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Education Government Portables The Almighty Buck Politics

L.A. School Superintendent Folds on Laptops-For-Kids Program 139

In an announcement yesterday reported on by Ars Technica, [Los Angeles school superintendent] Ramon C. Cortines said that the city can't afford to buy a computer for every student. The statement comes after intense controversy over a $1.3 billion initiative launched by Cortines' predecessor, former superintendent John Deasy, in which every student was supposed to be given an iPad loaded with content from educational publisher Pearson. (That controversy is worth reading about, and sparked an FBI investigation as well.)
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L.A. School Superintendent Folds on Laptops-For-Kids Program

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  • by Anonymous Coward on Saturday February 21, 2015 @05:25PM (#49102203)

    Buy a Pi for every kid. Education is what the Pi is for.

    Apple was the cheap option for schools 35 years ago, not now. Now they only sell trendy shit to snobs.

    • by Anonymous Coward

      Yeah. I have seen magnate schools in the US do wonders with no technology. I think a lot of school administrators use technology as a distraction from actually making changes that will do some good: Changes in curriculums and teaching styles. But I guess it's easier and PC to spend lots of money - money equals success in the US - than to make meaningful changes.

      • PC has better management tools and they don't have the app store only system that is build for end user use and not enterprise use.

      • I have seen magnate [merriam-webster.com]schools

        You mean Harvard, Wharton, Kellogg and the like?

      • Magnate schools - that might not be a bad idea: if we started training future CEOs in high school, we might end up with better quality executives.

      • by aliquis ( 678370 )

        But US schools isn't all that bad are they?

        I think the Swedish ones are ranking worse now.

        Though I assume the huge difference there is the immigrant overload and somewhat natural consequences of that.

        But I also wanted to suggest that possibly political correctness was what was taught in our schools rather than boring facts, logic and science.
        (In reality hopefully that isn't much.)

    • by Frosty Piss ( 770223 ) * on Saturday February 21, 2015 @05:36PM (#49102253)

      Buy a Pi for every kid. Education is what the Pi is for.

      The original initiative was not about learning to code or build electronic devices, it was about putting educational resources in kids hands in the hope that kids would use these resources to become smarter.

      In my opinion, this is a misguided, technology is not the most efficient way to impart "The Three R's", classroom interaction with a human, as well as parents that support the idea of the importance of homework over xBox.

      • as well as parents that support the idea of the importance of homework over xBox

        Hard to be that parent when you're not there & you're working three jobs just to put Cheerios on the dinner table.

        • While it's true that many parents made piss poor decisions in life (like having children they cannot properly raise), it's irrelevant to this topic.
          • by SeaFox ( 739806 )

            While it's true that many parents made piss poor decisions in life (like having children they cannot properly raise), it's irrelevant to this topic.

            That whooshing noise is you missing the point. The parents shouldn't have to work three jobs to put food on the table. Their absence in their children's lives is the result of the Haves screwing the Have-Nots on a living wage. Their kids don't have the guidance they need to help succeed in school, and can't compete in the real world -- which is already stacked against them when you have to have a $40,000 college diploma to get any decent job at all. Wonder if the three-job parents have money for their kids

            • by amiga3D ( 567632 )

              Three jobs to put Cheerios on the table? I don't know man, that's hard to understand. I remember hard times when I rolled pennies and cashed in aluminum cans to get gas money but I never had to worry about Cheerios. Steak and such was beyond my means but basic food for subsistence is pretty cheap. Pasta, rice, beans and cereal make it possible to get by even if it's not that great. What amazes me is how I see people complain about no money and they actually have internet and cable tv. I had a 12" blac

            • by ranton ( 36917 )

              That whooshing noise is you missing the point. The parents shouldn't have to work three jobs to put food on the table. Their absence in their children's lives is the result of the Haves screwing the Have-Nots on a living wage.

              The Haves are the one who understand the difference between a job meant for part-time / high school / second earner employees, and those meant for breadwinners. Most Have-Nots probably understand this too, but who can fault them for trying to spin their situation in a way that makes someone else seem at fault for their plight?

