Terkait rencana peningkatan penggunaan teknologi informasi untuk
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dari artikel berikut.

http://www.nytimes.com/2007/05/04/education/04laptop.html

May 4, 2007
Seeing No Progress, Some Schools Drop Laptops
By WINNIE HU

LIVERPOOL, N.Y. — The students at Liverpool High have used their
school-issued laptops to exchange answers on tests, download
pornography and hack into local businesses. When the school tightened
its network security, a 10th grader not only found a way around it but
also posted step-by-step instructions on the Web for others to follow
(which they did).

Scores of the leased laptops break down each month, and every other
morning, when the entire school has study hall, the network inevitably
freezes because of the sheer number of students roaming the Internet
instead of getting help from teachers.

So the Liverpool Central School District, just outside Syracuse, has
decided to phase out laptops starting this fall, joining a handful of
other schools around the country that adopted one-to-one computing
programs and are now abandoning them as educationally empty — and
worse.

Many of these districts had sought to prepare their students for a
technology-driven world and close the so-called digital divide between
students who had computers at home and those who did not.

"After seven years, there was literally no evidence it had any impact
on student achievement — none," said Mark Lawson, the school board
president here in Liverpool, one of the first districts in New York
State to experiment with putting technology directly into students'
hands. "The teachers were telling us when there's a one-to-one
relationship between the student and the laptop, the box gets in the
way. It's a distraction to the educational process."

Liverpool's turnabout comes as more and more school districts
nationwide continue to bring laptops into the classroom. Federal
education officials do not keep track of how many schools have such
programs, but two educational consultants, Hayes Connection and the
Greaves Group, conducted a study of the nation's 2,500 largest school
districts last year and found that a quarter of the 1,000 respondents
already had one-to-one computing, and fully half expected to by 2011.

Yet school officials here and in several other places said laptops had
been abused by students, did not fit into lesson plans, and showed
little, if any, measurable effect on grades and test scores at a time
of increased pressure to meet state standards. Districts have dropped
laptop programs after resistance from teachers, logistical and
technical problems, and escalating maintenance costs.

Such disappointments are the latest example of how technology is often
embraced by philanthropists and political leaders as a quick fix, only
to leave teachers flummoxed about how best to integrate the new
gadgets into curriculums. Last month, the United States Department of
Education released a study showing no difference in academic
achievement between students who used educational software programs
for math and reading and those who did not.

Those giving up on laptops include large and small school districts,
urban and rural communities, affluent schools and those serving mostly
low-income, minority students, who as a group have tended to
underperform academically.

Matoaca High School just outside Richmond, Va., began eliminating its
five-year-old laptop program last fall after concluding that students
had failed to show any academic gains compared with those in schools
without laptops. Continuing the program would have cost an additional
$1.5 million for the first year alone, and a survey of district
teachers and parents found that one-fifth of Matoaca students rarely
or never used their laptops for learning. "You have to put your money
where you think it's going to give you the best achievement results,"
said Tim Bullis, a district spokesman.

Everett A. Rea Elementary School in Costa Mesa, Calif., where more
than 95 percent of students are Hispanic and come from low-income
families, gave away 30 new laptops to another school in 2005 after a
class that was trying them out switched to new teachers who simply did
not do as much with the technology. Northfield Mount Hermon School, a
private boarding school in western Massachusetts, eliminated its
five-year-old laptop program in 2002 after it found that more effort
was being expended on repairing the laptops than on training teachers
to teach with them.

Two years ago, school officials in Broward County, Fla., the
sixth-largest district in the country, shelved a $275 million proposal
to issue laptops to each of their more than 260,000 students after
re-evaluating the costs of a pilot project. The district, which paid
$7.2 million to lease 6,000 laptops for the pilot at four schools, was
spending more than $100,000 a year for repairs to screens and
keyboards that are not covered by warranties. "It's cost prohibitive,
so we have actually moved away from it," said Vijay Sonty, chief
information officer for the district, whose enrollment is 37 percent
black, 31 percent white and 25 percent Hispanic.

Here in Liverpool, parents have long criticized the cost of the laptop
program: about $300,000 a year from the state, plus individual student
leases of $25 a month, or $900 from 10th to 12th grades, for the
take-home privilege.

"I feel like I was ripped off," said Richard Ferrante, explaining that
his son, Peter, used his laptop to become a master at the Super Mario
Brothers video game. "And every time I write my check for school
taxes, I get mad all over again."

Students like Eddie McCarthy, 18, a Liverpool senior, said his laptop
made him "a lot better at typing," as he used it to take notes in
class, but not a better student. "I think it's better to wait and buy
one for college," he said.

