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Sprint To Provide 1 Million Students With Free Internet, Mobile Devices (reuters.com) 65

An anonymous reader quotes a report from Reuters: Wireless carrier Sprint Corp on Tuesday pledged to provide 1 million U.S. high school students with free mobile devices and internet access as part of a White House initiative to expand opportunities for lower income kids. Marcelo Claure, chief executive of Sprint, said the plan builds on the company's prior commitment through the White House's ConnectED program to get 50,000 students high speed internet. He said Sprint realized that while providing students with internet at school was helpful, students would still need to be able to use the internet at home. "We are going to equip 1 million kids with the tools they need to reach their full potential and achieve their dreams," Claure told reporters on a White House call. Sprint aims to give cell phones, tablets, laptops or mobile hot spots to students who do not have internet at home. Students would be able to choose the type of device that might meet their needs and it would be coupled with four years of free data plans. The company hopes to reach its goal of a million students in five years. Manufacturers have agreed to provide the mobile devices at no cost, Claure said. He also said the company would encourage customers to donate their old devices to the program and that it would not cost Sprint much to allow the free use of its network.
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Sprint To Provide 1 Million Students With Free Internet, Mobile Devices

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  • by JonnyO ( 119156 ) on Tuesday October 11, 2016 @02:58PM (#53057525) Homepage

    I guess we know where all those returned Galaxy Note 7's are going.

    • I guess we know where all those returned Galaxy Note 7's are going.

      Double purpose, acts as central heating if you can't afford the electricity bill.

      • I guess we know where all those returned Galaxy Note 7's are going.

        Double purpose, acts as central heating if you can't afford the electricity bill.

        I'm just not sure how you're going to charge it to provide the heating if you don't have electricity... ... I may not have thought this through completely.

    • I'd say it's an even split between e-bay and Craig's list if you ask me! :)

    • Given how entitled kids feel these days, they'll complain if it's anything other than an iPhone 7/+ in their favorite color
    • by sims 2 ( 994794 )

      I think samsung would really have something if they could just figure out how to get it to catch fire on demand instead of at random.

      I was disappointed to find that if you wanted to have a kindle fire you had to actually light it yourself!

  • by Oswald McWeany ( 2428506 ) on Tuesday October 11, 2016 @03:10PM (#53057599)

    This is a much better than Facebook's plan of giving access to their tailormade list of sites that suits their interests.

    Anyone who has kids knows how much the internet is central to a child's schooling needs now. It's more than just using the internet for research now. The internet is used as the medium in which teachers hand out assignments, give grades, accept assignments.

    Without internet you can't be an affective student. If your parents don't have internet service you have to go places to access it from free-public places; libraries, whilst they're open, etc. Poor kids manage, but it's a definite disadvantage than having to access your work from home. Poor kids in rural areas are probably in extra trouble.

  • Hadn't I read somewhere that a study was done over time that showed that handing out free tech to students really didn't make them better students or give them better grades?
    • It's hard to focus on learning when you are going hungry. We tune out non-essential's when our basic needs are not being met.

    • by ADRA ( 37398 )

      I think that's along the lines of in-class teaching which probably doesn't enhance a kid's learning vs. pens/paper. That said, the Internet is essential to most school research work now, as libraries are often underfunded, carrying obsolete material, or simply not having information on a vast amount of topics necessary for children to self-direct their studies.

      • Trouble with the Internet: not everything out there is true. Perhaps the faked moon landings, UFO projects, and the newest patented tin-foil hat design are reliable, but how do we really know that when Wikipedia says that George Washington was the first American President, that it's correct? I've seen UFO's, and Bigfoot told me about the UFO's, but has anyone ever seen this Washington dude?

        Lies, all lies. The Internet is full of them.

        Give me a full set of Encyclopedia Britannica any day.

