New Hampshire to Follow Maine's Lead 236
Timex writes "According to an article from the Portland [Maine] Press Herald, some seventh-graders in New Hampshire will be issued laptops in January. 19 school districts have been invited to submit proposals, and up to five of them will be chosen to lead the way in New Hampshire. Cabletron Systems co-founder and NH Governor Craig Benson is getting funding for the four-year project from corporate donations. So far, he's gathered about half of the estimated $1.2 million estimated cost."
Excellent news (Score:3, Funny)
(fp?)
Re:Excellent news (Score:3, Funny)
I mean, where's the struggle with one of those iBooks? Heckm they're so easy to use even the most non-technical person can be productive.
No, what they need are cheap, noname-brand laptops with Gentoo Linux! Heck, even Gentoo makes it too easy. Make 'em to LFS!
That'll teach 'em!
Re:Excellent news (Score:3, Funny)
Ah, good times.
Re:Excellent news (Score:2, Funny)
Assembly Language! Hah! We were lucky if we were given 15 minutes to divine the hexadecimal opcodes for the 6502 instruction set before we were expected to write our own multiplayer FPS!
mommy. . (Score:3, Funny)
Would be good if... (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Would be good if... (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Would be good if... (Score:2)
Re:Would be good if... (Score:3, Informative)
I work with the education program at my college and in the local school districts and their admins. The ibooks for the Maine program are locked down rather well, I'm still trying to tinker with one to get it to use something *other* then 802.11b. The only settings you can alter (other then the top row of Personal stuff) is keyboard, mouse, sound, and the universal access. Nothing else is even accessable. I can run terminal, but I'm also using a teachers image of OSX and not the st
It's about time... (Score:3, Funny)
Kid's and laptops. (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Kid's and laptops. (Score:1, Insightful)
Re:Kid's and laptops. (Score:5, Informative)
IAACGWAL ( I am a college guy with a laptop ) and I can honestly say those things are nearly useless during class. They require boot time, which is wasted time. They also require juice considering they don't run on air and a random day at college lasts 8 hours for me. I haven't heard of ANY laptop with an 8 hours battery life and the idea of 30 people rushing for the nearest electrical outlet every 2 hours is plain silly. Also, laptops aren't very versatile for writing down stuff in a hurry. The programs given are very limited and using them can feel very unnatural at times. That whole issue might be solved by those tablet PCs with the pen thingy, which is far more suitable for jotting down notes and what not.
For college, nothing rocks more then a good pen and a good notepad with pre-perforated and lined paper. Though laptops would still rock, especially with WLANs. UT2k3 during dutch classes, anyone?
Re:Kid's and laptops. (Score:2)
I prefer a mechanical pencil.
Pens stain my pocket protector.
Re:Kid's and laptops. (Score:5, Insightful)
So, get an iBook. They are cheap and when you wake them from sleep, they are on almost instantly. No waiting.
They also require juice considering they don't run on air and a random day at college lasts 8 hours for me.
My 800 Mhz iBook ran for about 5 hours of constant use which is more than plenty for a day at school considering that you are not constantly using the laptop during your school day. If you were, you had access to a power outlet. Currently, I use an 12in Powerbook that has less battery life, but since I am not in classes anymore, I prefer it and the extra features.
Also, laptops aren't very versatile for writing down stuff in a hurry.
I can type much faster that I can write as can many, many others who generally prefer taking notes with a keyboard.
The programs given are very limited and using them can feel very unnatural at times.
I find a simple text edit program the easiest and fastest way to input notes.
That whole issue might be solved by those tablet PCs with the pen thingy, which is far more suitable for jotting down notes and what not.
