Saturday, January 15, 2011

70 Questions on the Proposed New Education System

1.      If the Maine laptop program cost $38 million, or $258 per student, in 2002, what will it cost now? The Statesman is citing a figure of $4.7 million per year for laptops and $9 million per year for maintenance in one article, and 2. $7 million for laptops and $6 million for maintenance in another.
2.       When schools can’t afford textbooks, how are they going to afford laptops and software?
3.       The Maine program used Macintosh laptops. Since the majority of businesses use PC-based computers, is it wise to train our children on a system used by less than 10% of businesses? http://www.appleinsider.com/articles/11/01/12/gartner_apple_takes_9_7_share_in_q4_grows_mac_sales_by_23.html
4.       How will teachers be trained to use the laptops in class?
5.       How much will this training cost, including the teachers’ time?
6.       Where will the money for training come from?
7.       What will the schools do to prevent unauthorized use of the laptops’ webcams, such as the case in Philadelphia where administrators were spying on children in their sleep, which ended up costing the district more than half a million dollars? http://www.techeye.net/security/philadelphia-laptop-spying-school-to-cough-up-610000
8.       Given that we already have problems with sexting with cell phones, how do we keep students from using their webcams for unauthorized use?
9.       What steps will the schools take, or be required to take, to prevent online bullying and harassment?
10.   Who will maintain the laptops? Will each school district be required to hire someone? Each school? Where will these people be found? If a private provider is being used, as has been suggested, will they have someone in each school at all times? If not, how will maintenance be coordinated?
11.   What will prevent students from theft or even selling their own laptops?
12.   What happens if a student’s laptop breaks or malfunctions? How will they take classes or exams?
13.   What modifications of school electrical systems will be necessary in order to support simultaneous use of more than 30 laptops per classroom?
14.   Will schools’ Internet pipelines be sufficient to support simultaneous use by all students?
15.   Will there be a way for classes to get priority use of the Internet over recreational use? How?
16.   Are all schools equipped with wifi so the students will have Internet access from their laptops? If not, how much will that cost to implement?
17.   What control will there be of students’ use of the laptops in school? Out of school? For example, will they be allowed access to Facebook, MySpace, etc.? How will this be coordinated with parental wishes?
18.   The Maine program did not include filtering software to prevent students going to unauthorized sites. How much will this cost, and who will administer it? Will it also apply in the students’ homes?
19.   If students do not have Internet access at home, how will this hinder them?
20.   Since online books can’t be resold or used by multiple students, how much are online textbooks going to cost?
21.   Many teachers, even in college level classes, don’t allow students to use laptops in class now because of concerns that the students are surfing the web or chatting rather than paying attention. How will this be addressed?
22.   If students drop out, will they have to give the laptop back? How will this be enforced?
23.   If online classes will be taught in the classroom, will they be asynchronous – self-paced classes taught at any time – or synchronous – with all students involved taught simultaneously?
24.   If the classes will be synchronous, how will the issue of differing class schedules, both on a daily and a calendar basis, be handled?
25.   What happens if the Internet is down?
26.   If students are required to take two online classes per year, how will it be determined what sort of classes they will take in this method? Will they be primarily core classes, or electives?
27.   If a student fails an online class, how will they make it up? Will they not be allowed to graduate?
28.   If students are taking online classes, why do they need to physically go to a school building at all?
29.   If students can take classes without the permission of the school, who will determine what classes are acceptable and valid?
30.   Who locally will oversee the student’s participation in the class?
31.   Will students be allowed to take online classes from sources outside Idaho? Why or why not?
32.   What about magnet schools? Will they and their classes be included in this system? Why or why not?
33.   What happens if a student needs help beyond that available from an online class?
34.   Where will the students take the online classes, in a way that doesn’t interfere with each other?
35.   How do online classes handle hands-on learning, such as science experiments?
36.   To what degree will a school be able to control students from outside the district taking its classes? How will this be decided? What recourse will a student have if a school says they can’t take a desired class?
