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South Africa Begins Ambitious Tablets In Schools Pilot Project

An anonymous reader writes "Guateng province — which is home to Johannesburg and Pretoria and is the richest state in sub-Saharan Africa — has just kicked off a pilot project to replace textbooks with tablets in seven government schools. If successful, the project will be extended to all 44 000 schools in the area. It's all been put together in a hurry — the local minister for education announced it in a media interview less than a year ago and details have never been made fully public, but he's hoping it will be an end to 'Irish Coffee' education in which rich white students float to the top." From the article: The classroom of the future being piloted is modelled on the system that’s been in use at Sunward Park High School in Boksburg for the two years. That former “model C” was the first state school in South Africa to go textbook free, and has pioneered the use of tablets in public education here. ... As with Sunward Park, the schools in this new pilot will be using a centralised portal developed by Bramley’s MIB Software for managing tablets and aggregating educational content into a single portal. MIB’s backend pulls in CAPS aligned digital textbooks from the likes of Via Afrika as well as extra resources from around the web. Content from Wikipedia, the BBC, the complete works of Shakespeare and Khan Academy is all cached locally for teachers to reference during lessons and pupils to use for self-directed study and research.

66 comments

  1. everytime this is tired by ganjadude · · Score: 3, Insightful

    it fails. Why do we keep throwing tech at a non tech problem just for the sake of throwing tech at it? Cali is in the process of taking back all the tablets they passed out after major issues. Sometimes real paper books are the answer.

    --
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    1. Re:everytime this is tired by tom229 · · Score: 2

      California tried to give everyone iPads: very expensive multi-purpose tablets. It was a terrible decision.

      Something like this could work but the device would have to be specially designed for the purpose. Something with an e-ink display would be ideal.

      --
      If it ain't broke, don't fix it.
    2. Re:everytime this is tired by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Because tech solutions are pork barrel and non-tech solutions (ex. hiring teachers) are not.

    3. Re:everytime this is tired by TWX · · Score: 3, Insightful

      It fails in part because the textbook creators are so wrapped up in protecting their intellectual property that using the device to pull up the textbook becomes a nightmare. the only way this can work is for the textbook to be pulled down to the device, like any other e-book, and accessed without any kind of network or wirless connectivity to bounce 'rights' checking against. You're right that these being multipurpose devices usually hurts too, as students can easily procrastinate their actual work by finding an inordinate amount of things to entertain themselves with.

      We need real devices that are as durable as the ficticious PADD from Star Trek: The Next Generation. Basically the tablet-equivalent of a Panasonic Toughbook, with software specifically tailored to the needs of students. I'm thinking it should be two devices essentially hinged in the middle, like a traditional book cover, so that more content can be displayed or homework can be done on one side with the content displayed on the other. But that's just me.

      Oh, and that requires proper software to be written for it too, and requires those textbook creators to cooperate.

      --
      Do not look into laser with remaining eye.
    4. Re:everytime this is tired by Trailer+Trash · · Score: 2

      What we need is to develop open text books with a creative commons license. Doesn't work for everything - sure - but let's face it: math, algebra, works of Shakespeare, these are things that never change (and Shakespeare isn't copyrighted, anyway, although I'm sure you can find copies of the works that are "protected"). Basic science changes slowly - talking about stuff that kids learn in school here. Really, there's no reason anybody should be making money from elementary school textbooks at this point in history.

    5. Re:everytime this is tired by meustrus · · Score: 1

      It fails in part because the textbook creators are so wrapped up in protecting their intellectual property that using the device to pull up the textbook becomes a nightmare.

      Which is why it's great to see the tablets are filled with so much locally-cached free content.

      --
      I sometimes ask revealing, often ignorant-seeming questions. Maybe they're harder to answer than you think.
    6. Re:everytime this is tired by Tx · · Score: 2

      Just because it's been done wrong in the past doesn't mean it can't be done right in the future, although it doesn't bode well that this particular project appears to have been rushed, and significant questions not answered in detail. However there's nothing wrong with the theory; access to textbooks, collaboration and communications tools, monitoring of students progress while they perform activities (and as the article mentions, monitoring of teachers as well), the list of potential benefits to using tablets or laptops as a central educational tool is long. At some point, someone is going to get it right and actually realize many of the potential advantages.

