Features
SCHOOLCIO : BYOD Strategies
1/31/2012 By:
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| At Osseo Area Schools, BYOD started in classrooms and spread from there. |
Proponents of “bring your own device”
(BYOD) programs like them for a lot
of reasons: budgets keep dwindling,
students already bring devices to
school, and technology isn’t getting
cheaper. “People are saying ‘It’s
happening in the real world. Let’s mirror that in
our schools,” says Lucy Gray, project director
ofthe Leadership for Mobile Learning (LML)
initiative at CoSN, the Consortium for School
Networking.
But this article isn’t meant to convince
readers to try BYOD. It’s about how to make it
work once you’ve decided it’s the way to go. Here
are the methods three districts took to make
BYOD happen.
Universal Content
The tech team at Lake Travis (TX) Independent
School District began planning for BYOD
last year by discussing it with administrators,
principals, and the cabinet. “We also did a
community chat in the spring,” says Sean
Casey, assistant superintendent, technology &
information systems services.
The most affluent families provide devices
for their children, low-income families are
given devices purchased through the latest
bond package, and middle-income families can
purchase or lease devices at a discounted price,
which Casey arranged with various vendors.
When it came time to update the AUP and student handbooks, Casey was pleasantly
surprised to discover that revisions were
unnecessary. “We had already updated for social
media, cyberbullying, and safety, and none of
that changes because the kids are on a personal
device.”
Last summer, more access points were added
to the wireless network, along with anchor
mobility, which is offered through Cisco. “The
network recognizes if you are not on a district
wireless device and routes you into tunneled
Internet access at no extra cost,” says Casey.
“We have no security concerns since everything
goes through our filtering.” Once they are online,
students log in to the district’s online learning
portal—a one-stop shop for online textbooks and
digital resources.
Already, 700 people (about 10 percent of
the district) are participating in BYOD, with
that amount growing every week. “We have
not made a large push yet. We want teachers
to be successful with classroom management
and making a successful activity using that
technology.”
To help teachers along, Casey created an
online repository for BYOD activity/lesson
sharing (www.epsilen.com/crs/1130693) in
Project Share, Texas’ statewide LMS. There’s a
wiki to discuss ideas and a Dropbox folder for
completed lessons.
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| New Canaan High School students productively working on their own devices. |
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During the last couple of years, Lake Travis
began working with YouTube and other social media tools. This year, the district rolled out My
Big Campus, from Lightspeed Systems, which
offers content from such sources as TED.com,
Khan Academy, and MIT OpenCourseWare. “If
we can package content that is platform agnostic,
students can use it as a guided activity, for an
independent lesson, or for review. With BYOD,
we can extend the day and give students the
benefits of a flipped classroom.”
R-E-S-P-E-C-T
The tech staff at New Canaan (CT) Public
Schools knew students would bring in their cell
phones, so they created an open environment to
support that. “When we updated our AUP we
made it clear that this is acceptable but limited
to using devices for academic purposes,” says
Robert Miller, director of technology.
Now, students and staff fill out a Google form
with their device’s MAC address and a statement
that they will comply with the AUP. Their device
is registered on the network within 24 hours.
Last year, about 35 percent of the district
participated in BYOD; this year it’s up to 45
percent. Much of the faculty brings in their own
devices, too.
Miller says those against BYOD tell him
he’s opening his network to risk, but he hasn’t
had problems. Because his wireless and wired
networks are separate, he can shut down either
network if he needs to, as was the case last May
when the middle school’s wired network was hit
by a bad virus.
In terms of equity, which is another reason
many schools are against BYOD, Miller says
that special education students used to be
embarrassed to bring their assistive devices into
classes. His team believed that if all students had
devices, those students would no longer feel out
of place. “We’re at that point now,” he says. “You
walk into a classroom or the library and lots of
kids have devices. There’s no stigma anymore.”
Essentially, BYOD at New Canaan is about
respect. “Our students know it is a privilege. They
are allowed to use Facebook and other social
networking tools. They don’t want to abuse it.”
A Grassroots Effort
Tim Wilson, chief technology officer of ISD
279 - Osseo (MN) Area Schools, calls his
district’s approach to BYOD “organic.” When it
started three years ago, it was at the classroom
level. At each school there are anywhere from
one to ten BYOD classes. A teacher decides
to introduce BYOD and consults his or her
colleagues and principal.
Because of the low-key approach, Wilson
offered only a one-day, summer PD class, but
teachers told him it wasn’t necessary. “From an
instructional standpoint, our teachers aren’t
teaching differently than if they’re using a laptop
cart,” he says.
The reason why instruction hasn’t changed
is because Osse is a Google Docs district. “We
couldn’t do this without Google Docs or our
Moodle,” says Wilson. “It doesn’t matter what
type of device the kids have, as long as it has a
browser, can get on the open wifi, and get to our
Google Docs domain.”
Many students share devices. Wilson says if
you get one-third to one-half of your students
bringing in a device, you’ll be in good shape. “We
provide a robust, reliable, secure infrastructure
and the kids bring what they need to connect to it
for learning to take place.”
In December, Oseo Senior High became
the first BYOD school in the district. “That’s
the tipping point,” says Wilson. “Enough
classrooms are already doing it so this made
sense. I expect to see more schools doing that
this year.”
The Time for Horizontal PD
When Kevin J. McCormack’s boss told him to look at the iPad a couple years ago,
he was hesitant. But as more apps came out and he heard what people were doing
with them, he stopped leasing PCs and began leasing iPads.
McCormack, the principal of Xaverian High School in Brooklyn, N.Y., knew that a
technology this different required a new way of doing PD.
He started by giving iPads to 20 of his younger, most tech-savvy teachers. By the
time the next shipment of iPads arrived, 70 teachers had requested one.
To date, McCormack has provided no formal training. “There is no uniform way to
use the iPad,” he says. “Science will use it differently than English; early adopters
differently than the fearful. We want to respect everyone for where they are at.”
In May 2010, all remaining faculty members received an iPad. “We encouraged
them to play Scrabble, download music, or just play Angry Birds during the summer.
Our faculty learn and work differently, just like kids.”
In September, the school began its rollout and gave two grades of students their
own iPads. A small group began meeting after school to share best practices. By
December, the group doubled in size to 30 people, all talking about how to optimize
iPads and differentiate instruction.