        • by ADRA ( 37398 )

          Britannica's are wrong too, and in fact have a single editor-centric view of the world, so a contentious article would either be: "The Editor's favourite selection", or a smaller, more ambiguous view of the topic. And of course since you generally buy a set for life, errors and omissions will essentially never be known to the original reader.

          The internet (wikipedia specifically) have temporal errors which are statistically removed over time (often immediately after discovery) and their articles often lack a

          • I'm sure every kid has the means of buying the hard-covers...

            For the incredible low low price of $9.95 a month*, ANY student can afford** to own their own mint-condition Encyclopedia Britannica Special Hard Copy Edition!

            * For 100 months
            **Requires a low-interest payment plan and credit check

            or you can buy this:

            https://www.amazon.com/Encyclo... [amazon.com]

        • I think people don't understand exactly what kids do online (for school).

          It's not just about them being able to go to Wikipedia to look up what happened in the war of the golden stool. [wikipedia.org]

          Teachers give assignments via internet portals. Students turn in assignments via internet portals. Without internet, it's not that you can't look up on a map where the city of Mörön [google.com] is. It's that you can't turn your assignments in. You can't see what your assignments are. Thus bad grades.

          • I find it so strange that this is how assignments are turned in now; only because of how things were back in my days as a student. I know that was simply due to the Internet tools to do so not being present yet. Everything was done on paper and much of that was given to us as our "homework". This had the positive benefit of being an attainable thing to complete regardless of the technology available in my house.

            Odd that in one way, technological 'progress' has actually hindered, not helped some people's e

    • No clue, but if your talking about a something with facebook and candycrush in the middle of a class I'm sure the kid isn't paying any attention to the teacher. They confiscate smart phone at our high school if they catch students using them during class.

      • Where is that? In the US it'd be unconstitutional, in the EU it'd be against human rights, and anywhere it'd be "Sooooooo unfair!".

        • That's in the US... They only confiscate them until the end of class and only for repeat offends that refuse to stop, the school district doesn't want to be liable for some over priced smart phone.

    • Only LUDDITE students read books and write with pencils, etc etc APPS!

  • by Anonymous Coward

    This screams political garbage. Sprint,AT&T and Verizon promote Family plans. How do you legally provide kids unlimited data? What is to prevent them from using it for streaming movies? How can a parent control misuse of the device?

  • by Anonymous Coward

    Thanks AOL.

  • by Anonymous Coward

    Internet access is a great step. This is really, really cool, and definitely I will do more to find out about how to help my students get free access to the internet.

    What is really needed is a way to easily use a cheap android phone as a laptop. Tablets definitely have their place, but for typing a report having a keyboard makes for a much better essay.

  • A friend at a local seattle community college received a verizon hotspot. Seems the college gave wifi units to every student, with no data caps. Not sure what the agreement was, or how it was included with the student fees, but all the students received them. unlimited verizon wifi hotspots (wow!)

    We pay over 150 bux a month for 15gigs on verizon for ours, and these students had unlimited access. Crazy. As theres no high speed data in the rural areas of Washington state, and sat is over subscribed. W

    • I wonder, what proportion of that free unlimited bandwidth contributed to distractions from one's studies vs advancing one's education?

      I'm sure many people used it wisely, but with such bandwidth, comes great opportunity...

  • by Anonymous Coward

    Can't believe Son and his buddies are doing this out of the goodness of their heart...

  • This solves nothing. Let's drop advanced Algebra and Trigonometry as required electives and allow students to spend their high school years studying discreet mathematics. I'm not saying advanced Algebra, Trig, and even Calculus should be omitted, but give kids a chance to learn something practical. Not to mention, discreet mathematics easily bleeds into structural linguistics. Not enough teachers to cover that much ground? That is another subject entirely.
    • Algebra is very useful in the real world. Even though you don't see the formula 5A = 14 + 6 written down on blackboards in real life and have to solve that problem, Algebra shows up in plenty of real life scenarios.

      As a programmer I use Algebra every day for my job too.

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