          • Whereas the superior intellect of bigfinger76 includes perfect knowledge of the future.

            • by bigfinger76 ( 2923613 ) on Saturday February 21, 2015 @11:52PM (#49103467)
              It doesn't require superior intellect to understand that each child you produce will cost you about a quarter of a million dollars to raise. I'm of average intelligence I guess, but I'm well aware that I don't have that kind of scratch, or the time to do it properly. It's simple math, kids. This nonsense about "haves" and "have-nots" is going to be a problem for you one day. I'm not saying it's fair, but life is not fair. If you don't understand that yet, your parents and your teachers have failed you.
              • And it doesn't require superior intellect to work out that the factory where your father & grandfather did a fair day's work for a fair day's pay is going to shut the doors ten years down the road and fuck off to China.

                It requires a crystal ball.

                • No, it doesn't. It's 2015; parents today have always lived in a world where pensions and lifetime employment were a thing of the past.
                  • Had the same job for 17 years. Pays close to 90k. I get 5 weeks of vacation a year, and in fact have a pension.

                    Where do I work?

                    • by ranton ( 36917 )

                      Had the same job for 17 years. Pays close to 90k. I get 5 weeks of vacation a year, and in fact have a pension.

                      Where do I work?

                      In one of the few union jobs left most likely. Some will be safe for another 50 years, but many of those union jobs won't last another 10-20 (just look at the number we have lost in the past few decades). Off-shoring destroyed many of our union jobs. Technology will get rid of many more, and legislation will help the government to get rid of the rest. Almost anyone under the age of 40 is kidding themselves if they think it isn't a large gamble counting on their union job and pension will still being there u

                    • Comment removed based on user account deletion
                    • People were saying that same tripe back when agriculture was being mechanized.

                      Back around the year 1800 about 90% of the population was involved in agriculture. Today it is about 2%. Last I checked we do not have an 88% unemployment rate.

                      What you are professing is what is known as the "Lump of Labor" fallacy. It has been recognized as a fallacy for only a couple hundred years and it is amazing how otherwise intelligent people keep spewing economic gibberish.

                      Labor will be rearranged to other avenues
                  • No they haven't. Even 18 years ago things weren't as precarious as they are now.

                    That 18 years is a low estimate, by the way. If you have more than one it will be higher than that.

                    You talk like a non-parent. For the sake of humanity I hope you stay that way.

        • Hard to be that parent when you're not there & you're working three jobs just to put Cheerios on the dinner table.

          What you describe is certainly something that happens, but also certainly not the average or the norm. Get off your soap box.

          In any case, there are two points that speak to this:

          1. If you can not afford to have kids, spend time with your kids, nurture your kids, and make them do homework, don't have them.

          2. You premise is bullshit, and I know it from personal experience. I know, it's "anecdotal evidence"... But, both my parents worked long hours. This did not prevent them from insisting that we do homework

      • In my opinion, this is a misguided, technology is not the most efficient way to impart "The Three R's", classroom interaction with a human, as well as parents that support the idea of the importance of homework over xBox.

        It may not be the best way, but it probably is the most efficient way in a world in which games consoles replace parental input. Turning education into video games is probably the most practical and inexpensive way to catch those lost kids.

    • Stupid... Stupid... Stupid... Guess Apple's sales department will need to get back to work now.. Could have been done with Raspberry Pi for every student for around $35 million. (Round figure based on a approx $50 per student cost) Text books currently cost more than this..
      • by guruevi ( 827432 ) on Saturday February 21, 2015 @06:58PM (#49102517)

        The problem wasn't the iPads - with edu discounts those things are cheap. The problem was the fact they went with Pearson - the mother of all rip-off scams. I think in this instance the 'software' came at a $1000+/student/school year price tag or something like that. They are the same people that cause a standardized test to come in at $1200.

        • As an author and editor who has had the dubious pleasure of dealing with Pearson on more than one occasion, I hereby verify that they suck.

