Maine buys 38,600 ibooks for Public Schools 581
Anderson Silva writes "I just found this piece of news on MacSlash, and since I live in Maine, and I own an ibook, I thought I would pass the word along: The Maine Learning Technology Endowment has announced today that Apple has won the bid to provide Maine 6th, 7th and 8th graders with Apple iBooks and Airport wireless connection points."
Anyone know who was competing? (Score:3, Interesting)
Apple has always gone out of their way to win school bids. I remember when I was a kid I wanted an Apple ][ just because that's what the school had, and that my friend, is what Apple wants!
Mike
Re:Anyone know who was competing? (Score:2)
Apples Education market troubles (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Apples Education market troubles (Score:2, Insightful)
Gimmickry and technology (Score:3, Flamebait)
Re:Gimmickry and technology (Score:2)
Modifier key mappings:
Ctrl -> Value Meal
Meta-> Super Size
What the hell is with schools and laptops? (Score:2, Interesting)
No Room (Score:2, Insightful)
And as far as computing power... I think our software makers have a long way to go before they are limited by todays hardware. (You don't require 125 frames per second in geology class...)
Re:No Room (Score:2)
If you have a desktop you have just wasted an entire desk. With the laptop you don't need a special desk just for the machine, plus you can put it away. And they can be much more easily locked away when not in use.
I wonder how hard it would be to set up a flat screen setup that could fold away into the desk. Basically a flat screen wireless xterminal, networked to the teacher's 1.5 gigahertz running linux (which of course is networked to the rest of the school). A thin client network would probably be better for teaching applications anyway, but the initial setup would probably wind up costing the same $1K each anyway. The advantage would be in the upgrades. In any case, it would probably take far too much technical knowhow for the school system to actually pull off, and hiring that technology would probably be too expensive, so I can see why they're not doing it, but the solution is there... I wish I had contacts on school boards... I guess the rest of the country is glad I don't :)
Re:What the hell is with schools and laptops? (Score:2, Insightful)
Laptops will allow more kids to use the computers.
Before you think of "That's what the computer lab is for!"... as somebody else mentioned, there is often times no space for computer labs. Classrooms are packed full and no over-populated school is going to set aside a perfectly good general classroom just to put in a computer lab.
Re:What the hell is with schools and laptops? (Score:2)
What ever they are smoking when they made that decision, I want some....
Re:What the hell is with schools and laptops? (Score:2)
iBooks cheap in about a week (Score:2)
Bad idea. Laptops sprout legs.
Re:What the hell is with schools and laptops? (Score:2, Informative)
1. Software can be more easily licensed 'per machine' allowing the kids (with permission) to take the machines home and use the software without dealing with headaches like copied (pirated) software from school. Believe me, those 'homework licenses' are a pain.
2. There's no external mouse to be gummed up or with a ball or steal. (When I was in HS, this was a *huge* problem.)
3. No mousepads needed.
4. The electricity logistics are probably better. A desktop with a newer 15" monitor will take 3 amps or so. A laptop only takes power when it's recharging. So you don't have to mess with lots of wiring and powerbars, etc.
5. Students can use them in the classroom at their desks which frees computer lab space for other uses.
6. Easy to securely store away in the summer so they're not sitting vulnerable in a lab somewhere.
7. Built-in audio. Most desktops in schools have external speakers which are annoying for other users. A minority of them will have headphone plugs. Almost every laptop will have a headphone plug.
8. Less heat generation than a desktop with a monitor. We have a certain new lab with 70 desktops with 19" monitors at my university and it's like a sauna in that room.
Laptop Cons
1. Oops, I dropped it (or spilled my lunch on it.)
2. Easier to steal when they are passing through many students' hands.
3. More expensive for the computing power, harder to upgrade or fix in-house.
Re:What the hell is with schools and laptops? (Score:2, Interesting)
Learn to read, please. (Score:2)
Still doesn't solve the desk-space issue though. I'd actually say Laptops with wi-fi could be better then desktops though, especially if you give them to the students individually, rather then handing them out at class time.
The cost alone.. (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:The cost alone.. (Score:3, Funny)
Re:The cost alone.. (Score:3, Interesting)
In my experience, I've noticed that smart (ie. PhD), non-hitech people are the worst with technology. This is probably because they think like "why doesn't this work like I think?" instead of "why don't I try to figure this out?". This is how they end up breaking hardware (and software!).
It's hard, I know. But smart people sometimes have to get past their egos and realise they don't know everything. They NEED training, probably more than kids. For kids, computers have been around almost all of their lives. They are natural. To adults, these seemingly fragile pieces of equipment are clumsy, heavy and ugly. No wonder the guy is using it as a speed bump.
Kids, on the other hand
pot, kettle, black, etc. (Score:2)
Worthy advice, that the collected members of slashdot need.
Re:The cost alone.. (Score:2)
By your argument, nobody should have laptops. I don't think having a PhD is relevant to the ability to own a laptop. I think with proper training and respect for expensive provided equipment, any teenager can properly handle a laptop.
(Of course I've dropped my laptop but that's because the zipper on my backpack decided to break the one time I put my laptop in there
Re:The cost alone.. (Score:2, Funny)
Wow! Your school already has an entire department dedicated to that funky scooter-unicycle thing? I heard it was going to take over, but I guess you're really ahead of the curve!
hmmm, social promotion??? (Score:5, Funny)
The Endowment itself (Score:2, Interesting)
Besides using macs, which IMHO is totally cool, The Maine Learning Technology Endowement [state.me.us] itself is actually quite a progressive idea.