      --
      Oh no... it's the future.
    7. Re:everytime this is tired by NotDrWho · · Score: 2

      Why do we keep throwing tech at a non tech problem just for the sake of throwing tech at it?

      In my experience, this sort of thing usually has a lot to do with bribes paid to the school board and/or administrators by some contractor. And by "bribe," I mean whatever euphemism they're going by in any given situation: "Campaign Contribution", "Educational Conference" (in an expensive tropical resort), "Donation", "Gift", etc.

      --
      SJW's don't eliminate discrimination. They just expropriate it for themselves.
    8. Re:everytime this is tired by ColdWetDog · · Score: 1

      We need real devices that are as durable as the ficticious PADD from Star Trek: The Next Generation.

      And while we're at it, let's get the Warp Drive and the Transporter on line. That ought to improve things.

      --
      Faster! Faster! Faster would be better!
    9. Re:everytime this is tired by itzly · · Score: 1

      Or we just keep paper books. Paper books have done a fine job for the last century helping to educate the best and brightest minds.

    10. Re:everytime this is tired by ShanghaiBill · · Score: 1

      California tried to give everyone iPads: very expensive multi-purpose tablets.

      I live in California, and my kids go to school here. California absolutely did not try to "give everyone iPads".

    11. Re:everytime this is tired by bluefoxlucid · · Score: 2

      The correct technology for education is thousands of years old.

      The ancients--the greeks and romans--didn't use a lot of writing. It was expensive and bulky. Wax tablets were huge, papyrus was costly. You'd hardly have books; if you saw a scroll or codex, it was probably for the first and last time. If you saw a codex twice, there wasn't an index to reference; you had to know what was in it, flip to a random page, and say, "Oh, no, the material I need to reference is before this", then flip backwards.

      Mnemonics techniques were a primary driver in the lives of the ancients. Their lives revolved around what they knew; what they knew revolved around what they could remember. They didn't have the luxury of remembering a topic existed and throwing a keyword into Google; they didn't even have the luxury of expansive libraries in every town. Libraries were places of pilgrimage: There may be one or two copies of a book in the world, and so you had to go to the library of a certain town to read it. The first and most important things the ancients learned was how to remember.

      In modern days, we don't even teach study techniques. SQ3R and SQW3R, the most basic techniques, are powerful; so powerful that modern methods are just SQ3R and SQW3R with different names (PQRST is Preview, Question, Read, Self-recite, Test rather than Survey, Question, Read, Recite, Review). Teachers incite small students to "take notes" and "study", without explaining what "study" entails; worse, the entire point of studying is to remember, yet memorization is considered a bad strategy in learning. The focus on "understanding" without first "knowing" knee-caps any effort to bring mnemonics into schools.

      We're hell-bent on new technology and new methods, on progressive movements over regressive. While Japan turns second-grade students into human calculators with the Soroban--an ancient mechanical computer known as an abacus--the rest of the world feeds us blunt paper mathematics and teaches us to use TI-83 calculators and Excel spreadsheets as soon as we get to Algebra. Educators have not been so bold as to scrub all visual imagery from early education; yet they are resistant to using visualization, song, and rhyme beyond the most early years, and absolutely refuse to teach students to bolster their own memories with such techniques. The ways of the past are thrown by the wayside in favor of new ideas.

      What poor, starving children most require, in third-world countries and in the ghettos of developed nations alike, is an education system; we cannot solve the education problem by throwing laptops at bush Africa or gangland America. We don't need specialized education systems, tools, and techniques for the poor or the retarded, either; those highly-beneficial methods which allow even the brain damaged to learn often make learning easier for any student. When such methods are found beneficial in both, the subgroup which is incapable--by class status or by mental development--of learning in the broader classroom atmosphere shrinks, and some of the disadvantaged can place directly in general population; this works wonders for social and psychological development. The last thing they need is expensive hardware and software pretending to help.

      I really want to run on the education platform one day.

    12. Re:everytime this is tired by Archangel+Michael · · Score: 1

      THIS ^^^^^^

      I'll extend that with enough support, there only needs to be ONE textbook for all jurisdictions.