        • by Anonymous Coward

          I'm not sure where you get your numbers, but Apple doesnt give much of a discount for education. It's only a couple of dollars per device. I'm sure this big sale made some sales person's day, but Apple in general doesn't care if education buys its products or not.

          Just look at how hostile to school environments Apples products have been. The ipads originally didn't even have a way for a school to manage them. iBooks came out with the idea that the school would keep rebuying the same text book year after

        • by Falos ( 2905315 )
          They might edu discount you a tiny bit. If you buy them by the thousands. Otherwise expect to pay shelf price, or you build a time machine to the 90's Apple.

          Source: Local district IT, already seeing them give iPrices the finger, but not looking forward to endless hours of scut work that will result from deploying everyone's new chromebooks.
      • Comment removed based on user account deletion
    • by Squash ( 2258 ) on Saturday February 21, 2015 @05:46PM (#49102303) Homepage

      A pi on its own is cheaper, but each student would need a display, keyboard/mouse, SD card, power supply, and presumably a usb wifi stick. If these devices are intended to be left at school, that's still not totally unreasonable and will clearly undercut the price of an ipad.. Certainly the educational capability is much higher, at least for students interested in engineering. But if they are intended to be taken home, they're just not suitable.

      Something like a Chromebook could do the job, and still undercut the ipad cost... But if they want to lock these devices down, they'd have to buy the Education models (which also gets them other features such as no hassle replacement if one is broken), and those models cost more.

      The scary part to me is the school's efforts to restrict what students can do with these devices, and allowing the school to track and monitor them. Your school's influence should end at the gate. We've already seen a case where a school passed out laptops to students and were then using the laptop's webcam to spy on those students at home. That was totally inappropriate just a few years ago, but now everyone is fine with assigning a pretty gps and internet tracking device to every child? Any smart parent would require their child to leave such a device in their locker, and never bring it home.

    • by Rinikusu ( 28164 ) on Saturday February 21, 2015 @06:21PM (#49102397)

      Buy every kid a pad of paper, some pencils, and a slide rule...

    • by Dutch Gun ( 899105 ) on Saturday February 21, 2015 @06:45PM (#49102467)

      Buy a Pi for every kid. Education is what the Pi is for.

      A Pi is great for learning about computers and technology. A tablet is more useful when learning about general subjects, and has a more appropriate form factor, since they need to be carried home.

      Tablets are not a bad idea for the classroom. They could replace the students physical books and eliminate a lot of paperwork. There are also significant educational advantages. Each tablet can carry a small library of books, not just a backpack-full. And data is easily cross-referenced - the definition of any word can be looked up in an instant just by holding your finger down on it, for instance. Hyperlinks to additional topics of interest (like in Wikipedia), reward curiosity and exploration. I've found such features be very helpful on my own e-reader.

      But frankly, they'd need to come down in price quite a bit first, probably with low-end models that are more appropriate for mass distribution. Apple devices are decidedly high-end, and as such, aren't really the best choice for a mass market deployment. The devices don't need to be sexy. All they really need is large-screen color e-book readers, with just enough horsepower to show static text and images. The ability to surf the web is an unneeded distraction, not a benefit for these devices. Laptops can be made readily available for research purposes. I'm thinking something between the current generation of e-book readers and tablets would be ideal. Also, perhaps most importantly, the schools need the proper infrastructure, training, and management systems in place to take advantage of these devices - which is may be the hardest part.

      It's really only a matter of time before this sort of thing happens on a large scale, but I just don't think we're quite there yet. I'm guessing that within a decade we'll hit a technological and economic sweet spot that will make it happen for real. I think the LA school district jumped the gun, and was focused on the wrong things that are important for actual learning.

      • by AuMatar ( 183847 )

        Tablets are a horrible replacement for books. Lets ignore the fact they have massive amounts of distractions built in. They're harder to read, worse for your eyes, run out of batteries, are harder to take notes on, and worst of all hard or impossible to skim. I own over a thousand books on my kindle, but almost 0 technical books. Its just not a good medium for it.