Been There Done That.... (Score:2, Flamebait)
Re:Been There Done That.... (Score:3, Insightful)
Hey, you said it. Let's not discount colleges (and even my sisters' private high school) "providing" students with laptop-which means, "We just increased your tuition by $2000, and you don't get to choose what computer you get."
In my experience, implementation of computers and particularly the Internet has been excreble, especially outside the college level. At my sister's school, they got to pay $2100 for a Compaq that feels like a 486 (supposedly a Celeron, but it's the slowest POS I've ever used).
They also set up a wireless network, which allows students to IM each other (when their computers work.) IT sucks up a huge amount of budget, as the assheads had to set up an on-site repair shop in the high school just to keep the Compaqs up and running.
How are the laptops being put to use? PDF versions of textbooks are replacing their paper counterparts (I could understand for searching/indexing purposes, but who wants to read 50 pages of PDF?) Other than that, nothing.
The Internet (and computers in general) have been hailed as next great tool in education, just like the TV was before it. Let's not forget that implementation makes all the difference. Forcing students to carry around a laptop doesn't help anything.
headline should have read... (Score:3, Insightful)
But seriously, does anyone really, REALLY think that $38.6M couldn't POSSIBLY have found better uses than buying laptops? Like, some textbooks maybe? Or hiring teachers that made better than a C average in college?
Though I suppose Maine may not have these problems to the extent Colorado does. In that case, I suppose the money is better spent buying iBooks than building prisons or installing street surveillance cameras... (though I contend the best use of any "government money" is to refund it to its rightful owners)
Re:headline should have read... (Score:2, Funny)
hell, if a C average is good enough for our President, it ought to be good enough to teach America's kids!!!
Re:headline should have read... (Score:2, Insightful)
It's done with the claim that US kids will get "left behind" if they're not wired in and wired up 24-7. The claim is that we're educating kids on how to use computers for tomorrow.
Have you ever seen a kid who didn't know how to work a computer after a few short sessions? Most of these kids are already on their way to becoming l33t hax0rz in a matter of weeks.
We don't need computers for education we need education for education.
Just because little Johnny didn't have 802.11(n) when he was a kid doesn't mean he's going to be working in the mill for the rest of his life. But forgo the hard sciences and the English books for laptops and you've given him a crutch forever.
Clifford Stoll, the man who wrote "The Cuckoo's Egg" wrote, not too long ago "High-Tech Heretic." It deals with exactly this issue. He questions the "...relentless drumbeat for 'computer literacy' by educations and the computer industry..." His arguments on this issue are well thought out and did indeed change my mind about the roll of computers in the education system here in the US.
Re:headline should have read... (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:headline should have read... (Ah, ya, sure...) (Score:2)
But really.. 1000 bux per computer is a good buy, and they do include aircards, so the schools can save money on network wireing costs. The macs are also low maintence, so its easier for the teachers.
Re:headline should have read... (Score:2)
Or hiring teachers that made better than a C average in college?
Let's see. We're talking about 38,600 students here. Let's say the average classroom size is 30. So that's 1280 teachers. Now lets say the laptops last 4 years. I think that's reasonable. $38.6M divided by 1280 divided by 4 is $7500/year. A nice bit of money, but do you really think someone is going to go into teaching because of an extra $7500/year? It isn't going to happen. You become a teacher because you love teaching, or because there's nothing better you can do. The difference between making $30,000 a year and $37,500 a year isn't going to sway you one bit.
Re:headline should have read... (Score:2)
The second point I can agree with, but the first one I disagree with. Why would being a teacher mean that you don't want to be paid decently.
Of course the teachers want to be paid decently. My point is that paying teachers $7500/year more is not going to attract better teachers. The job of the school system is to benefit the students, not the teachers.
Teachers have to do a lot of work for the measly pay.
Teachers work half the year (180 days or so), and not any longer hours than any other profession (shorter than most, in fact). The pay is hardly "measly" when you consider that fact. Even if you don't consider the rediculous number of holidays teachers get compared to other professions, there is still the fact they get 3 months summer vacation. Multiply their pay by 4/3 right off the bat for that.
They understand that going into it, but it still doesnt help when they have to goto the store and buy materials for his/her class because the school wont.
So spend the $30 million on reinbursements for materials, if that's what the school needs. I'm just saying if you're spending that amount of money on that number of students, raising the teacher's pay is not going to be the most productive way to spend the money. Give each teacher a laptop, free internet access, a $500 materials account, maybe (besides that's all going to be nontaxable to the teacher, so in some respect you get more bang for your buck). Giving them $7500 and hoping they spend it wisely is not the best use of the taxpayer's money.
Re:headline should have read... (Score:2)
Teachers work half the year (180 days or so)
I see you skipped math. Those 180 school days account for 36 weeks, or nearly 3/4 of a year, not 1/2 of a year. (The rest of us word about 235 days.) It is true that teachers get three months off, and that needs to be factored in to the equations. But you also have to allow that teacher still have to feed their families, and they aren't very likely to be able to find additional work during the time they are off.
I'm not going to argue about whether giving each teacher another $7500 is the "correct" course of action, but I will note that since the average teacher's salary is about $40,000, that would be more than an 18% raise. That is not an amount I would consider "measly."
Re:headline should have read... (Score:2)
Do you really think gpa means for shit in the real world?