      Create a single textbook with all the variations needed for every district/board of education. Configure the "Textbook" software to download the entire book (all versions) and have a management feature that checks off which version to display, and the software formats the book accordingly.

      This way, you could have a "progressive left" version and a "Bible Belt" version of the same book, each tailored to suit each constituency, but otherwise is the same information. The end result is that we'll see who the wackos are on both sides, and trend towards the sane balance.

      --
      Agent K: A *person* is smart. People are dumb, stupid, panicky animals, and you know it.
    13. Re:everytime this is tired by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Tom when you're making up bullshit, fact check your colon to the world around your head. You might find they match.

    14. Re:everytime this is tired by Solandri · · Score: 2

      It was the Los Angeles Unified School District which tried to give everyone iPads, not California. And the program was halted before it was completely rolled out because of problems with kids hacking the restrictive software controls (if you can call deleting the user and restarting the device "hacking").

      Also, what the LAUSD tried was different from what South Africa is trying. LAUSD was trying to incorporate tablets into the teaching program. There is very little evidence that this has any beneficial effect on how well students learn the material.

      It sounds like SA is trying to use tablets to replace textbooks. That actually has merit from the standpoint of portability and accessibility to a wide range of educational material in a tiny amount of space. I would question how cost-effective it is though. A typical textbook costs about $100 and will last 10-20 years. If a typical tablet costs $500, it would have to last 50-100 years to be as cost-effective as books. If you're able to get textbooks which aren't controlled by the textbook publishing cartel, the price drops to a few dollars, and the tablet would have to last thousands of years to be as cost-effective. (OTOH if they're able to use a cheap $50 e-ink reader, then it could succeed.)

    15. Re:everytime this is tired by rogoshen1 · · Score: 1

      sad that an AC says this; because it's basically all that needs to be said. =/

    16. Re:everytime this is tired by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Early introduction of technology into my classroom made it so easy to be lazy. I can't spell very well or do any decent math in my head efficiently. I'm a fairly good writer but not when it comes to spelling - i don't bother to even review how I spelled it incorrectly before I click to fix it. I'm pretty good at math, but I typically go straight to the calculator because I'm not confident in computing things in my head. I'm not surprised to see checkout clerks struggle when they incorrectly enter in the wrong 'cash' and have to figure out the correct change to return. I am grateful my CS professors taught us to program using xemacs, rather than showing us Eclipse. I'm not a fan of early introduction of technology for this reason. I like to think that I'm not a lazy person when it comes to work or learning, but technology has made it so easy to use as a crutch.

      On another tangent... I find the use of 'Irish Coffee' to be racist. Where is Al Sharpton when you need him to defend the minorities over there?

    17. Re:everytime this is tired by meta-monkey · · Score: 2

      You could mix and match chapters. A teacher could roll his own text book, the same way we can roll our own Linux distros. I'm pretty sure this is already a thing. If you can collaboratively spawn Wikipedia and Linux, I don't see why collaboratively creating a third grade math book should be that difficult.

      Of course, that would only work in a sane country. In the United States, we make our teachers get Master's degrees, whereby they pay thoughtful attention to different learning methods and how to make things click for different students who exhibit different types of understanding. Then we take those freshly minted grads, passionate about reaching young minds, and hand them Common Core and every other state-mandated curriculum and force them to recite from the book like robots. Any deviation from the script is punished, your students are data points measured entirely by what they score on standardized tests. All the while we pay you a pittance, cut your benefits, expand your hours and generally crush anything like passion or a soul you ever had until you burn out and quit.

      But hey, the administrators are making six figs, and all your students are gonna get a iPads, so, score!

      --
      We don't have a state-run media we have a media-run state.
    18. Re:everytime this is tired by meta-monkey · · Score: 1

      I'd vote for you. I remember when you taught me a better method for finding cube roots.

      --
      We don't have a state-run media we have a media-run state.
    19. Re:everytime this is tired by bluefoxlucid · · Score: 1

      I don't remember that. http://www.wikihow.com/Calcula... ?

    20. Re:everytime this is tired by Trailer+Trash · · Score: 1

      Note that I said nothing of the books being on a tablet. While that's certainly possible it would be nice to see text books distributed solely for the cost of printing and distribution.