        • I'm guessing you didn't make it to the third paragraph, or perhaps missed the gist of it. I actually agree with you.

          What would be more useful than today's tablets is cheap, large-format color e-book reader that can comfortably and effectively display technical books, and I think it's important that they NOT be able to surf the web or run distracting apps. Until then, I don't think we're ready either.

          • Personally, I give much importance to the presence of a physical keyboard. Keyboards are what makes the students able to create original content and tinker with a device. They make the difference between a machine that you can use to write essays, program, communicate... and a device that is only able to play Angry Birds and send short KTHXBYE messages on Whatsapp.
    • by amiga3D ( 567632 )

      I agree with the Pi for education. This continuous drivel about Apple being for snobs though is silly. Apple is for people who are tired of the broken, crippled windows pc world. I know plenty of working class people using Apple systems because they got tired of dealing with the pc bullshit. No one likes to pay the toll to use Apple computers but eventually, if you don't have the drive to learn to use linux that's where a lot of people end up. I've heard more than one person tell me how they hated to p

      • Apple is for people who are tired of the broken, crippled windows pc world.

        ...and are ready for the broken, crippled Apple PC world.

        • by amiga3D ( 567632 )

          I know you're kidding or ignorant. I've never seen an Apple come new out of the box clogged with bloatware so that you needed to go to "cleanmypeecee.com" right after you bought it. There's an entire ecosystem built on fixing the bullshit attached to the windows world. If you are a computer fix-it guy you have to absolutely love the hell out of Microsoft. A lot of people make a living fixing that broken shit. Maybe that's why all the peecee fixers out there hate Apple so much. No money to be made.

  • by ADRA ( 37398 ) on Saturday February 21, 2015 @05:36PM (#49102257)

    Its still dumb now. Just have good public access to computers for educational purposes (for all) and maybe a few set aside for people with specifically high enough permissions for programming and such. 95% or higher computer work in school is research, and everyone should absolutely have access to use it. Do kids need them at home? Nope, but it'd help. If a family is willing to get a cheap computer / tablet / etc. for their kid, that's their imperitive. But for those unable/unwilling to pay for a computer, they should still have access to materials. But assuming unlimited portability is more of a pipe dream unless you're footing the bill. My libraries have had computers for going on 2 decades now, and they've worked great for what they do, supply people with access to information.

    • And I am not even sure that it help for research. Sure it makes it easy, but I think there are definitely some downsides to allowing kids to just g to Wikipedia for all their research needs.
      • Generally higher education teachers don't allow excessive Wikipedia usage in research, and if they make it clear why not to use it, even better. And with the large numbers of students in the system, having every one of them go to the library for research is more impractical, especially if you live in a smaller town with a library that isn't as big, without as many resources.
    • by amiga3D ( 567632 )

      For home use a 5 or 6 year old laptop with a 2ghz or better core2duo processor can be had for around 100 dollars or less. These are more than sufficient for any educational needs. I've seen off lease Dell D630's for $100 and that's better than a brand new chromebook to me.

  • by gweihir ( 88907 ) on Saturday February 21, 2015 @05:42PM (#49102283)

    Education, as needs to be done to make people fit for today's ever more complicated world, needs to be done in an individual, customized form that recognizes the learner and his/her personality. Anything else just lead to failure. In the absence of true/strong/real AI (and we are not going to get that in the next few decades and possibly not forever), this has to be done by qualified, motivated and talented teachers. There is no other way. Instead it is being done far too often by those left behind, but those lazy and by those that value conformity over everything else.

    This "technology in education" issue is a diversion, nothing else. That includes computers for kids, teaching programming, etc.

    • by Anonymous Coward

      Education, as needs to be done to make people fit for today's ever more complicated world, needs to be done in an individual, customized form that recognizes the learner and his/her personality.