It's important for grad school, scholarships, etc. Are you suggesting these are not elements of the real world?
A stupid subjective,content free way of letting the over achievers act like ass holes because they got an "A" and someone else got a "B".
Can you suggest a better way to determine what a person has learned? And at what quality level? And at my school the under achievers were the one who acted out.
Yes I teach in my spare time.
And you sound like a truly caring and patient teacher... :)
Why Wireless Laptops? (Score:3, Interesting)
Most people don't have wireless network connections and laptops. Why is it imperative that the government pay to buy luxury items for the schools?
I'm all in favor of spending money on education, but that means *education*, not laptops for stupid powerpoint presentations on Abraham Lincoln. (Bitter high school experience.) Why can't we buy the children better textbooks or pay the teachers more money. A laptop for every teacher and assuming ~20 kids per teacher is tens of thousands of dollars that could pay for more and better-qualified teachers and facilities.
*Sigh* Maybe I just miss the good ol' days of playing Doom in the high school computer lab -- the old fashioned way, with wires.
Re:Why Wireless Laptops? (Score:2)
Re:Why Wireless Laptops? (Score:3, Insightful)
Or, it could be that the kids go from classroom to classroom all day, and it's better for them to be able to take their computer with them... And wireless prevents them from having to deal with snapping connectors in (and off) all the time.
--T
Re:Why Wireless Laptops? (Score:3, Informative)
BTW, some high school experiences are much better, programming, typing tests, doing actual work, being a TA and grading assignments.
Side note - Every kid should play Where in the world is Carmen Sandiego and wagon train.
Apple trying to make a comeback.. (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Apple trying to make a comeback.. (Score:2)
If Johnny grows up using a Mac in school, what kind of computer/OS is he likely to purchase after school? What kind of computer is he going to convince mom and dad to buy, so it's compatible with the files he brings home from school?
MadCow.
Re:Apple trying to make a comeback.. (Score:2)
A PC. I had Macs growing up in school forever, but all I wanted was a PC. I may have been an exception though, after being a Mac zealot for a few years I took a programming class where we used DOS and I loved it. I just thought the command line kicked ass.
But anyway, it's really a moot point these days, most people already have computers, and families are going to buy machines that will work with the files that mommy and daddy bring home from work, not the one junior brings home from school...
GOOD DAMN THING (Score:5, Interesting)
The area where I live (Lewiston) has a high school that is tech heavy and accomodates other high schools in the region. We've found that computers help out education a lot. (Yes, I did say I'm a student. But I like playing with tech and get my hands all over everything). The laptops should be a further boost.
The idea is NOT to replace desktops, but to give people decent usable computers that they can carry. Nighmares will happen - they'll get dropped, stolen, broken, maimed, abused, and dead. What we want to see is if we can keep that to a minimum. And if it works, the wireless networks that are being planned should prove interesting. And if it doesn't work, then other states can save themselves the cash. I really believe it will work. And we're ready for it.
Re:GOOD DAMN THING (Score:2)
Re:GOOD DAMN THING (Score:2)
Practicality is a nice thing, and I tend to aim for it. And I see this as practical. If you can sit here and tell me honestly that computers are not going to play an integral part in the future lives of students entering junior high and high school next year, I'll gladly shut up. But I don't see that happening...
Literacy is important - and technical knowledge has become a form of it.
Luddites on a tech site. Huh. (Score:5, Insightful)
Plenty of schools have plenty of laptop programs. They work. They have roughly 5% overstock for the repair stream. Remarkably few ever get run over by cars. iBooks don't need no stinking dongles 99% of the time.
The kids do a higher level of work. Remember when your only vehicles for expression were book reports and clay-filled shoeboxes? Wanna go back to that? This is the direction the world is going. Once again, some want the kids to be last in line.
There is no best way to teach, there is no best way to outfit a school. This you learn only by experience in a school. There are plenty of good ways, and this is one of them.
I've been in education for 20 years. I've been running Mac & Win labs fo the past ten. Never had to unload a teacher machine because it was full. Kids, on the other hand, overdrive any machine you give them, and that's without games contributing to the fray.
The guns or butter arguments don't wash either. If you weren't harping about spending school money before, don't do it now.
Plenty of schools don't have laptops and still have lots of problems that - surprise - aren't being solved by anyone of their critics.
Only thing that worries me - they'll lose these shiny white boxes in all that snow... tsk.
In the 80's Kids stole each other's pricey shoes (Score:2)
What about irresponsible kids
This seems like a luxury some families can ill afford. I don't know how I feel about this trend yet.
Re:In the 80's Kids stole each other's pricey shoe (Score:2)
I don't see how this can work for everybody. Seems like another gimmick-perk for the suburbs.
Not luddites, just... (Score:2)
But yeah, the concept of giving every student computer access at their own desks is a no-brainer. I'm not even going to try to imagine what all those kids in Maine are going to do with their new toys. God, I envy them!
Re:Luddites on a tech site. Huh. (Score:2)
Probably because they are lacking in crayons too.
That means $11,580,000 is being spent at a time when teacher shortages are happening everywhere. I would rather have a smaller class size with or without the laptops than a crowded class with technology being used ineffectively.
Agreed. However the teacher shortages have more to do with most potentially good teachers' inability to tolerate the bureaucracy and nonsense that goes on in the "education establishment."
In addition to that fact, roughly 75% of the money spent on education in this state at least is spent outside the classroom, and not on teachers. THAT is the problem.
