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Thursday, November 9, 2017

What Exactly is the Deal with those Notebooks for RPS?

The New York Times published a front-page story yesterday about the huge commitment that Baltimore County has made to technology in the classroom. 
The story begins slowly, as a conventional account of a district that wants to prepare its students for the new world of technology.
Baltimore County is one of the nation’s most ambitious classroom technology makeovers. In 2014, the district committed more than $200 million for HP laptops, and it is spending millions of dollars on math, science and language software. Its vendors visit classrooms. Some schoolchildren have been featured in tech-company promotional videos.
Tech companies are salivating over the school market, which is supposed to reach $21 billion in spending by 2020.
School leaders have become so central to sales that a few private firms will now, for fees that can climb into the tens of thousands of dollars, arrange meetings for vendors with school officials, on some occasions paying superintendents as consultants. Tech-backed organizations have also flown superintendents to conferences at resorts. And school leaders have evangelized company products to other districts.
These marketing approaches are legal. But there is little rigorous evidence so far to indicate that using computers in class improves educational results. Even so, schools nationwide are convinced enough to have adopted them in hopes of preparing students for the new economy.
But then as we read on, we learn about covert payoffs, payola, lavish expenses, cozy deals between vendors and school officials, and the mysterious resignation of the superintendent who started this expensive initiative. We see a district committed to spending hundreds of millions on technology while some children are in trailers for classrooms, and water fountains are spouting brown water. In other words, basic needs have been neglected to pay for the shiny new machines. One parent, a physician, says that the relationships between school officials and the industry reminds her of Big Pharma and its cultivation of medical professionals. 
Then we learn, almost as a throw away line, that the machine that the district settled on, was not the one with the highest evaluation. 
The district wanted a device that would work both for youngsters who couldn’t yet type and for high schoolers. In early 2014, it chose a particularly complex machine, an HP laptop that converts to a tablet. That device ranked third out of four devices the district considered, according to the district’s hardware evaluation forms, which The Times obtained. Over all, the HP device scored 27 on a 46-point scale. A Dell device ranked first at 34.
The superintendent appeared in an HP video, promoting the company. The HP product ran Microsoft software, and Microsoft honored the district as a Microsoft Showcase. The district’s tech leader was honored as an “Intel Education Visionary.” 
Worse, we learn that the company that makes the machine has discontinued it. 
Recently, parents and teachers have reported problems with the HP devices, including batteries falling out and keyboard tiles becoming detached. HP has discontinued the Elitebook Revolve.
Mr. Dickerson, the district spokesman, said there was not “a widespread issue with damaged devices.”
An HP spokesman said: “While the Revolve is no longer on the market, it would be factually inaccurate to suggest that’s related to product quality.”
No, of course not.
While the superintendent has resigned, the interim superintendent is as deeply engaged with the tech companies as her predecessor. 
Question for Baltimore County residents? Do you know or care where your tax money is going? 
The article says:
Baltimore County’s 173 schools span a 600-square-mile horseshoe around the city of Baltimore, which has a separate school system. Like many districts, the school system struggles to keep facilities up-to-date. Some of its 113,000 students attend spacious new schools. Some older schools, though, are overcrowded, requiring trailers as overflow classrooms. In some, tap water runs brown. And, in budget documents, the district said it lacked the “dedicated resources” for students with disabilities.
Parents, what are your priorities? How about prohibiting school officials from consorting with or taking favors of any kind from vendors?