I agree with you here. I have owned an Apple Newton 120 (they still rock!) and I have used some of the new Microsoft tablets, and by far, the Newton had better usability, although they are showing their age now by lacking modern I/O and networking. The Newton however was not quite ideal for notetaking. If you plugged in the additional keyboard they were O.K., but it needed a little more integration with the pen and keyboard. The current Wintel tablets are simply tablet versions of dekstop metaphors and simply, don't work very well. More R&D needed to go into interface design. I don't know if Apple will ever produce another tablet/subtablet type device, but it would certainly be welcome in many circles.
do you only take humanities classes? (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:do you only take humanities classes? (Score:2)
To answer your question, no, I have a Ph.D. in retinal neurophysiology with many years of statistics, chemistry, biological science, bioengineering, anatomy and the first two years of medical school under my belt.
Re:Kid's and laptops. (Score:2)
OTOH the Newton had all these properties and excellent handwriting recognition.
Nevvton Handvvr1ting rEcognition (Score:2)
I'nn us11ng @ Nevvt0n rig8t novv. Th3 handwr11t11ng recogmiXion i5 50 gQQd !
Re:Nevvton Handvvr1ting rEcognition (Score:2)
Re:Kid's and laptops. (Score:3, Insightful)
I've thought about the usefulness of laptops during classes, and the best way that I've seen to make them useful would be to set up a tiny direction microphone pointed at the lecturer, set up a small webcam, and record.
Years ago, when my mother went back to school, she did a similiar setup with a cassette recorder. Works well for review, if your professor does not rely on blackboard diagrams. Else, an audio/video recorder is the way to go.
Then again, it would only take one person to do this and jus
Yeah dont give kids pencils or calculators. (Score:2)
They should do all the math in their head because they might lose the pencil or drop the calculator!
Re:Kid's and laptops. (Score:2)
When Maine did this, didn't they use the old Toilet Seat iBooks? Those things where durable like no other. Too bad they dont' make 'em like they used to...
REAL computer curriculums needed BEFORE computers! (Score:5, Interesting)
Now if a REAL computer curriculum were to be developed around the Unix aspects of Mac OS X that would be something, but integration with the classroom itself isn't going to happen. I don't know how it could really without losing the attention of students who resort to web browsing during dull (and meaningless) lectures.
High School/Public School education is a joke in the U.S. Student's don't even know algebra by the time they graduate with A's in math.
Re:REAL computer curriculums needed BEFORE compute (Score:1, Flamebait)
> Student's don't even know algebra
Looks like you didn't pay much attention in school either...
Re:REAL computer curriculums needed BEFORE compute (Score:1)
Re:REAL computer curriculums needed BEFORE compute (Score:5, Informative)
I live near Bangor, Maine, and I did a college photojournalism project at my middle school to see how the laptops were working. Not only did the students seem more engaged in their learning, but they used them for almost everything: they wrote journal entries, found clipart for multimedia presentations, and then researched information for a speech. And that was all during one class. Students in social studies the next period spent time researching current headlines on msnbc.com and informed the teacher of the latest development of the war in Iraq (I visited this spring). That's right, they were telling her the latest news. What better way to engage students in education than by letting them be the teachers? Every study I've ever seen has said that two-way learning is much more effective than reading from a textbook or listening to lecture.
While some districts in the state may be less excited about the program, its important to note that the laptop program in Maine is still supported and still working. While expensive, this program introduces students to technology at a fairly early age. It's very possible that Maine students will be much more tech-savvy once they leave their middle and high schools.
Re:REAL computer curriculums needed BEFORE compute (Score:4, Informative)
As he pointed out, the schools in his area were hardly making good use of the machines. In your example, I bet that the distribution of laptops in Maine was accompanied by an education programme to teach how to use the laptops for school assignments.
Re:REAL computer curriculums needed BEFORE compute (Score:3, Interesting)
When we implemented a laptop program for graduate students in 1990 at UC Irvine's Graduate School of Management, it definitely took some time for faculty to understand how to best use the new technology for their curriculum. Obviously, some professors took to it faster than others, some may never take advantage of the fa
Re:REAL computer curriculums needed BEFORE compute (Score:2)
Will the teachers give an "A for effort" when the kids produce cute pasted clipart and sampled audio instead of a coherent well-written presentation?