Re:"Critics don't solve anything" (Score:2)
Yes, if your force your kid's world view to be a proper subset of your world view, then you will be guaranteed to be compatible. Never mind if your kid turns out to be an intellectual bonsai kitten [bonsaikitten.com].
Worse than pointless (Score:2, Interesting)
These laptops are totally unnecessary. What a waste of money. The vast majority of teachers don't know what to do with the computers in the computer lab down the hall. How is that going to be improved by putting them in every backpack?
Sure, computer literacy is important in the modern world, but so is writing and math. In fact, computer literacy without both of those to back it up gives you nothing but slashdot trolls. This is just as bad of an idea as letting kids use calculators in pre-algebra, and for the same reasons. How are kids ever going to learn the basics of anything if we keep handing them machines to take care of the basics for them?
Computers in schools are great. I remember the first computer I ever got to use, a Commodore PET with a cassette drive that lived in the corner of my 4th grade classroom. You had to reserve it ahead of time to play games on it during recess. Unfortunately that's all we ever did with it. A few years later we had a lab with some Apple]['s that we could use to type up our essays, and by the time I got to high school those were replaced with PCs. Were they useful? Did I learn from using them? Sure, but not enough to justify giving every kid their own. 10:1 is a perfectly acceptable ratio, probably even less in more upscale neighborhoods where everyone has a computer at home.
There was recently that linked the rise of the modern word processor with the decline of writing skills in college students. My fear is that these programs are just going to produce more of the same. Kids need to learn how to do stuff themselves before we hand them tools that do stuff for them.
Re:Worse than pointless (Score:2, Interesting)
The vast majority of teachers don't know what to do with the computers in the computer lab down the hall. How is that going to be improved by putting them in every backpack?
Because the kids will know what to do with them, and can teach the teachers.
Sure, computer literacy is important in the modern world, but so is writing and math.
And of course, these are mutually exclusive goals.
I remember the first computer I ever got to use, a Commodore PET...A few years later we had...some Apple]['s...Did I learn from using them? Sure, but not enough to justify giving every kid their own.
And of course, computers and how computers are used haven't changed the slightest since then. I bet you walked uphill both ways to school, too.
There was recently that linked the rise of the modern word processor with the decline of writing skills in college students.
Witness this sentence as an example.
Thanks for the insightful commentary. Now I'm convinced that it's those durn blasted computers that's keepin' our kids from lernin' nuthin!
-jimbo
Re:Worse than pointless (Score:2)
Indeed.
BC? (Score:2)
Why do you need computers in education? (Score:2)
The is absolutely no reason that you need a computer for education. I mean, I passed the AP Computer Science AB exam with flying colors, and the only time I touched my computer to learn that stuff was to find out that the College Board web site sucks. (The AP Computer Science AB exam has nothing to do with programming -- it's all logic and computer science, the way it should be.) Why couldn't these schools buy another computer lab? I doubt that everyone needs to be on the internet at all times.
Re:Why do you need computers in education? (Score:2)
BTW, network != Internet. Just cause the ibooks have 802.11b network adapters, doesnt make them networked. But it would be a waste to not use them, and save money on "NOT" installing a network.
iBook contract (Score:3, Interesting)
Another testament to the bias of Slashdot, I suppose.
Re:iBook contract (Score:5, Insightful)
Microsoft offered to give (as in 'dump') software to public schools in exchange for settling class action suits against them. This has the effect of a) getting rid of a bunch of potentially expensive law suits, b) paying damages based on retail value of a bunch of MS software, and c) freezing Apple out of the competition for equipping a large number of schools.
Big difference!
Re:iBook contract (Score:2)
That's because Apple isn't a monopolist, at least. Some would argue not evil, but that's a moral judgment - the monopoly status is a fact established by law. Microsoft is a monopoly and must play by different rules than everyone else. Period. No dumping free products, no hooking kids at an early age. It's called level playing field and protected competition.
Oh, and you forgot one thing - Apple is selling, not giving away. You get what you pay for, in this case.
follow up news. (Score:2)
laptops, please. not neaded, easily breakable.
how about we spend the money to teach children how to think?
If Maine had decided to pass out Linux Laptops... (Score:2, Insightful)
Now where did that unbiased journalistic integerity go?
Well, this might be the way to go (Score:2, Offtopic)
But, if Maine wanted to go with a laptop solution, I'd have to say that the iBook was a wise choice. I own an iBook, and I can say that this thing would be my primary choice for a situation like this (except for maybe Panasonic's Toughbook, but those cost far too much). Take note school districts:
1) Durability - While I haven't actually dropped my iBook, it does live in my backpack when it isn't in use. I have dropped the whole backpack (no damage), and it has flown off the passenger seat when idiots pull out in front of my car (still no damage). I have walked with it under my arm in a hard rain (no damage).
2) Heavily integrated - yeah, this isn't a good idea most of the time, but broken dongles will no longer be an issue. Neither will stolen NICs/Wireless NICs.
3) Lightweight - As far as I know, the iBook has the lowest weight for a laptop in its price range. $1,299 retail for a 4.9 lbs. laptop is a helluva deal.
4) Sort of bastardized security through obscurity - 95% of these 1337 7th and 8th graders don't know enough about Mac OS/mac hardware to cause serious damage. I can just see some jerk setting BIOS passwords or messing with clock frequencies or IDE device settings on little Suzy's PC laptop when she got up to go to the bathroom.
