Bandwidth becoming a learning block at KM
District looking at referendum to pay for high cost of technology
At Kettle Moraine Middle School in one seventh grade house, students spread out with laptops to work on memoirs. Next door, laptops sit poised waiting for students to come in from their outdoor science exploration. Using technology like Google Apps for Education for online collaboration of assignments and mass communication of information available anywhere, anytime, provides efficiency for teachers; however, it comes at a cost.
Bandwidth and wireless access points limit use at KMMS where access points only accommodate 30 people at a time. KMMS Principal Theresa Gennerman has concentrated on installing additional access points in one house at about $1,000 each.
"The infrastructure is holding us back," Gennerman explained. "If we can spend money on access points, we can let kids bring their own devices."
While Gennerman is planning on rolling out BYOD (Bring Your Own Devices) to seventh-graders to increase use of technology and remove barriers of individual access, the district struggles to provide the necessary bandwidth to provide uninterrupted access.
ALEKS and Digits math programs allow personalized, interactive learning but are only available on a limited basis to KMMS students because of limited bandwidth and access points.
"This is how kids are learning," Gennerman pointed out.
However in an older building where the number of electrical outlets further complicate the situation, bandwidth is only one stumbling block to learning without boundaries, but its limiting grasp encompasses the entire district.
On Sept. 18 Director of Facility Services Dale Zabel outlined $14.4 million in urgent facility needs and $4.2 million in needs that can wait three to five years and Director of Technology Services Brandon Kostolni's listed urgent technology needs of about $2.5 million with further needs estimated at $1.9 million. On Oct. 16, the KM School Board looked at timelines for a referendum, aiming for one in 2014 provides time to gather information and inform the public, but pinches urgent technology and facility needs, which then wouldn't begin being addressed until 2015 or 2016.
While School Board members favored having more time to prepare for a referendum, interim solutions for pressing needs could be costly.
"It doesn't change the urgency of technology needs," said Superintendent Pat Deklotz.
Zabel said they could make things run for a while but might be spending more than they want as they continue to patch aging buildings and equipment.
Kostolni said he would have to find a short-term solution to bandwidth, possibly buying bandwidth for the interim, which would be "extremely costly."
"It's not ideal, but we'll have to make something work," said Kostolni. "Once you get into larger increments of bandwidth, the cost goes up dramatically."
School Board President Gary Vose said it would be preferable to take more time to allow the public to digest information about needs and associated costs.
"Success is called getting the referendum to pass," said Vose. "We want to do everything we can."
School board member Dennis Krueger stressed the public should understand they are still in the stage of gathering information on potential costs. Zabel and Kostolni will explore options and costs for interim solutions to technology and facility needs that could carry the district to a 2014 referendum and bring that information back to the board.
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6 Comments
Craigpv2d - Oct 25, 2012 2:25 AM
Sawzall - Oct 26, 2012 8:25 AM
writer was talking about KMMS, then went on to give figures and talk about a
referendum. It makes it sound like the figures are for KMMS only. They are
actually for district wide needs.
As for the rest of your statement, the monthly internet access is already being
paid for so no, it wouldn't be included in these figures in full. Only the part that is
in excess of what already exists would be included. I don't understand what the
cost of mobile hotspots has to do with this, because those are not part of the
plan. I think you might be confusing mobile hotspots with wifi. Mobile hotspots
run off cellular towers, wifi runs off a regular internet line. Wifi is not more
expensive than wired access. In this case it would be cheaper because you don't
have to run 30 or so wires to each classroom.
Lastly, the kids are not tethered by a power cord. You are thinking of a school
computer lab circa 10 years ago. The technology in use now includes laptops,
netbooks, tablets, etc. that only need to be plugged in to charge. Many of these
devices don't have a plug for wired internet. Usually, a "mobile computer lab" is
used. It consists of a cart with 20-30 devices that can be moved to a classroom.
Each student can work with a device at their desk, then return it to the cart for
charging.
As for internet access on cell phones, they would run into the same issues. A cell
tower can only handle so much data flow. Having an entire school of kids trying
to run data through the same cell tower would cause connectivity issues and slow
data flow not just for the students, but for members of the general public who
are also trying to use that tower.
Mucho - Oct 26, 2012 12:57 PM
To his point though, technology enables more effective teaching and learning only if it is spent wisely and adopted fully by those that use it. The current implementation of and compliance with technology initiatives by the faculty is all over the map. It would be a great idea to demonstrate the entire faculty's willingness to embrace technology by getting their LoTI Digital Profile scores above a 3 out of 6 like reported in 2010 before you ask the taxpayers for millions of dollars in equipment that gets used M-F 8-5pm 9 months per year.
WoodStok - Oct 26, 2012 2:43 PM
How are private schools dealing with these technology issues. I doubt if St. Paul's in Genesee Depot or St. Bruno's in Dousman are planning on spending millions on technology or hundreds of thousands of dollars for that matter and they're doing just fine.
Why is it that whenever it's the public taxpayer footing the bill, administrator's can think pie in the sky. Start thinking like the private schools when funding issues come up and then, and only then, will I approve more resources.
Sawzall - Oct 29, 2012 3:13 PM
Atron - Oct 30, 2012 12:50 AM