Are they focusing on substance or just the fun of being able to mindlessly browse menus? Do they teachers even know the distinction?
Re:REAL computer curriculums needed BEFORE compute (Score:2, Informative)
Flame bait and ignorant.
Teachers [wired.com] like this one [middleweb.com] , and studies [stateline.org]and newspapers [macobserver.com] back up my claim.
Do you work better on a good day or a bad day? Most work better when
Re:REAL computer curriculums needed BEFORE compute (Score:4, Interesting)
- How to teach using computers, and when teaching without them is better.
- What to teach about computers.
Both these issues are not being addressed or even recognised in schools over here (Holland). In rare instances you see an enthusiastic physics teacher giving classes on computer science, and even in those cases they have little if any teaching materials to back them up.
Buying computers for schools or giving laptops to kids is not the way to improve education.
Oh, I can sympathise with your sentiment about education. Here in Holland, per-capita spending on education is about 2/3rds of the amount spent in the rest of Europe. It scares the hell out of me to see my country dumbing down, visibly.
Re:REAL computer curriculums needed BEFORE compute (Score:2)
Why would a 7th grader need to know anything about Unix? Seriously.
Re:REAL computer curriculums needed BEFORE compute (Score:2)
You did not really answer my question, how does average student get benefit from knowing the inner workings of unix? Essentials of word processing? sure. Basics of email? Wh
Re:REAL computer curriculums needed BEFORE compute (Score:2)
Re:REAL computer curriculums needed BEFORE compute (Score:2)
That just proves that maybe we shouldn't teach them two-column proofs. There are countless things out there that would be good for a kid to know but we must prioritize and I see no reason to put *nix knowledge to a high place on that ladder.
Re:REAL computer curriculums needed BEFORE compute (Score:2)
Re:REAL computer curriculums needed BEFORE compute (Score:2)
The reality was I did not understand anything. I did not understand what a computer really was. I did not understand what i was really doing when i was using one. But I did understand that these things were very cool and I needed to learn and understand. i needed to get comfortabl
Re:REAL computer curriculums needed BEFORE compute (Score:2)
I wonder if the NH school folks have consulted with, or researched about, Brewster? It'd be nice to think they
Re:REAL computer curriculums needed BEFORE compute (Score:2)
I don't know that I'd go that far - would remove all the special "awe" of being a computer geek in the eyes of the unwashed.
I graduated HS in 89. At that time, we had a computer lab (IBM PS/2 I think). Every student to graduate had to either complete a fairly basic computer lit course or a p
Waste of money (Score:5, Insightful)
Thats for sure (Score:2, Insightful)
I was taught that one needed to know the math before one could use the appropriate functions on the calculators or computers. This is a prime reason there are so many garbage "scientific" studies out there. Nobody recognizes the stats for the baloney they are.
Re:Thats for sure (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Thats for sure (Score:2)
Re:Thats for sure (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Thats for sure (Score:2)
Yeah, lets teach kids how to design and build cars before we allow them on the roads!
Kids need to be taught how to use the computer as a tool. Not everyone needs to know how to code, and I'm not too sure what would be gained from making all kids learn to program. There are far more efficient ways of training people to use a PC as a tool, as it should be.
Re:Waste of money (Score:2)
Throwing money at public schools isn't going to result in better education, takign the government out will.
Re:Waste of money (Score:2)
If I were you, I'd always vote in favour of giving the government less in taxes, and then demand that they should pay you to put your kid through a private school. You know, what with their inability to provide adequate resources for education for some strange reason.
Re:Waste of money (Score:2)
They pay?? That's a joke...
There are many people out there that have 6 figure incomes but can't afford to send their children to school. Why?? Because they're forced to give up 50% of that income.
Studies have shown that more money into public schools doesn't equate better education. Most everyone could afford a better private education if government didn't tax the hell out of us...