5) Useable UNIX - escape the MS tax AND teach the kiddies some UNIX all at the same time (that was my requisite karma whoring). I could actually see this being fairly useful, though. Only give the kids user privileges in OS X, and make them find someone with root access in order to install programs. "Okay little Billy, tell me again why you need Starcraft for school use...". This also solves any problems that might stem from some jerk trying to erase important parts of the system.
Overall, I think buying laptops is a waste of money, but I'd say that iBooks are probably the way to go.
Re:Well, this might be the way to go (Score:2)
Re:Well, this might be the way to go (Score:2)
That's assuming, though, that Apple isn't just knocking a huge amount off the purchase price (another poster said $300 per iBook).
The great thing for Apple is that it can afford to lose money now, if that means gains in the long run, so I wouldn't be surprised to see them doing something like that. I think $300 is a little low, but I wouldn't mind.
Sure, they're trying to take over the market, but I'd rather a company take over the market by selling decent hardware to schools, instead of screwing customers and 'buying' a billion dollars of its own software for schools.
--Dan
This is a good use of money? (Score:2)
Now I'll back that up with what I think is a better argument against the purchase of these systems: Wouldn't the money be better spent on things like teachers' salaries, improvements to the classrooms, programs that promote the learning of basic subjects like math, science, reading, etc.? While I'll be the first to line up with those who say that throwing money at education isn't necessarily the best solution (take a look at California's test scores), if the money is going to be spent, I think that it ought to be spent where it will make the most difference.
Let's also consider the issue of support for these computers. Who's going to take care of them when they get dropped, when the screen cracks, when software gets deleted, when the network connection isn't working...I could go on and on. Is the teacher going to fix the computer? The student? Does the school system have to hire network administrators? A whole new IT department?
While I think that knowing how to use a computer has become an important part of American life, somehow I think that too many people have decided that computers are some sort of panacea for the classroom. I disagree. I think that an extra $38 million spent on education in a state the size of Maine could provide a significantly greater return by creating new and exciting programs designed to captivate and encourage children to learn. And establishing ongoing programs like these provides a benefit to more than just four years' worth of students...the kids who follow will benefit, too.
Put simply, I'd say that while this program sure has a great gee-whiz factor, in the end, I suspect that it won't amount to anything.
-h-
Re:This is a good use of money? (Score:2)
While Apple computers are great machines and can do a lot of things very well, most of the world relies on PCs to do their work
If you are using a PC at work, it is probably mostly for Office (and Solitare, but it has a quick learning curve), and the Mac and Windows versions of Office have near identical commands, so I don't see the issue, beyond the time it will take them to use the start menu.
Let's also consider the issue of support for these computers.
Part of this contract is that Apple will provide the training. The iBook is designed to be an extremely durable computer for people to keep in their backpacks and possibly drop, and Macs in general have a much lower TCO, so support would be less of an issue anyway.
Taking Maine's Economy Out of the Dumps (Score:4, Redundant)
Think big. (Score:2)
Don't forget. (Score:2, Informative)
Ahhh, memories...
Re:Don't forget. (Score:2)
How do you run a program like this? (Score:2)
- First kid to destroy his laptop while beating up another kid and get a free replacement.
- First kid to lose his laptop and get a free replacement.
- First kid to realize he/she can fence his/her laptop and get a free replacement.
- First kid to organize the use of 38,600 state-owned laptops to launch a DoS attack.
- Kid who maintains the most heavily-trafficked node on the private gnutella network (can you imagine the sheeite 7th-graders would send around?).
- First kid who gets the FBI coming to a school because he/she lent his/her laptop to a l33t older sibling.
Any other suggestions?
Im a little late on this, but... WHY? (Score:2)
again its just Apple trying to muscle into the market by going through the school system...
heres a hint apple, open up your hardware and reduce your price, THEN you can compete...
Re:Im a little late on this, but... WHY? (Score:5, Informative)
In my experiance, kids can move between platforms (Mac OS 8-9, 10, Windows 9x, 2K/XP, Linux) with no problems at all. In fact at my work we in the IT group think it's better for the kids to be exposed to mulitple platforms because it assists them in learning how to deal with different things.
For the Middle School grades, a Mac makes more sense than Windows for a number of reasons.
1. iMovie - Easy as pie DV work.
2. Office 2001/X - Works better than Office for Windows
3. AppleWorks - Nice, easier to use "light" Office Suite for younger kids.
If you think giving a Middle School kid an iBook will do them little good in the "real world", that's just FUD. A computer is a computer, what a 6th grader will be using when they get to the "real world" in 6-10 years isn't going to be what they are using today. Windows, Mac and Linux have changed a great deal since 1995 (5 years ago - when a 12th grader was in Middle School).
If anything, concentrating on one OS through a child's school career will, if anything make them unable to deal with changes. In short, they will end up like the majority of thier teachers.
As for the tired old "open Apple's hardware" speech...IDE, USB, Firewire, AGP, PCI - It's as open as most PC vendors, and alot more open than offerings by Sony or Compaq.
Re:Im a little late on this, but... WHY? (Score:2, Informative)
So, what was your point again?
Re:Im a little late on this, but... WHY? (Score:3, Informative)
around 90% of the computing world runs M$ software
And around 100% of the Mac computing world also runs Microsoft software. Word, Excel, Powerpoint, Outlook, Internet Explorer, WiMP, etc. The fact is that you can get just as much real-world computer experience with a Mac as you can with a Windows computer.
