afford or don’t have,” CoSN CEO Keith
Krueger says. “It is a rethink of one-toone
and urgently needed in this time of
economic crisis.”
From laptops to access
Only two years ago, Wynn was looking
for a one-to-one laptop grant. Then a
new, tech-savvy superintendent came
in and helped Wynn realize that it’s not
about the hardware; it’s about the bigpicture
lessons and benefits that any
technology can provide.
Recently, Rockdale rolled out iPod Touches for the fourth and sixth
grades. Fifth graders will get something,
but what, exactly, hasn’t been
decided yet. “Technology is a tool.
Pick it up and learn it—whatever it is,”
Wynn says.
Since it can’t afford to provide
devices for everyone, the district is
working on a bring-your-own-tech
(BYOT) initiative as well. Students are
allowed to bring in their own products
while the administration nails down a
BYOT policy for September.
It’s not solely about money, Wynn
stresses; it’s also about getting kids
involved in their education. “If they
use what they know, it’s easier on us.
We’re looking to learn from what they
do. If they can teach us, that’s great.”
Because his staff has been stretched
for so long, he hopes the new BYOT
direction will require less effort. “The
kids choose the tools, are engaged, and
we don’t have to support it. Instead we
can devote resources on the back end.
As long as we build the infrastructure,
the front end is easier to handle.”
Rich Kaestner, a project director
for CoSN, sees many districts making
this shift from laptops to access. “This
has the potential to transform K–12
education,” he says. “It allows teachers
to step back and let kids take charge
of their own learning. The teacher
becomes more of a coach as children
learn at their own speed. That is what
this [access] can do.”
Of course, no one says it’s going to
be easy. A wireless network has to be
robust enough to withstand hundreds
of devices accessing it at the same
time, and the digital divide comes in,
because many children can’t afford
their own devices. Still, schools are
jumping on board and figuring out the
steps as they go along.
The tech department of Birdville
(TX) ISD recently installed a new
wireless solution using N devices at
the high schools. “We’re finding that
the more we provide, in terms of speed and amount of bandwidth, the
more the users will use,” says Julie
Wallace, executive director of technology
and information management
services.
Wallace estimates that a third of
the district’s students have their own
devices. In December she rolled out
nearly 650 i-devices for students.
“Principals and teachers are determining
a need from an instructional standpoint
and finding the device to meet
that need. That’s where we’re going,
and that will finally, I believe, get us to
where we always needed to be.”
A sea change
“In the past, adults brought laptops
into schools and the kids were, like,
‘So?’” says Eliot Soloway, chief executive
officer of GoKnow, Inc. and a longtime
expert on handheld computing
in schools. “Now the kids are bringing
mobile technology into their schools.
That shift in who’s in control is the fundamental
difference.”
When we use mobile technology
in schools, Soloway says, we’re telling
kids, “You have it right. What you
do outside counts.” Students spend
more time doing schoolwork on mobile
devices than they would with paper
and pencil because it’s an affirmation
of who they are and it’s readily available,
according to Soloway. In fact, he
says he has seen 30 percent improvement
when children use mobile devices
on the same curriculum they used to
cover without them.
In three years, Soloway believes,
there will be a layer of software that
makes all smartphones the same; at
that time kids will be able to bring
whatever they have to school. He suggests
that districts begin building infrastructure
and doing pilots now so that
in three years they will be ready.
The new one-to-one is “a slight
reframing away from the notion that
everybody will have the same device,”
says Doug Levin, who heads the State
Educational Technology Directors
Association. At his organization’s
November meeting, members coined
the phrase high-access computing to
define the more mixed environment
in which every child and teacher has
ready access to one or more devices,
including laptops, smartphones, tablets,
and electronic whiteboards. The
devices are mixed and flexible so that
teachers have what they need to meet
instructional goals.
The first question for schools is how
to manage this environment. Providing
a uniform device may reduce the economic
and technical burden; with a
mixed environment comes a ton of
network traffic. It also raises concerns
about equity.
“We’ve been in a situation in which
equity means packaging what teachers
and kids should know in a book that
everyone gets,” Levin says. “When it’s
digital, it’s customizable, more powerful,
and more abundant, but it’s not
clear that it makes sense for districts or
states to make all the decisions about
how it’s delivered.”
A multi-tiered approach
Six years ago, Miami-Dade (FL) County
Public Schools couldn’t afford to
institute a one-to-one laptop program
but knew that Internet access would
become more available and less
expensive. “Our strategy was to lift the
systems that were client-server or site
based and bring them to an enterprise
level and make them all Web enabled,” says Deborah Karcher, chief information
officer. Today every system, from grade
books and scheduling to instructional
software, is Web accessible. Karcher
designed an interface so that all systems
look the same online, including the very
old student information system, which
sits on a mainframe. She buys only
digital textbooks, so that students can
access them at classroom portals. The
new superintendent asked her to link
appropriate software to students to
give them additional practice in areas in
which test scores showed they needed
help. All resources are available to
parents and teachers.
Of course, all this innovation is useless
without computers or Internet
access, so the district refurbished old
laptops and had wireless cards donated.
Recently it received a broadband
stimulus grant that provides 10,000
Internet connections and 6,000 computers
free for the next six years.
“How do we get to one-to-one with
this?” Karcher asks. “We are tackling it
in several ways. We built our system
for every platform except for iPad.
We’re trying to make campuses wireless
through eRate money so kids can
bring smartphones and use them. And
we’re giving out free laptops to people
without access.”
Ellen Ullman is editor of SchoolCIO.
[Resources
for the New
One-to-One]
CoSN Value of
Investment Leadership
Initiative
www.cosn.org/voi/
Helping Laptop
Programs Work
www.1-to-1learning.blogspot.com
One-to-One Institute
www.one-to-oneinstitute.org
Project RED:
Revolutionizing
Education
www.projectred.org
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