37.   How will it be determined which students get to take a particular online class? Will registration simply be thrown open to the entire state and made first come first serve?
38.    If the majority of spots in an online class are taken up by students outside the school district, will the school district still be responsible for paying for that teacher?
39.   How will students find out about potential online classes?
40.   Will online class providers be allowed to market their classes to students and/or to their parents individually? Why or why not? If so, how will this be policed?
41.   What will ensure that students in smaller, rural schools, or are disadvantaged in some way, get equal access to classes?
42.   If the online classes are only being taught at school, how will parents help their students at home?
43.   If schools will no longer be reimbursed for online classes, then what incentive is there for schools to teach them or encourage students to take them?
44.   Will charter school students be able to take classes outside the charter school system, and vice versa? If so, then doesn’t that weaken the point of having a charter school in the first place and blur the lines between charter and traditional schools?
45.   Will charter schools be mandated to use this system as well? Why or why not? What’s keeping someone, for example, from setting up Traditional School Charter School, with books and blackboards rather than computers?
46.   Will charter school class sizes also receive a mandated increase? Are charter school class sizes counted in the class size calculation? Why or why not?
47.   How will the issue of disabled, LEP, etc. students be handled? Will they also be mandated to receive laptops, use clickers, take online courses, etc.? Why or why not?
48.   If the average class will increase by up to two students, what will the mean class size be? In other words, if class sizes are already 30, does that mean those class sizes will go up to 33?
49.   If teachers’ performance will be measured based on the ISAT, then how will teachers’ performance be measured for areas in which there isn’t an ISAT, such as music, agriculture, or physical education?
50.   What will prevent schools from discouraging lower-performing students from attending ISATs?
51.   What incentive is there for teachers to teach lower performing or difficult students?
52.   The iSTARS program, as presented in 2008, was slated to cost up to $60 million more than existing pay scales. How much more will this system cost? Since it was difficult to ascertain how much the iSTARS system would cost, how has this been determined? http://www.newwest.net/main/article/lawmakers_skeptical_of_luna_teacher_pay_plan/
53.   Why was this plan developed without input from teachers or parents?
54.   Who will buy and maintain the clickers and implement the software required to support them? In colleges, students are typically required to purchase their own. One student reports that his costs $50 and is only good for one class. http://thechoice.blogs.nytimes.com/2010/11/15/click/?partner=rss&emc=rss&apage=2#comment-64307
55.   How will clickers be used for classes that aren’t geared toward multiple choice tests, such as writing?
56.   What prevents students from pooling their clickers to avoid going to class? http://thechoice.blogs.nytimes.com/2010/11/15/click/?partner=rss&emc=rss#comment-64133
57.   How will teachers be trained to use the clickers?
58.   How much will training cost?
59.   Where will the money for training come from?
60.   Students report technological issues with clickers, such as systems getting overloaded and not recording answers. How will this be handled? http://thechoice.blogs.nytimes.com/2010/11/15/click/?partner=rss&emc=rss#comment-64161
61.   Do the clickers run on batteries? What happens if a student’s clicker runs out of battery? How much do the batteries cost? Who is responsible for maintaining the battery?
62.   What happens if a student loses their clicker?
63.   If one of the advantages of clicker use is that it is anonymous, then how is a student’s performance monitored?
64.   If 770 teachers are expected to lose their jobs, where does the department expect the majority of the losses to come from? Old teachers? Young ones? Specialized teachers? General teachers?
65.   How much income tax loss, unemployment compensation, state-provided medical care, etc., will the state accrue from 770 teachers losing their jobs?
66.   If this new method of education doesn’t work, how will Idaho replace those teachers?
67.   If contracts are limited, how will smaller districts be protected from losing their best teachers to larger districts?
68.   If the 99% threshold is not kept, then what happens if a school’s attendance turns out to be lower than expected? Will teachers at those schools lose their jobs at the beginning of the school year?
69.   If teachers are teaching classes that include students from outside the district, how will those students’ test scores and evaluations be incorporated into the teacher’s performance?
70.   How will this be coordinated with home schooling? Will home schoolers be allowed to take the online classes as well? Why or why not?