Sure, Windows machines have tons of software that has been developed for them. Let me ask you one thing: how many programs do you typically use? 10? 20? I bet that for just about all of the programs you use there are either similar programs on the Mac, or there is the same exact program available!
Not to mention that since MacOS X is out and doing very well, there are a ton of developers scrambling to produce programs for it. Another thing is that BSD is built-in to MacOS X. Can you say "huge world of open-source software with just a simple compile"? I knew you could.
Macs do cost a bit more than a similar IBM-clone, but they also have a ton of added-value in the extras and attention to detail which comes with the platform. More and more people have been realizing this and have been trying Macintosh and loving it. This is a good thing, since with competition all of us benefit. Would you want to be the one to advocate giving the remaining 10% of the computing world to Microsoft without a fight? I didn't think so...
What A Complete Waste Of Money (Score:4, Interesting)
Ludicrus as it sounds, not even the 6th grade classes, who now have SOME conmputers, use them for anything. The kids type reports, and play video games..... and surf for pr0n when my mother is not looking.
Now they want all of our kids to have laptops?!?!?!?! What is it about our society and laptops. I own a laptop computer, I am a programmer, and I have poor handwriting, I use it quite often. And as a laptop owner, I feel qualified to state that very few people on this planet have any need to own one. There are many misconceptions about laptops that just drive me nutty. And the truth behind them them all are great reasons why laptops in elemantary and high schools is a really dumb idea.
In our society, laptops are cute, small, handy computers. WRONG! In reality, laptops are small, slow, hard to handle, hard to service, and EXPENSIVE AS HELL. A touchpad is not like a mouse folks, that keyboard takes some getting used to, and they aren't exactly the most rugged pieces of machinary. Add all that togther, plus a complete lack of need in our schools for each student to have the ability to get his daily pr0n fix when he should be learning geomtry, and you have some politicians way of getting relected, at the taxpayers' extreme expense.
I'm sorry, computers in schools right now barely get used, laptops will get misused, and mistreated, and eventually become worthless paperweights..... all at the taxpayers expense.
Call me a complainer, cause I am.
My school uses iBooks (Score:2)
Similar programs elsewhere. (Score:2, Informative)
I work for a school system in Ga that will be running several pilot programs in this upcoming year. Both Dell and Apple laptops with wireless capabilities will be bought. Both companies will be providing complete solutions for these "portable labs" that we plan on implementing. We already have 3 Dell portable labs that are in place, and their success is mixed.
Our school system is very experienced in terms of technology, with every classroom consisting of at least 4 desktops and several computer labs placed throught the schools. There are approximately 50 schools in our school system with this setup. Every computer is on the network, every computer is used for educational purposes. Educational software is not compromised of Oregon Trail, Carmen Sandiego, and Word 97, as most readers tend to think.
We use over a dozen software suites (most which run on both Windows and Macintosh operating systems) that allow for students to enhance and evaluate their reading, analytical, and mathematical skills. This software allows a child to be interested in reading, and be motivated to learn new mathematical concepts. The software is varied as the grade levels progress, and new skills are picked up by the student.
With over 10,000 workstations in our network to support, adding many more laptops into the mix will allow students to be able to learn new skills while being able to work in a more comfortable environment. The initial testing will be with portable wireless labs that will several teachers to use the laptops. Pending the results of our pilot program, potentially every student will have their own laptop to use. No, the students will not get to keep the laptop, but they will be turned in at the end of the school year.
I do not think that what Maine is doing is a bad idea, but if they cannot control the situation on how laptops are distributed, how the laptops are used, and how they are implemented to enhance the learning process, their program will be deemed a failure.
iBook a good choice for education (Score:3, Informative)
However, even more importantly Apple is a serious player in the education market, and a lot of educational software in K-12 is made for the Mac and the Mac version is better than the Window's ports --- so this isn't as strange of a decision as it sounds.
It was an open bidding process [state.me.us], so Apple won this bid fair and square based on the merits of their bid (the software, the training, and the hardware).
I'm so sick of hearing: a) its not MS so its a good thing and b) Apple is small so no one should ever use them. Its very important to use the right tools for the right jobs. And, in this case Apple legitimately sounds like its the right tool for the job.
Apple's iBook [apple.com] is a tough little computer with all of the connectors built in so that there are no dongles & with integrated wireless networking, this deal will end up saving all the schools in the State of Maine a ton of money not needing to pull cable to each desk in each classroom in each school across the whole state.
So, Congratulations to Apple. I hope that competition like this causes them to keep making better computers and make better deals.
I hope... (Score:4, Interesting)
Whoopie cushion footprints (Score:2)
Apple won Maine's bid fair and square and I think it will work out pretty well. The iBook is a sturdy little worker that can connect to just about anything you can think of. Not only is it pretty durable but it is really light and easily fits into a backpack or messenger bag. As for the software, there's little MacOS can't do that Windows can do, especially OS10. It will connect to just about any sort of network you want to connect to, shit you can base your whole backend on any Unix system you want and OS10 will talk to it with no problems. The iBooks need not Microsoft because AppleWorks 6.1 and up read and write Office documents and will suit any sort of educational purpose you use it for. If you've ever cared to look which I can tell few of you have, there is a literal ton of educational software available for MacOS. Nearly all computer interfaces are pretty much the same damn thing. Whether the GUI is called Explorer, Finder, or X doesn't mean crap. They all act pretty much the same way. You press buttons and things do different things on your monitor. Web browsers and e-mail clients work the same way, there's little real difference between Lynx and OmniWeb when you get down to it.