      Show me the empirical data to back that up. Not a study, but a college, university or K-12 program where this has worked and continues to do so after more than one generation of students (four years for university, six years for K-12). One. Anywhere? If you say in Scandinavia (where that BS originated) think again. They've already found out the hard way that once implemented it fails like communism a few years later. Kids that need more help need additional assistance, that's why we have/had Special Needs c

      • by gweihir ( 88907 )

        You seem to have wasted your 22 years in academia. Seriously, anybody with actual teaching experience and a mind that is awake sees immediately through your claims.

        • The AC was thoughtful enough to offer a very literate respone to you, despite the fact that portions of your original post did not even parse. Counter the AC's assertions with something better than your implied "I think I'm special, so anything that doesn't reinforce that notion for me is bad" or GTFO.

  • by fermion ( 181285 ) on Saturday February 21, 2015 @06:05PM (#49102363) Homepage Journal
    Back in the day, kids were given textbooks. Six classes of textbooks cost $600-$800. They get lost, damaged, and cost a fair amount of money to keep up with. Some districts try to force the teacher to pay for books lost by the students.

    If we assume that students still need textbooks, giving those textbooks on an iPad or similar device can be cost efficient. If the student buys a keyboard, the iPad can do much of what they student would do on a regular computer. One can even teach the basics of programming or web development on the iPad, if there is a server running somewhere they can telnet to.

    Of course the iPad is different from a book because the iPad is worth real hard cash, and the market for stolen iPads is robust. That is a hard problem to solve. It is the same problem with calculators. Students steal them and sell them.

    At some point education will enter the 21st century and kids will have computers, and we will just each the cost of stolen machines. If we are to have a trained workforce, kids need to learn to use computers as tools, and that requires an acquaintance with them. We have not had a powered machine quite like the computer. The closest thing would be the car, but the car is not a general work device.

    The biggest problem to educating our children is the idea that 'they don't need a computer'. I am fortunate in that in the 80's my family did not believe that. If they did I would be as ignorant and underemployed as so many who graduated in the last century are.

    • by gweihir ( 88907 )

      If costs for books are a real factor, everything is lost anyways. And no, they do indeed not need their own computer. Access in a library or the like is quite enough. Computers themselves teach you almost nothing and anybody with a reasonable education can use them after a short time.

    • Back in the day, kids were given textbooks. Six classes of textbooks cost $600-$800. They get lost, damaged, and cost a fair amount of money to keep up with.

      So the proposal is to buy each of the students an ipad, so the cost is $600 times the number of students PLUS the $600-$800 because as we know, the cost of an ebook is the same as the physical book (sometimes even higher). And now you have a piece of electronics floating around that is going to get lost or stolen, and the parents will have to pay $600 for it, as opposed to if a book gets lost or stolen, the parent only has to pay $30 or so. Add to that that an ebook is not reader friendly, and it seems like

    • Bullshit.

      Back in the day the textbooks were not updated yearly, they were owned by the school, and they lasted for 4 or 5 years MINIMUM on average.
      They cost the schools significantly less than that also, as they were a negotiated bulk purchase.

      NOW the 'etexts' they ARE re-selling zero-cost items to each and every student who comes along, complete with DRM and kills them.

      The biggest problem to educating our children is the idea that 'they do need a computer' as that has become a crutch to teachers who are la

  • by theodp ( 442580 ) on Saturday February 21, 2015 @06:09PM (#49102377)

    No profit left behind [politico.com]: Across the country, Pearson sold the Los Angeles Unified School District an online curriculum that it described as revolutionary - but that had not yet been completed, much less tested across a large district, before the LAUSD agreed to spend an estimated $135 million on it. Teachers dislike the Pearson lessons and rarely use them, an independent evaluation found.

  • by ErichTheRed ( 39327 ) on Saturday February 21, 2015 @06:30PM (#49102421)

    I have 2 kids, one who is ready to hit kindergarten next year. From my extremely limited parenting experience, it seems to me that just putting computers in the classroom or in students' hands isn't going to fix long standing education problems. This (in my opinion) goes double for locked down tablets like the iPad.