    21. Re:everytime this is tired by meta-monkey · · Score: 1
      --
      We don't have a state-run media we have a media-run state.
    22. Re:everytime this is tired by dj245 · · Score: 1

      Of course, that would only work in a sane country. In the United States, we make our teachers get Master's degrees, whereby they pay thoughtful attention to different learning methods and how to make things click for different students who exhibit different types of understanding. Then we take those freshly minted grads, passionate about reaching young minds, and hand them Common Core and every other state-mandated curriculum and force them to recite from the book like robots.

      We want kids to have quality educations. Implementing standards and then following them is the cornerstone of even the most basic quality program. Having a good quality control system doesn't guarantee the result will be good. However, NOT having a standardized system of maintaining quality standards means that it is a lot more difficult to have a consistent good result.

      There are very few white-collar professions where a person uses their entire 4-year university experiences every single day. As an engineer, I certainly don't need differential equations, integrals, or high-level geometry often, if at all. In fact, a majority of what I learned is of little practical use in my career. It was taught so that I might "be aware" of the topic in case I ever came across something like it. I'm not sure why you think Teachers would be any different. A 4-year degree is not job training. It's an education. There is, and should be, a difference.

      --
      Even those who arrange and design shrubberies are under considerable economic stress at this period in history.
    23. Re:everytime this is tired by unixisc · · Score: 1

      And the bizarre solutions they have - Wikipedia, BBC, Khan Academy... What makes them think that these would provide a well rounded education?

    24. Re:everytime this is tired by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      All we really need is the Replicator and the Holodeck. Provided, of course, that no Texas-sized asteroid comes along (the Texas-sized ones are known to be ill-tempered)

    25. Re:everytime this is tired by Archangel+Michael · · Score: 1

      I don't see why collaboratively creating a third grade math book should be that difficult.

      Politics.

      --
      Agent K: A *person* is smart. People are dumb, stupid, panicky animals, and you know it.
    26. Re:everytime this is tired by Archangel+Michael · · Score: 1

      The problem isn't standards. The problem is "One size fits all" standards. There are no gradations or levels of competency, just more or less "pass/fail" series of hoops.

      The fact is the industrial method of teaching has to be changed, and we are starting to see those changes. But it is going to require a whole new type of teacher, and most teachers are not up to the task.

      --
      Agent K: A *person* is smart. People are dumb, stupid, panicky animals, and you know it.
    27. Re:everytime this is tired by Gliscameria · · Score: 1

      Maybe "textbooks" are an inferior way to learn? What's the point of having students just read stuff of a tablet - the learning should be interactive. This is what current textbook makers are worried about, and the ones that survive will embrace it. Even, what... 10 years ago we had a fantastic formal logic textbook that came with a CD that you more or less used for everything. It had all the lessons, tests, problems and even an online companion to submit your work. If they had something in the kin of codeacademy for physics/chemistry/math/grammer I think that would be a no brainer - I don't know this would work with history or heavy memorization disciplines.

      --
      X
    28. Re:everytime this is tired by unixisc · · Score: 1

      I dunno exactly about South African education, but typical textbooks don't 'last' 10-20 years, nor is their cost $100 outside the US or Europe. A typical textbook lasts the year or 2 for that grade, after that, they get replaced by new ones. Yeah, the kid can go back to his old class textbooks and read that, but how many actually do?

      I like the idea of tablets replacing textbooks. Let's decouple 2 things:

      1. 1. The cost of textbooks, and how they are distributed
      2. 2. The medium in which textbooks are distributed

      Addressing the second issue first, it is a good idea to have configurable textbooks depending on the grade the student is in. Let's say there is a universal textbook in the cloud, and of that, an appropriate subset is to be downloaded onto the tablet/laptop and that's what the student studies from. Aside from the physical issue of slaughtered trees and having several books, this helps customize the contents of the pad to keep just what the student needs at any point of time. If these are issued by school districts, as opposed to being owned by the students or paid for by parents, then it makes sense for school IT admins to have locked down versions that restrict what a student can or can't download. If it's owned by the students, then the sole role of the school IT admins would be to ensure that the students have what they need for the school year. However, having an iPad shouldn't eliminate things like writing, or physically working out math problems, like calculations of height of a tree based on its shadows.