There are others who think giving laptops to kids won't help them learn anything. Have you seen Maine? It is a pretty damn rural place. I bet a good portion of the kids getting the iBooks would have never had gotten a computer at home. Giving kids the laptops is pretty cost effective if you sit and think about it. The demands of educational software aren't really changing a whole bunch past the "multimedia" phase. It has a moderate level of interactivity and a pretty small memory footprint. Thus it can be used a really long damn time. The 8th graders getting iBooks this year can probably still use them when they are seniors in high school. Besides longevity it isn't a particular OS you learn it is the computer concepts that are important. For an area not rife with computers in the home laptops for students makes alot of sense. Any assignment involving computers can be continued at home without much hassle. There's alot more to increasing teacher salaries than just diving up a lump of cash. Bitch to the unions about teacher's pay.
Wow, who knew? (Score:5, Funny)
Hm. I fail to see what's wrong with this. (Score:2, Interesting)
OK, so this is a reply to a lot of comments here. I've just been reading the article and noticing that about half of the people here have something negative to say about this.
This comment [slashdot.org] mentions that they aren't figuring out "pressing educational problems." I would personally say that they are: having been in schools where they had computers that were avaliable for everyone to use (even if they were just computer labs) they did many things to help the students, thereby alleviating some of the issues that seemed pressing at the time:
Sure, some students don't do their work. Some don't do it because they find it overly difficult, others because they aren't good at it, and some out of pure laziness (such as my brother). Others didn't do it because they found the pencil (or pen) and paper based approaches too difficult. Writing becomes much faster when sitting in front of a computer. Research becomes easier - Google [google.com] is an excellent research tool (honestly - enter anything you happen to want and it comes up, and the most relevant stuff happens to be sitting right there). Much of everything seems to become easier because you aren't spending so much time dealing with the issues of, for example, copying an entire paper because you need to make 3 or 4 changes to it. Pop it up in your word processor, make the changes, print it out. Voila, done.
Of course they can't - they're human too. Do you expect everyone to know everything?
I'm sure it's expensive. But giving students access to technology provides greater benefits than it really costs - see #1. Sure, the machines aren't PC's. [slashdot.org] But does that mean that they aren't going to know how to use a PC when one is placed in front of them? Remember that most (all) of these students have been around computers (or at least have known of their existance, and have used a few) all of their life, and could most likely navigate their way through Windows 3.1 just as easily as they could through MacOS, and just as easily as they could through KDE. The fact that they're not PC's is a non-issue. And the fact that they happen to be running MacOS is also a non-issue. See here [slashdot.org] for someone else's comments on the topic. And as for support, it's been done before. [slashdot.org]
As for comments that claim that this whole thing is pointless [slashdot.org], they aren't pointless. See #1 in the previous section for some reasons why they aren't pointless. Beyond that, some other reasons:
Well, now the teachers, at the very least, no longer have to compete for lab time: I know that while I was in high school, and we had access to many computer labs, the teachers would generally find some use for them. English classes: we would go type our reports. It was easier for the teachers to read and grade (because they didn't have to deal with illegible handwriting, which computers didn't help, but it's still no worse than it was originally to begin with), and easier for us to type as opposed to write because we didn't have to go through the repetitive steps of write, copy, copy, copy, (wash-rinse-repeat, you get the idea).
Well, given that you really don't have computer literacy without either of the above in the first place...
And furthermore:
Maybe true. So go back to text editors. Or use older word processors that don't try doing everything for you.
Everything you would want to configure is right there. Open up the Control Panel, and you get access to everything that would need to be configured for the machine. That's not enough? Every school that I've ever been at that uses Apple systems (post-Mac of course) has plenty of software to safeguard the system from the students so that they don't do things to the system to make it unusable for everyone else.
Everything has a standard interface. Going from one program to another is easy, because they all follow the same UI guidelines. There isn't anything difficult to use about a Mac. They're designed for people who aren't necessarily the best with computers, but can be used by even the most knowledgeable people with little hassle and do the job well.
Keeping in mind that plenty of schools have them, there happens to be all kinds of educational software for the Mac. Nowhere near as much as for Windows or Linux. Sure, one could use Windows for it, but now you've got machines that are suitable for word processing (and if they're trying to use ancient hardware with the latest software, barely suitable for that even) and little more. Same goes for Linux.
And, sure, there is no need for computers in education [slashdot.org], but not only are they helpful to the teachers (every teacher of mine from 9th grade on up used a computer for everything from preparing lesson plans to keeping students grades to doing presentations for the class), but they're also helpful to the students (see #1 in the first section of this comment).
Anyway, that whole long-winded comment is my 2c for this.
Re:I guess that makes Maine... (Score:2)
Contact me. My new name online will be: WFManiac47.
Re:They found a market..Now can they keep it? (Score:3, Interesting)
However, with M$ and the ***Billion Dollar*** Settlement offer still floating around (looking however less politically viable everday)
What can Apple do to keep their educational position?
they need to be putting Apple products into the big city K-12 school systems....
New York, Chi Town, El Lay, Don't forget the Motor City...these school systems have orders of magnitude more students in them than the entire state of Maine..many future developers and other technologists will come from the Big City school districts...
One of the edges that MS has being a software centric company, is that "giving away" products like WinOS and Office and Visual Studio involves only trivial duplication costs...MS could burn "collections" of educationally aimed software on to DVD's and have "per byte" costs that are microscopic
Apple has to cough up genuine hardware that represents real (and very non-trivial) capital and production costs, which in its current market position is not an attractive proposition...