    I'm actually not pushing computers, tablets or other electronic stuff too much on the kids. There are so many fundamentals to work on (reading, numbers, vocabulary, learning to act like a normal human) that electronics can't solve or make worse. They watch movies, watch a little too much YouTube for my taste, and play a couple of educational games. The older one knows a little about navigating around the computer, and of course every kid knows how to use an iPad/iPhone. Ask me in 14 years whether I screwed them up too badly, but it's working out pretty well just reading to them. playing with them, answering all of the 29 million 4 year old questions they have, etc.

    Computers can't fix the real problems -- crappy parents, crappy home situations, low pay and low respect for teachers, etc. Every kid should be computer literate...not just phones and tablets, but able to use an office suite, look stuff up, etc. If they express an interest in coding or IT, great -- but the fundamentals of logic and scientific reasoning should take precedence. It's no reason to dump a computer or tablet into a kid's hands without a good curriculum to back it up. And from the article, it sounds like Pearson just sold the LA school district a bunch of slideware.

    • by gweihir ( 88907 )

      You have that right. With the exception of CS types (like me) anybody with an active mind and a solid education can use computers with a very short learning period. As to using office software, that is not complicated. A one week course is quite enough to get the basics. The important things, like reading and writing with a strong focus on what the text said and what you want to express, are however critical and more so in a world where more communication goes via the written word than ever.

      • You have that right. With the exception of CS types (like me) anybody with an active mind and a solid education can use computers with a very short learning period.

        So what's wrong with you CS types, anyway? As an IT worker I have commonly noted that programmers don't know which side of the computer is up.

        • by gweihir ( 88907 )

          I am not a "programmer", so I would not know from the inside. I do create high-quality software from time to time though, and do the occasional code-review.

          My take is that about 90% of programmers have no business being in that field due to lack of talent, insight, passion and general incompetence. Many might have thought this was an easy lunch-ticket, but the central problem I see is that "business" people do not get at all that it requires significant skills and education to create good software and hence

  • Why imprison kids at the consumer level by giving them all such a closed platform as the iAnything? Select paths for several levels of technology, and let them pick their course. Some will be into Fancy Displays, Some into 1's and 0's, some are into networking etc... Have them share the development thru release of a content delivery system... Top to bottom. Would Pi work for this ? sure. Would Ipad - for some levels, but why pay for it? Stand back an look what will get invented!!!!!!! I get the impres
  • ...now that Apple and Pearson's got the money.

    Looks like they need a new project somewhere else.

  • by Anonymous Coward on Saturday February 21, 2015 @06:47PM (#49102475)

    is that failure comes as a complete surprise, and is not preceeded by a period of foreboding or woe.

    Introducing change, at a large scale, into any large system, without a well thought out, holistic plan is going to, at best, be sub-optimal, and very likely fail.

    It is very likely, that the driver for this was to achieve lock-in to Pearson Education's electronic textbooks, with a strong side effect of "hey look at me, shiny thing" from the senior leadership. (iPads are the lowest cost platform that Pearson's DRM textbook system - they call it "eText" - can be deployed on). It is possible, that also they were simply recommending Apple devices, to use Apple's brand to draw attention away from the relationship between the deputy superintendent, and Pearson, where they were previously a VP.

    Are iPads a great educational tool ? Hell yes. If you plan for how they will be used, and you have the right sets of software on them, and if you develop the teachers to be able to use them. Otherwise its basically giving laser rifles to cavemen.. Apple's Education sales team has significant resources, including lots of teacher training, but also IT staff training, that they make available to customers. The fact that the LAUSD program didn't make much, if any use of this, suggests that LAUSD senior management weren't really interested in the educational outcomes, but rather the publicity.

    Are they just a consumption device ? Not by any means at all, and "you need a physical keyboard to produce information" is a largely, bullshit argument made by vendors who make devices with hardware keyboards. Here's a hint : "content creation" does not always equal "lots of typing". There are many forms of content creation where typing is a peripheral activity, that have real educational value, and help students express in more ways than how many WPM they can achieve on a keyboard.