      The first issue - cost of textbooks - I agree that there should be a standardized textbook for at least STEM and Geography. Maybe the cost of developing all that could be amortized over a population over time, until it ramps down to a nominal fee. I do think subjects like History would be thornier things to have, since those tend to be subjective based on the opinions of people teaching those. And I know I'll be hated for saying this, but screw the arts. Having a Masters in English Literature or Gender studies isn't gonna land you a job outside legal, so let's not have that in the curriculum. Stick to STEM and the commerce subjects - Economics, Accountancy, Commerce, and stay out of esoteric subjects.

      Bottom line - tablets/computers do have a role in school, and can be the new medium of textbooks. However, making students overly dependent on them would make them incapable of independent calculations or analysis. Such as knowing how much change you need to give a customer for a $7.64 meal when he pays you $12.64 w/o using a calculator.

    29. Re:everytime this is tired by Cyberax · · Score: 1

      Romans also had stagnated in a pre-industrial world. Hardly a role model.

    30. Re:everytime this is tired by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Or we could just keep horse-drawn buggies. Buggies have done a fine job for the last century, helping to transport the best and brightest minds."

      "640K ought to be enough for anybody."

      When I was in 7th grade, I had a book bag that, fully loaded, weighed approximately 40 pounds. If I could get those books to all fit on a tablet, and have room for my notebooks and pens? I'd have been ecstatic.

    31. Re:everytime this is tired by laurencetux · · Score: 1

      what i could see is a truly epicly massive Education DataCore where STEM stuff could have the Standard Textbooks stored and then have the top say half dozen* or so "alt" textbooks for the rest of the subjects (including The Arts).

      And even with STEM stuff how do you decide to teach Electronics? Conventional or Electron Flow?? hint DO BOTH wanna see WW2 from the German side?? then access that file and check it out.

      the only locks i would want to see is keeping students from subjects that are not "age appropriate" (as locally defined).

      the data and the test/quiz/homework bits should be kept separate (this btw is 85% of how textbooks get changed from school year to school year).

    32. Re:everytime this is tired by laurencetux · · Score: 1

      " I find the use of 'Irish Coffee' to be racist."

      the problem is its a dramatic visual of the problem

      White on top brown below and fueled by booze

    33. Re:everytime this is tired by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      A typical textbook costs about $100 and will last 10-20 years.

      And each student gets 5-8 "typical textbooks" every year. Total cost: 500-800 dollars.

      And each "typical textbook" will have a new edition every 2-3 years. So your $100 book lasts 2-3 years - assume a $33/yr cost to the book.

      So: let's say you're a typical high school, grades 9 - 12. Each student gets 5-8 books per year, at an aggregate cost of $165 - $264 per year, assuming the average book is replaced after 2-3 years. Over the 4 years they attend your school, you'll have spent $660 to $1056 over the course of that student's 4 years at the school.

      Versus spending $500 on a tablet, even if you refresh the tablet every 2 years, you've only spent $1000 over their 4 year career, which is pretty much right in line with what you'd spend on books.

      Plus, the student gets to keep the books when they're done.

      It's not as cut and dried as you make it sound - the cost could be a wash either way, and there might be significant additional benefits that a tablet offers that books don't that would make the (possible) extra cost worthwhile - interactive software, video and other visual learning aids, internet access, and something not to be overlooked is the benefit to students' spines of not having to cart around 50 pounds of books.

    34. Re:everytime this is tired by rtb61 · · Score: 1

      The interactive aspect is exactly why tablets fail in education. The keyboard is essential in ensuring student input and creativity is the focus and not just becoming a mindless consumer of content. The keyboard also protects the screen and acts as a more effective stand. Now all that is needed is a shift to alphabetic keyboards for the new generation coming out.

      --
      Chaos - everything, everywhere, everywhen
    35. Re:everytime this is tired by TheSync · · Score: 1

      The LA Unified School District is spending over $1 billion to give all students (650,000) iPads.

      Note that Beverly Hills School District is independent, and not part of LAUSD...

    36. Re:everytime this is tired by complete+loony · · Score: 1

      This is South Africa, where they already have open licensed text books covering a significant fraction of their school curriculum.