More than a decade ago, schools began investing heavily in laptops at
the urging of school boards and parent groups who saw them as the key
to the 21st century classroom. Following Maine's lead in 2002, states
including Michigan, Pennsylvania and South Dakota helped buy laptops
for thousands of students through statewide initiatives like
"Classrooms for the Future" and "Freedom to Learn." In New York City,
about 6,000 students in 22 middle schools received laptops in 2005 as
part of a $45-million, three-year program financed with city, state
and federal money.

Many school administrators and teachers say laptops in the classroom
have motivated even reluctant students to learn, resulting in higher
attendance and lower detention and dropout rates.

But it is less clear whether one-to-one computing has improved
academic performance — as measured through standardized test scores
and grades — because the programs are still new, and most schools have
lacked the money and resources to evaluate them rigorously.

In one of the largest ongoing studies, the Texas Center for
Educational Research, a nonprofit group, has so far found no overall
difference on state test scores between 21 middle schools where
students received laptops in 2004, and 21 schools where they did not,
though some data suggest that high-achieving students with laptops may
perform better in math than their counterparts without. When six of
the schools in the study that do not have laptops were given the
option of getting them this year, they opted against.

Mark Warschauer, an education professor at the University of
California at Irvine and author of "Laptops and Literacy: Learning in
the Wireless Classroom" (Teachers College Press, 2006), also found no
evidence that laptops increased state test scores in a study of 10
schools in California and Maine from 2003 to 2005. Two of the schools,
including Rea Elementary, have since eliminated the laptops.

But Mr. Warschauer, who supports laptop programs, said schools like
Liverpool might be giving up too soon because it takes time to train
teachers to use the new technology and integrate it into their
classes. For instance, he pointed to students at a middle school in
Yarmouth, Me., who used their laptops to create a Spanish book for
poor children in Guatemala and debate Supreme Court cases found
online.

"Where laptops and Internet use make a difference are in innovation,
creativity, autonomy and independent research," he said. "If the goal
is to get kids up to basic standard levels, then maybe laptops are not
the tool. But if the goal is to create the George Lucas and Steve Jobs
of the future, then laptops are extremely useful."

In Liverpool, a predominantly white school district of nearly 8,000
students, one in four of whom qualify for free or reduced lunches,
administrators initially proposed that every 10th through 12th-grade
student be required to lease a laptop, but decided to make the program
voluntary after parents protested. About half the students immediately
signed up; now, three-quarters have them.

At first, the school set up two tracks of classes — laptop and
non-laptop — that resulted in scheduling conflicts and complaints that
those without laptops had been shut out of advanced classes, though
school officials denied that. In 2005, the school went back to one set
of classes, and bought a pool of 280 laptops for students who were not
participating in the lease program.

Soon, a room that used to be for the yearbook club became an on-site
repair shop for the 80 to 100 machines that broke each month, with a
"Laptop Help Desk" sign taped to the door. The school also repeatedly
upgraded its online security to block access to sites for pornography,
games and instant messaging — which some students said they had used
to cheat on tests.

Maureen A. Patterson, the assistant superintendent for instruction,
said that since the laptop program was canceled, she has spoken to
more than 30 parents who support the decision and received five phone
calls from parents saying they were concerned that their children
would not have technological advantages. She said the high school
would enlarge its pool of shared laptops for in-class use, invest in
other kinds of technology and also planned to extend building hours in
the evening to provide computer access.

In a 10th grade English class the other day, every student except one
was tapping away on a laptop to look up food facts about Wendy's,
McDonald's, and Burger King for a journal entry on where to eat. The
one student without a computer, Taylor Baxter, 16, stared at a
classmate's screen because she had forgotten to bring her own laptop
that day.

But in many other classrooms, there was nary a laptop in sight as
teachers read from textbooks and scribbled on chalkboards. Some
teachers said they had felt compelled to teach with laptops in the
beginning, but stopped because they found they were spending so much
time coping with technical glitches that they were unable to finish
their lessons.

Alice McCormick, who heads the math department, said most math
teachers preferred graphing calculators, which students can use on the
Regents exams, to laptops, which often do not have mathematical
symbols or allow students to show their work for credit. "Let's face
it, math is for the most part still a paper-and-pencil activity when
you're learning it," she said.

In the school library, an 11th-grade history class was working on
research papers. Many carried laptops in their hands or in backpacks
even as their teacher, Tom McCarthy, encouraged them not to overlook
books, newspapers and academic journals.

"The art of thinking is being lost," he said. "Because people can type
in a word and find a source and think that's the be all end all."

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