What will Maine (or any other state) do if MS comes along and offers them 50,000 low-cost XP laptops (bullied out of Compaq or Gateway or some other Wintel mfgr with big inventory excess problems) with Office, FlightSim, and Visual Studio pre-loaded for net net cost????
Maine would probably dump their Apple order in a second......
This is what happens when you have a monopoly position....
Re:They found a market..Now can they keep it? (Score:2)
Why? Because this would have a very strong effect of breaking the operating system stranglehold. Plus, they might even go for it since it has the benficial side effect of increaing their office mind share.
But, please let them be loaded with MacOS X. This way at least the kids have a chance of seeing Unix, and all that extra users sure would help the unix software cause....
Re:Apple has always had their fingers in education (Score:2)
Re:Apple has always had their fingers in education (Score:3, Interesting)
You're probably thinking of FrEdWriter.... which, I believe, stood for Free Educational Writer. More info on this great program can be found here [gsnaward.org].
I remember typing papers up on that in 5th grade.... and being all happy that we'd gotten the latest version of ProDOS. Every once in a while I get a FrEdWriter flashback when I'm using pico... heh.
Re:Apple has always had their fingers in education (Score:2)
Maybe not.
Re:ibooks for unix (Score:3, Insightful)
Wouldn't that be a problem with the window manager, not the program that simply interprets what dots are to be drawn on the screen?
Re:Eh ? Point Please ? (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Eh ? Point Please ? (Score:2, Funny)
But in other news, Bob bought a ibook too.
Re:They're not giving them away (Score:2, Troll)
Will someone please explain to me how you can read the headline, "Maine buys 38,600 ibooks for Public Schools" and infer that they were giving them away!
Also they did not sell laptops, they sold the entire solution, with networking, hardware, and support. If a company wanted to put in a bid to provide a solution using Linux laptops they were more than free to do so, but there are several advantages Apple had in a contract for wireless labs:
Re:Which OS? (Score:2)
Re:Pointless (Score:2)
Re:You people are never happy, are you? (Score:5, Insightful)
Because there's a difference, a gaping chasm, in fact, between responsible and effective use of technology and a wasteful "technology for technology's sake" approach. This is the latter. Transportation is important, too. We need our government to maintain roads, not give everyone a car.
I understand the concept all too well. The responsible and ethical thing to do would be to say "Thanks so much, but giving children laptops is not a productive use of $2k or so per student." As a taxpayer, I don't really care whether the money spent comes from my state or federal tax return. I care first whether it's something government even has any business being involved in, and second, if they're performing their role responsibly and with at least some semblance of efficiency. You don't have to be perfect, but you'd better not buy $800 hammers. Kindly stop looking at this as government money. It isn't. It's the money of thousands of hardworking taxpayers who had numerous productive uses they could have put the money to had it not been taken from them for this wasteful pet project.
I disagree. The complaints you hear are from people (like me) who don't think using a computer is such an integral part of schooling that every student needs a computer 24x7. That's the wasteful part, and that's where it gets needlessly expensive. Computers simply don't add as much to the educational experience as you seem to believe. There are select exceptions (CompSci, some mathematics), and for those exceptions, "Students, please take a laptop on your way in to the classroom." or "This will be your laptop for the semester. Take care of it."
It's hardly a drop in the bucket. Educating a student costs $4k-8k per year depending on your school system. Spending $2k or so on *each student* is therefore a rather massive increase. If it's justified and warranted AND we have the money, fine. When there's no established return on investment, I find it wasteful. I care when it happens elsewhere because other unwise politicians will emulate it.
No it won't. Zero sum doesn't apply. Whine this year for laptops for everyone, whine next year for a raise. Voters have a hard time turning down more money for teachers. I happen to agree on that point. Most teachers aren't paid enough.
Schools are not vocational education centers. They should teach you the academics. In other words, here's how to write a quality paper, not here's how to type in Word.
You're still missing the point. It isn't about dollars, its about effective use of a limited resource. Books remain a more friendly medium. It's easier to read a book, you won't get repetitive motion problems from a book, you won't get a headache from staring at a book all day. We have a nice, long history of students learning effectively from books. If you want to throw them out in favor of something else, PROVE (do a peer reviewed study) that something else works at least as well FIRST. Once you've shown that, only then do I even care whether it costs more or less.
Re:Why iBooks? (Score:2)
And come on, they're eight graders, give em a break!
Re:And if the school has slow learners (Score:2)
They ship with both; it will be interesting to see which one the school chooses to teach, or if they let the kids pick most of the time
Too bad, however, that Star Office/Open Office never came thru with a mac version...you bet you boots Microsoft will want to "give special deals" to those schools as part of their settlement.
Well, it is possible to run OpenOffice on a rootless XFree86 in X, but I doubt many schools will opt for that. But the iBooks do come with a software bundle, so they will already have AppleWorks (which should be more than they need already); hopefully they will not waste the money to get MS Office. Why districts shell out $249 so that they can have some features most businesspeople, let alone middle-schoolers, will never use.
Even better... (Score:2)
Let's face it: the only reason indows is at the top is because Microsoft lied to the public, who didn't know enough to see through the transparent fraud that Microsoft has committed over the years. Because of this, they believe M$'s lies about performance, compatibility, stnadards-compliance, and such.
So raise a generation to know better, and Microsoft will be relegated to the oblivion it so richly deserves.