Wednesday, November 17, 2010

Preliminary results from reorganization study circle

According to an article in the Kuna Melba News, the overwhelming choice of attendees at Monday's study circle on reorganizing Kuna schools was to rezone all the existing zones into five new ones, to accommodate the new elementary school on 10 Mile.

I participated in the study circle; in my group, we felt that it would be the simplest choice and that most of the other choices would require a rezone anyway, and most of them wouldn't solve the current and future overcrowding problems at the elementary schools. In addition, because of the state budget situation, it's unlikely that Kuna schools will have any additional money for a more extensive reorganization.

The Kuna School Board is scheduled to address the issue at its December meeting.

We're getting noticed!

http://www.kuna360.com/2010/11/theres-new-blog-in-town.html

Thanks for the kind words. Yes, I expect to do more analysis and Kuna-specific information going forward; I wanted to get caught up at first as it was starting up.

And yes, I expect to keep it updated. That's the idea. :)

As far as ads, I hadn't even realized it was showing any yet. Interesting. I wonder why it doesn't show them to me.

(I've also heard from Scott McIntosh, editor of the Kuna-Melba News, who indicates that he's been looking at this, too.)

Tuesday, November 16, 2010

Our View: A pre-K problem, created by Idaho lawmakers

"In the winter of 2007, before the Great Recession, the Legislature considered a simple bill to encourage voluntary pre-K programs (in other words, no school district would be mandated to provide pre-K, and no parent would be required to enroll their child). These programs would not have been eligible for a dime of state funding. But lawmakers said no anyway.

By slamming the brakes on voluntary pre-K programs, which would at least qualify for local funding or federal grants, the lawmakers left parents to shoulder the burden of costs of early education. No one can be surprised that some parents are opting out. Meanwhile, no one should expect anything more than crocodile tears from some quarters at the Statehouse."


Read more: http://www.idahostatesman.com/2010/11/16/1420092/a-pre-k-problem-created-by-lawmakers.html#ixzz15RROi5s8

Volunteers pitch in for Treasure Valley schools

"But [Meridian Superintendent Linda] Clark worries about how much more the community can do for schools facing more budget cuts next year.


“There is no place left to cut,” she said. “We’ve cut text books, salaries and teacher development. We only have two arrows left in our quiver. We can cut the school year, or ask our patrons for a supplemental tax levy. That’s all that’s left, because we’re out of options.”


Read more: http://www.idahostatesman.com/2010/11/16/1420103/volunteers-pitch-in-for-schools.html#storylink=omni_popular#ixzz15ROXBLfZ

(Unfortunately, Kuna isn't included in the article and doesn't have information about how volunteers can donate to Kuna schools. Hopefully someone will step up and add that information.)

Monday, November 15, 2010

Good and Bad School Budget News -- Mostly Bad

The Idaho Legislature's Joint Finance-Appropriations Committee (JFAC) met today and will meet tomorrow to discuss the upcoming budget. The Legislature decides upon the budget during the legislative session starting in January 2011, for the budget year starting in July 2011.

State Superintendent of Public Instruction Tom Luna told JFAC that schools would need an additional $61 million just to stay in the same place next year as they are this year -- without replacing the $128 million cut from the school budgets last year.

Unfortunately, the budget for next year is already $340 million behind.

However, for the fourth month in a row, revenues are ahead of projections -- just a total of $23 million, but it's a start. At this rate, that would raise an additional $72 million by the end of the year.

Finally, a new data system will help Idaho better track its students -- and might save money.

Reconfiguring Kuna Elementary Schools

In the fall of 2011, the Kuna School District will be opening a new elementary which will be located on Ten Mile Rd. With the opening of the seventh elementary, the district will reconsider how current schools are configured.
The district is requesting ideas and feedback before a final recommendation is made in December. Patrons and employees can share their ideas by submitting their recommendations through the district website at http://www.kunaschools.org.
The school district also held a Community Study Circle tonight on the subject and will be releasing more information later in the year. The Kuna School Board is also expected to talk about the issue during its December 14 meeting.
Here is part of an article from the Kuna-Melba News about the meeting and reconfiguration.