    Should students only have access to a single vendor ? It depends on what functions you are trying to accomplish, but usually no. There are economies of scale in having a single platform for certain functions . But when you get to the area of "we want to teach kids about technology" then absolutely not - there should be iPads, Macs, Android, Linux machines, Windows machines, Rasberry Pi's, 3 D printers, etc etc etc. We wouldn't teach children "English" as a subject, and then only make them read Harry Potter, or only make them read Harold Robbins.

    Did LAUSD screw up ? Hell yes. At many levels, from the lack of teacher development effort - i.e. teaching the teachers how to use the tools; lack of infrastructure like Wi-fi networks, content management systems etc ; technical ineptitude over issues like use of ActiveSync as a "device management" protocol (FFS - ActiveSync is opt-in/opt-out by the end user, and the server believes everything the device tells it - it is totally unsuitable for an educational environment as a management tool. The ridiculous thing is that Apple HAS stuff that largely works in this space, mostly pretty well - Device Enrolment Program to completely configure devices over the air, supervision to shift the breadth & depth of policy controls from a BYOD style scope to greater depth & breadth, mandatory, non-removable mobile device management, restricted iTunes accounts for under 13's, and LAUSD appears to have chosen to ignore what was sitting on the shelf ready for them to use)

    Note that this kind of ineptitude isn't unusual at large scale in the education system - Australia had a state education department deploy half a million netbooks running Windows into schools in another "computer for every student" deployment a few years before this and it also was an epic disaster - perhaps without quite the same whiff of corrupt behaviour by senior management, but it was epically mismanaged and failed to address almost all of the infrastructure and teacher development aspects that LAUSD also failed at.

    Change at this scale is hard and there are many moving parts. Very few educational systems , anywhere in t

    • Are they just a consumption device ? Not by any means at all, and "you need a physical keyboard to produce information" is a largely, bullshit argument made by vendors who make devices with hardware keyboards. Here's a hint : "content creation" does not always equal "lots of typing". There are many forms of content creation where typing is a peripheral activity, that have real educational value, and help students express in more ways than how many WPM they can achieve on a keyboard.

      What a ludicrous assertio

  • 1.3 billion USD is a huge amount of money. Wikipedia tells me Los Angeles total population is 3958125 (how precise!). If we use 1.3 billion USD to buy a computer for every resident (which is much more than every children), individual machines can still cost up to 328 USD, which seems to be more than an iPad's price.
    • You're thinking of the price of a Chromebook or an inexpensive Windows laptop. The fruity tablets always cost more. They're the Buick of computers (fans claim they're the BMW, but they're the Buick, believe me)

      • Sure, but there are much less children in LA than the number I used, which is the whole population.
  • The road to hell is paved with good intentions.
    • Assuming there were any good intentions seems awfully hasty...

    • The intentions behind stupidity aren't all that important. I'll call scrapping this program a win for the kids. There may be a valid technical solution to some problems in education, but iPads, conventional laptops or any device + Pearson is not the right solution. Technology won't solve teaching to the test and it won't stop schools from pushing to much of the work off to homework when they could do more with the classroom time. Very little percentage of education is well suited to education software and m

  • by Chas ( 5144 ) on Sunday February 22, 2015 @12:16AM (#49103543) Homepage Journal

    It was primarily designed to funnel money into Apple and Pearson's coffers or facilitate tax writeoffs from said companies that would be at least as lucrative.

  • I'm actually on my way to becoming a teacher right now and just started my practicum, which is essentially just observing a teacher and his / her students. The teacher I'm observing is one of the heads of the I-Pad technology initiative in this school, so you'd think that I would see some really interesting uses for the I-Pad in the classroom, right? (10th Grade English, Honors) So far I've seen the I-Pads used for taking quizzes, writing responses, drawing, and playing games and/or listening to music i
  • ...another cargo cultist.
  • by Brian Kendig ( 1959 ) on Sunday February 22, 2015 @11:08AM (#49105199)

    Give the kids iPads and they will just run Angry Birds all day. What ever happened to OLPC?

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