Re:Waste of money (Score:2)
Also, any school that gets to pick and choose whom it will admit can spend less on support, aid for the disabled, free lunch programs, discipline and security, etc.
Or do you just think the Catholic school is 40% more efficient, plain and simple?
Re:Waste of money (Score:2)
Porn isn't as much a distraction as much as it it self-torture. Have you got any idea how cruel it is to bring porn to college, watch it, get all randy of it and then look around you an realize you're spending the better part of the day with 28 sweaty geeks and a girl whose mass is only rivaled by the mass of the Eurasian tectonic plate? Of course personality is more important then looks but if I'd start about her personality she'd be off WORSE. So all in all, porn at college isn't the brightest idea. Howev
Re:Waste of money (Score:2)
It'd be nice if the a student's laptop doubled as the textbooks for ALL his/her paper-based textbooks, having them all on CD/DVD. Those stacks of books get heavy when you try to carry them home with you.
$1.2 million ... (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:$1.2 million ... (Score:2)
Doesn't that, I dunno, kinda smack of socialism?
These are districts that already have good textbooks, I wager, and the parents and involved citizens want their kids to get an additional advantage, in this case computer literacy and submersion from an early age.
Re:$1.2 million ... (Score:3, Informative)
And yet, we still had to deal with textbooks that were falling apart at the seams because they had been in use since the 70's.
It's nowhere near a sure thing that they already have decent books. In fact, I would be willing to bet that a lot of them don't.
Re:$1.2 million ... (Score:2, Insightful)
On the other hand, the information contained in those textbooks can and will be largely out-of-date in a decade, particularly where the fields of natural sciences and engineering are concerned.
Back in the days before the web, when I was in the K-12 system, I was handed textbooks that were decades old.
If I wanted to write a paper with current information, I would have to travel to the local college library, which had a budget sufficient to pay for today's periodi
Re:$1.2 million ... (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:$1.2 million ... (Score:2)
improve learning? (Score:1)
It just works... (Score:5, Informative)
Re:It just works... (Score:2)
Re:Everyone disputes that (Score:2)
Re:Everyone disputes that (Score:2)
Whatever.... (Score:2, Insightful)
"If that doesn't tell you this works, nothing else will," he said.
I think it's because the laptop is more like a gimmick that keeps kids occupied. Back in my days, we stopped playing pencil break because we were busy making ASCII porn on a TI-82.
The program seems to be working in Maine (Score:4, Insightful)
The last story on this in maine highlighted greater attendance, fewer discipline problems, and greater attentiveness in class as easily spottable trends after the implementation of this program. The laptops stay with the classroom, not the students as they move on. But when the students move on they will know how to use the internet as a research tool, how to use spreadsheets and databases and word processors and such, in short they will be able to utilize technology.
In a state that is trying to update its workforce to keep pace with the times, that alone is a big step. Frankly, I think an educational system that IS NOT addressing the ever growing prescence of technology and its uses in our lives is woefully inadequate.
Re:The program seems to be working in Maine (Score:1)
Re:The program seems to be working in Maine (Score:2)
Re:The program seems to be working in Maine (Score:2)
Consider it research money if you like.
i am a school teacher (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:i am a school teacher (Score:2)
Re:i am a school teacher (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:i am a school teacher (Score:2)
How's that for a turn? (Score:5, Funny)
My principal's famous last words:
"You need to learn to do this without a computer. When you grow up and get a job, is your computer going to be there to do your work for you then?"
heh
tech for tech sake (Score:2, Insightful)
If they're providing the technology for access to more technology enhanced curriculum or integrating something useful, then It's a very good thing.
Ehhh...Kind of a waste of money (Score:2, Insightful)
Oversold and Underused? (Score:4, Interesting)
Larry Cuban, a professor of education at Stanford, has written a book on the subject, "Computers in the classroom: oversold and underused," which is available in .pdf form here:
http://www.hup.harvard.edu/pdf/CUBOVE.pdf
Book Covers (Score:3, Funny)
'Cuz, they gotta turn them back in, right?
