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I have moved to newlyancient.com and will be writing regularly there! Content on this domain is no longer updated, but will be maintained as an archive in its original form.


zero-to-one learning

According to the New York Times, school districts are discontinuing one-to-one learning programs. These programs, which allow every student the use of a laptop, can work great if implemented correctly. Unfortunately, in many districts where it is implemented, the schools simply give out the laptops without educating teachers in their use. They fail to show teachers how to add digital information to their lessons. Consequently, students use the laptops more for personal than study use. Unfortunately, this does not boost test scores, the classic measurement of project performance. Dismayed at the lack of improvement, schools discontinue the program for not being cost effective or productive.

This is not how it needs to be. If schools would take the time to implement tools and teach teachers how to effectively use them, one-to-one learning could be highly effective. For instance, districts could set up simply classroom blogs using WordPress MU, then get teachers to use them as an effective tool for teach-student-parent communication. Or, they could set up an effective Moodle installation and show teachers how to digitalize their courses using the software. If your district gets the choice between buying a couple dozen more laptops and showing teachers how to use social tools for learning, then educating teachers will give you far greater bang for your buck. Complex tools without manuals will never be useful.

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2 Responses to “zero-to-one learning”


  1. 1 Jan Zanetis

    Hi,

    Cruising around your blog and this post struck me as right on. I would only like to add that the failure of the one to one intitiatives also can be due to lack of IT support within education. Often there is one support person for many many schools. Clearly, too much for one person to do, especially when the system multiplies # of units in one fell swoop. I was so pleasantly surprised when I left the classroom to be able to access an IT person for help in a matter of minutes, rather than waiting weeks.

  2. 2 arthus

    Thanks for the comment, Jan! I’m glad you find my blog interesting and observant.
    As for the lack of IT support, I somewhat agree with that. I believe schools need to hire more competent IT support staff. For instance, there are two IT people in my school. One knows what he is doing all the time, and can fix anything. The other person barely knows how defrag a hard drive. You can guess who gets payed more… the second one because of seniority. Having efficient, knowledgeable IT support is extremely important whenever deploying a new IT initiative in your school.