      --
      09F91102 no, 455FE104 nope, F190A1E8 uh-uh, 7A5F8A09 that's not it, C87294CE no. Ah! 452F6E403CDF10714E41DFAA257D313F.
    37. Re:everytime this is tired by shugah · · Score: 1

      My kids elementary school in Vancouver did this. They replaced an entire computer lab of PCs with a bunch of iPads. Half the iPads were stolen within 6 months, but worse than that - they were useless. A tablet is good for consuming content, not creating content. If you want kids to learn to do something more useful with a computer than watch YouTube videos, teach them to work on real computers.

      --
      If you aren't part of the solution, then there is good money to be made prolonging the problem
    38. Re:everytime this is tired by TWX · · Score: 1

      Alphabetic keyboard?

      Last time I looked at a keyboard, all letters of the alphabet were represented.

      --
      Do not look into laser with remaining eye.
    39. Re:everytime this is tired by bluefoxlucid · · Score: 1

      So will America.

  2. Tablets. Yup. That's what Ed is missing... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    Don't you all know the famous story?

    Archimedes was killed by a Roman soldier whilst he finger-painted on a Syracusian tablet running Android 0.0000001 Olive Tree.

    1. Re:Tablets. Yup. That's what Ed is missing... by meta-monkey · · Score: 1

      Android 0.0000001 Olive Tree

      Man, they had really shitty desserts back then.

      --
      We don't have a state-run media we have a media-run state.
  3. Not a Bad Idea by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Tech in school is generally a bad idea, I feel (children don't need tablets to learn) but this is an example of it done right. South African schools can use those tablets to build a massive library of free reference resources and public domain literature and share that with the students. It's more a pop-up computer lab, if anything.

  4. This is the solution how? by DumbSwede · · Score: 2, Insightful

    And how would this in any way address the “Irish Coffee” problem?

    If anything I could see this exacerbating the problem. Rich white kids are probably more computer literate than poorer black peers – going full on digital will amplify the difference.

    Do it if it improves education in general (a big if). I know that tablets and online education are the future, but one that never quite arrives in the correct form. Content is key whether it is online or in a book. Handing out hardware doesn’t solve the content problem.

    1. Re:This is the solution how? by meustrus · · Score: 2
      South Africa is not America, and computer illiteracy won't stop poor black kids from learning how to use what sounds like basically an e-reader. And in this case, it sounds like they got the content right:

      Content from Wikipedia, the BBC, the complete works of Shakespeare and Khan Academy is all cached locally for teachers to reference during lessons and pupils to use for self-directed study and research.

      --
      I sometimes ask revealing, often ignorant-seeming questions. Maybe they're harder to answer than you think.
    2. Re:This is the solution how? by Tx · · Score: 2

      Content is key whether it is online or in a book. Handing out hardware doesn’t solve the content problem.

      Good thing they're not just handing out hardware then.

      FTA: "As with Sunward Park, the schools in this new pilot will be using a centralised portal developed by Bramley’s MIB Software for managing tablets and aggregating educational content into a single portal. MIB’s backend pulls in CAPS aligned digital textbooks from the likes of Via Afrika as well as extra resources from around the web."

      --
      Oh no... it's the future.
    3. Re:This is the solution how? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Here's the part of the solution:
      The tablets are designed to be rooted. Rooting your tablet allows you to download porn.

      The tablets are then designed to break, one piece at a time. The clever student must then figure out a way to repair his tablet before he can continue using it for its rooted purpose.

      After three short years, every child in South Africa will be able to fieldstrip a tablet, build a network card out of paper mache and wire, and at least one will discover how to make cheap solar cells out of trash bags.

  5. rich white students by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Whites don't run the country anymore. And from the looks of things, nobody is really running the place all that well. I don't see the blacks treating each other any better than the whites did. Equal indeed...

    This 'tablet' stuff is a scam, to cover up continued government atrocities against the people, and to sell electronic trinkets.

  6. Cool! Just one thing missing... by dskoll · · Score: 3, Insightful

    ... all that's needed is for Eskom (the South African electrical utility) to actually supply reliable power to recharge all those tablets!

  7. well, i failed. i actually read the article by turkeydance · · Score: 2

    these tablets are traveling Time Clocks for Teachers.