Hmmmm .... is this really a good idea? (Score:2, Interesting)
don't bother with laptops (Score:3, Insightful)
With that said, as a practical matter, laptops are a bad idea. They are easy to steal. They suffer a lot of wear & tear and break (all you road wariors know this). Anyone ever had an LCD crack? Laptop batteries, just like all other batteries, can only hold a charge for so long. And repairing/replacing them (all the parts, not just the battery) is expensive.
Now, I recommend that instead of trying to fool with all this fancy technology (administering these laptops would be a pain in the ass, too), students just take a pad of paper and a pen. We are really losing something important if we teach these youngsters to be dependent on technology to learn.
Re:don't bother with laptops (Score:2)
Re:don't bother with laptops (Score:2)
populations (Score:3, Informative)
hi, nh kid living in an actual city here... just like to point out those are like... really small. did it even say how many laptops they're getting? 1.2 million over 800 bucks a laptop is 1500 laptops. the above list adds up to just about 100k people, so how many of those are 7th graders? 1.5 percent?
Are laptops more expensive than desktops? (Score:2, Insightful)
We need to get back to basics... (Score:2, Insightful)
Most primary and elementary school students need to be educated in the basics before they are able to
tackle the literate medium of the Internet.
We used to produce many engineers and scientists and put men on the moon when we weren't falling into this PC trendy educational ex
Efficiency (Score:4, Insightful)
Danger! (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Danger! (Score:2)
Start sand bagging (Score:4, Funny)
Attention all sixth-graders everywhere: If your parents pay a lot of property taxes, make sure you do poorly on your tests. Maybe next year you'll be rewarded with a laptop!
If using laptops means lugging fewer dead trees (Score:2)
I say this having just spent over $600 on books for college classes this semester. When the fsck did these things get so expensive? You could post the books on the class website for registered students to downl
Re:If using laptops means lugging fewer dead trees (Score:2)
No offense intended, but apparently there are enough people willing (or stupid enough) to pay $600 for textbooks- it's a consumer problem, and the blame lies squarely at their feet. It's the same dynamic that provides the RIAA with funds it needs to continue its encroachment on fair use. Keep paying for it, and they'll keep doing it.
Re:If using laptops means lugging fewer dead trees (Score:2)
If you know of a way to pass college classes without buying the textbooks that professors require I'd like to hear it, especially if it's legal. We're not talking about luxur
HTML would be better (Score:2)
The only way $1 pdf's would be good is if they are unencrypted so they can quickly be converted to a usable format.
Reactionary Geek Alert! (Score:5, Insightful)
This has nothing to do with teaching kids how to use a keyboard and mouse, or about binary and hexadecimal data storage. It has everything to do with empowering them to use the intellectual tools of the trades in our society. And one laptop contains every textbook you or your kids will ever need, and always in the most up to date version. The entire MIT undergrad curriculum and much of the grad curriculum is now online, along with most of world literature. Do you think this is mistake that will soon be corrected with a back-to-basics movement? Give me a break! This is the vehicle through which our kids will progress at their own pace, rather than being held to the average abilities in whatever class to which they may be assigned.
Give a human a fish and you feed them for a day. Give a human a fishing rod, and teach them how to use it, and you give them the means to feed others as well as themselves.
Great! (Score:2)
As a general rule, giving expensive equipment to kids is a bad idea. They don't know how to take care of it; chances are half of these will be broken, lost or stolen. Who is going to pay for it when that happens? Can every parent afford to shell out $1000 when their child's laptop comes up missing? I predict incidents of child abuse will go way up, as parents find out their kids used a computer as a football or a sled...
knowitalls (Score:2)
Just loooove to hear themselves type.......
Meanwhile (Score:2)
I went from 5th to 12th grade with a laptop in sch (Score:2, Informative)
Re:Better be Macs (Score:5, Funny)
Namely, backwards.
Re:Better be Macs (Score:2)
Re:What the? (Score:1)