44 CommentsPost your own or leave a trackback: Trackback URL

  1. eleanor 
    Same problems in our district. The Superintendent and her compliant board believe they must have the latest iteration of anything “tech,” while we have lead in our drinking fountains and do not supply pencils or paper for kids.
    One way to tame this monster might be for teachers’ unions to begin inserting clauses in their contracts to put the brakes on runaway spending for unproven technology. Just because the vendor says it’s great doesn’t make it so.
    In the meantime, teachers are subject to frequent meetings where they are berated for not ensuring that students are working bell-to-bell. After all, those students now have the technology to tether them to the edu-assembly line.
    • Threatened Out West 
      Same in my district, too. My school is 53 years old and has never had a major renovation. In the warm months, the building can be as high as 85 degrees before school even starts. We have seven trailers out back. Ceiling tiles are broken, bowed, and stained from water leaks over the years. Last year, we had to evacuate the school in a snowstorm because wires were smoking and set off the fire alarms. BUT, the superintendent is spending so much money on technology in the new schools that my school is about to be removed, for the third time, from the reconstruction bond.
  2. SomeDAM Poet 
    “The Best of both Words”
    If “play” is what we seek
    Then “playoff” is preferred
    But “pay to play” is peek
    And “payoff” is the word
  3. Chiara 
    Ed tech never should have been hyped the way it was and it is.
    They all should be ashamed of themselves- everyone from Arne Duncan on down. The “academics” who promote these products should be MOST ashamed because they’re supposedly engaging in some sort of critical thought.
    They don’t have a shred of evidence that any of this crap benefits students, but they ALL promoted it. A crash was inevitable.
    Jeb Bush, DeVos, Duncan, read across the ed reform leadership- they ALL hyped the heck out of this. The US Department of Education had superintendents signing “future ready” vows at cheerleading sessions for products!. They were blatantly selling ed tech product. Some of the US Department of Education materials actually link to specific vendors and products.
    They all should apologize to the public because one of two things happened- they were all bamboozled by these companies OR they are actually corrupt and doing the bidding of these companies.
    Stop buying. Stop being bullied into buying. Who cares if Betsy DeVos or Arne Duncan sneer at public schools for not buying ed tech product? Who cares what they think? Neither one them knows a thing about public schools. If they tell you to buy it you should run in the other direction.
  4. Michael Fiorillo 
    Gadget worshippers, all…
  5. I read that half of the nation’s schools are in disrepair. How can any administrator bring him/herself so low? Unfortunately, I’ve been around long enough to know that it does happen. It’s a sad commentary on what is important…clean drinking water, small classes, arts that are funded, librarians and books, nurses, medical care, food for the hungry or obsolete tech equipment. SICK!
    • Threatened Out West 
      My principal told us that we “had” to use technology all the time to, “keep (our) lessons engaging.” My lessons are REALLY engaging–students tell me that all the time, and I seldom use technology. We use it for research and an occasional review game, but most of my lessons are really low-tech.
  6. Yes, tech options can be helpful when used logically and as limited tools, yet the costs and fallout from the Baltimore County Public Schools 1:1 program–and the way it has been implemented here as a national model–is a travesty. As Eleanor says in her comment: “Just because the vendor says it’s great doesn’t make it so.”
    The laptop-per-student digital initiative known as STAT is actually running close to $300 million, including linked infrastructure, professional development, and other line items noted in BCPS’ own six-year STAT/Digital Conversion budget. Former Superintendent Dallas Dance told the county council in a 2016 memo that STAT was costing at least $275 million. And that did not even include tens of millions in software and licensing fees revealed under numerous contract spending authorities, including DreamBox ($3.2 million); Curriculum Associates/iReady ($3.2 million); Discovery Education ($10 million); Middlebury Interactive Languages (MIL) ($7.5 million) and so on.
    The superintendent and administrators have done numerous videos, promotional talks, and testimonials for school vendors’ products. For one example, see various links here for MIL and “Dallas Dance.” https://www.middleburyinteractive.com/search/site/Dallas%20Dance
    And the misspending for travel is widespread, ongoing, and contrary to district reimbursement policies and codes of ethics: http://towsonflyer.com/2017/05/16/op-ed-students-not-benefitting-dallas-dances-costly-travels/#comment-1329
    For additional information on costs, contracts, travel, studies, “personalized learning” and related, see a local coalition blog following the issue here, in one of the nation’s largest school districts, at STAT-Us BCPS https://statusbcps.wordpress.com
    • Chiara 
      They learned NOTHING from the disaster in Los Angeles.
      They had a perfect example of dumb, pressure driven purchases in LA and they ignored it.
      • Parent 
        We made it worse – by starting 1:1 with the youngest kids, in first through 3rd grade. First thru 8th are now 1:1 throughout the county, with 3 high schools in year 2 of roll out, and all scheduled for it in 2018. NO evidence of effectiveness.
      • Chiara,
        Yes, why have school districts learned nothing from the $1 billion iPad disaster in Los Angeles?
        Apple unloaded obsolete iPads. Same in Balt County.
    • Lisa M 
      I’m in neighboring Howard County. This could have easily been us but Balto Co chose DD and Howard Co got Renee Foose. I don’t know who was worse? I guess they were equally bad but in different ways. It’s funny that at the same time, Lillian Lowry (a Broadie) was hired at MSDE for the head job and she bailed on her contract early and headed to Ohio? Somehow all of this is connected. Now you have Dr. Joseph (PG Co) leading MNPS and he seems to be conducting ed reform ala MD style down there. The hell we acquired when MOM appointed Lillian (from DE) to take the lead. It was like letting a few cockroaches into a sterile environment to watch them breed?
  7. Cindy Claymore Watter 
    I am retired, but my district went for tech in a big way in the ’90s. It repurposed an old elementary school into a beautiful, new, small high school, with all sorts of amenities–recycled glass counter, a fountain, beautiful landscaping. (No necessary for educaiton but useful in attracting middle-class parents.) The district has moved on to a program that in effect makes laptops,etc., mandatory for all students–but it doesn’t supply all students with laptops, nor does it pay for home wi-fi access. Not surprisingly, the district is having money problems. It also built a Xanadu-like structure–the newest school in the district–that is a beacon for visiting educrats, to entice them into entering the technology/education combine that grew from the first high school. This new school cost a fortune and won’t be paid off for decades. Oh, and often the time the district network doesn’t work, so teachers who have placed all their faith (and lesson plans) in tech are left high and dry.
  8. Chiara 
    If you-all want to read someone who isn’t opposed to technology but actually applies some critical thought and skepticism to it, try this person:

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