  8. Good Luck by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

    he's hoping it will be an end to 'Irish Coffee' education in which rich white students float to the top

    Rich students have so many advantages over poor students that nothing you can do in the schools is ever going to fully compensate for it - not that they shouldn't try. From infancy wealthier kids are (on average of course) spoken to more, with a more varied and stimulating vocabulary, and with more encouraging words. They are generally exposed to more stimulating activities, and read to more regularly. By the time they hit Pre-K they already have significant cognitive advantages. The achievement gap needs to be tackled at its root causes if you really want to try to close it.

  9. Corrections & some by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Firstly it's spelt "Gauteng" and it's not a state...it's a province, albeit the most populous and largest contributor to South Africa's GDP.

    I keep feeling that the tablet fetish is a way to "fix" the chronic issues with distributing textbooks. Unfortunately, it doesn't address the largest issue in the education system: poorly performing, trained and at times simply lazy teachers. Added to that a belligerent teachers union that obstructs any attempts to introduce strong performance monitoring.

    As other posters have pointed out, the battery life of your typical tablet is such that they'll be useable during classes and won't last much past that. You'd after all want learners to be able to carry all the teaching resources with them home. And, besides turning them into mugging targets, many of the poorer communities, which you'd think would benefit most from this initiative, don't have electricity.

    Gauteng, for it's previous sins, had tried a very ambitious computer labs and internet connectivity project a few years ago and that imploded so weary whether this is likely to have any greater success :(

    Andries

  10. Seriously... by altrent2003 · · Score: 1

    Do they expect to fix education problems by throwing more tablets at it?

  11. Use an e-reader rather than a tablet by davidwr · · Score: 1

    If it were me though, I'd go the way the military does for some of its members: A "sealed" (no radio or USB, with tamper-evident seals on the case) e-reader pre-loaded with the textbooks the student will need. This will keep theft way down.

    Make it rugged enough to handle 5-10 years of careless use by students, but cheap enough so if it gets lost or really banged up it can be written off.

    Use "e-paper" so there is no battery use until the student turns the page and so they can read it right before bedtime without causing sleep issues. Throw in a speaker for audio-books/text-to-speech/audio-translations/etc.

    At the end of the year, unscrew the cases, replace or refresh the data chip with next year's books, and apply new tamper-evident seals.

    In large quantities, a typical-tablet-sized device could be made for well under $50 before you add in the licensing fees for the books and the licensing fees for any applicable patents (sigh). Amortize that over 5 years and you are talking $10/year/student before paying off patent-holders, licensing the books, and paying the wages of the employees who refresh the machine each year.

    To placate copyright owners (an unfortunate necessity), the "data chip" should be unreadable (i.e. encrypted) unless it is plugged into the same device as it was plugged into when it was first inserted or when it was last refreshed.

    An optional enhancement to this would be a USB or similar port that ONLY talked to devices who presented a token cryptographically signed by the school that issued them. This would allow for things like e-library books, teacher-prepared books or presentations to be taken home (without color though, e-paper is B/W only as far as I know), and a less-labor-intensive end-of-year-refresh process.

    If the school wants to issue tablets for the purposes of computation or Internet access, they should either be:
    * In-school-use only
    * leased to students who don't have a home computer or home Internet, and/or
    * "leased" at no cost to students who don't have a home computer or home internet and can't afford one

    --
    Knowledge is how to play a game, intelligence is how to win, wisdom is knowing what game to play.
    1. Re:Use an e-reader rather than a tablet by laurencetux · · Score: 1

      something that might cut down on theft of these tablets (since you are going custom anyway)

      1 make it obvious that this is a childs ELearning device by cooking the rom and using a nonstandard casing

      2 rig it so that if you open the unit it fuses something important (main power lines or the CPU data lines) on the motherboard (dead man circuit with glue on the back??)

      3 make these things as cheap and low power as possible (cheap enough that OS upgrades are not worth it)

      4 the only 2 jacks on the device should be the USB power connector and a Headphone jack (memory chip if removeable should be in the battery compartment)

      also shouldn't SOLAR power be useable in this case?? (even if you have say a half dozen kids using a single powerunit)

  12. Re:Cool! Just one thing missing... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Wouldn't be a problem if they went with e-readers instead. Tablets are a bad solution in search of a problem.

  13. Daylight viewable display? by WillAdams · · Score: 1

    Or are the kids only going to be using these indoors?

    Is anyone doing a true daylight viewable display, like the transflective LCDs which were used on Fujitsu tablets?

    I need to replace my Fujitsu Stylistic ST-4121, and there simply don't seem to be any real options (need a Wacom stylus as well).

    --
    Sphinx of black quartz, judge my vow.
  14. Sigh. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Tablets are really nice, but they also happen to be, well, toys for the most part. Tablets play a very fundamental key role in assisting students in very young levels and students with special needs to learn things, but once you get above a certain age (I'm talking, like, 2nd grade) an actual laptop makes far, *far* more sense, both ergonomically and speaking from a capability standpoint.

    It's easy for educators to get excited about tablets in schools, but rarely does it pan out with flying colors.

  15. XC Collaboration for Microsoft Windows® by lippydude · · Score: 1

    "The XC Collaboration AddOn Software is a 3rd party product and not a default part of your installation of SMART Notebook Platform. In order to use this AddOn, you first have to download, install and activate it."

  16. Math behind tablets are replacement by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    He invoked math first!

    >A typical textbook costs about $100 and will last 10-20 years
    I would like to take this as a given, but my experience is a new "edition" comes out every 3 years, making the old edition obsolete. Now this is in theory controllable, but as far as I can tell many school boards are on the payroll of the text book companies.
    So lets use 3 year, 100 bucks. 30 bucks per book per year for 4 core subjects.
    Books
    That would give me the total cost for a student going to high school as
    4 core subjects * 4 years * 30 USD per year => 480 USD for 4 years of high school.
    Tablet
    (4 core subject * 4 years * 5 USD per subject (using common core)) + 200 USD for ebook reader => 280 USD
    Now this doesn't take into account supporting the tablet. But at scale I think that could be 10's of dollars per year per student.

    ALSO
    4 core books + 10 pounds of notes => Many students with very sore back from lugging all those books around
    PLUS
    No need to go back to locker to swap out books => Billions of additional hours for students to check their social media accounts!

    This would be a no brainer if so many people didn't profit from the current price inflated school book system.

  17. Ref: LAUSD by Virtucon · · Score: 1

    Ask how it went in LA. Also, does it bother anybody that "Khan Academy" popped up again?

    --
    Harrison's Postulate - "For every action there is an equal and opposite criticism"
  18. "Put together in a hurry" Great. by Radical+Moderate · · Score: 1

    I work in educational IT, and that generally means some executive wants something shiny with no clue as to the resources needed to make it work. Hilarity ensues.

    --
    Never let a lack of data get in the way of a good rant.
  19. NO, that would actually make sense. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    That's far too well-thought-out to ever see the light of day in any school system, in South Africa, or elsewhere. If you propose a sound solution that actually addresses, if not solves, nearly all of the potential issues, you'll get shot down immediately. Stop thinking and just throw money at it, that's what everyone else is doing so it must be better. (and admittedly, the solution you propose requires semi-custom hardware and software and integration, as well as negotiation with content providers, all of which can prove much more time consuming and expensive than anticipated).

    South Africa is kind of an interesting place though. The current plan might actually be a reasonable choice, given the circumstances, as long as the tablets are low-cost and durable, and have good battery life. Just having all that information readily available could be a great help to many of the poorer students, at least the ones who are actually motivated but whose families lack resources. Pilot programs are also the right strategy, and give time to evaluate and modify the solution (and work through the issues that arise) rather than doing a truly massive simultaneous rollout that would be almost certain to fail miserably.

  20. Other slight problems to this: by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The majority of teachers are not qualified to teach anything, Grade 8 students average a better score than their teachers!

    The government failed to deliver textbooks to quite a few schools in recent years.

    The government do not spend nearly enough on upgrading/maintaining rural schools.

    1. Re:Other slight problems to this: by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Actually I believe this is mainly a ploy to "buy" votes in the province, even if it is doomed to fail as pointed out above, as the ruling ANC party has been bleeding votes there for the past few years.

  21. racism after 20 years by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    what has racism to do with this ?