I'm agreeing with John- this is madness.

 What about the DAS systems boosting cell coverage? Do faculty get an on/off 
switch for that? Or for newspapers and magazines that also distract? And what 
about ad hoc networks, and MiFi cells? And iPods, and doodling? There are 
several ways to get to the internet, and many more to not pay attention (one of 
my sons makes the most elaborate little paper figures when he's bored in class- 
the more elaborate his creations are, the more his mind was elsewhere in 
class.) And let's not forget that more and more emergency notification systems 
rely on IP and you being reached in a hyper-connected world.

As far as surgically killing off wireless in a specific room while leaving it 
untouched on the other side of garden variety sheetrock wall goes, I'm from 
Arkansas- you'd have to show me. And then I'd be looking for the smoke machine 
and magic mirrors!

But it does make for interesting cultural discussion. Be forewarned- non-PC  
profiling ahead: I have to wonder how many of the complainants are older, or 
lacking in classroom management skills to begin with...

-Lee Badman
Skeptical in Syracuse


________________________________________
From: The EDUCAUSE Wireless Issues Constituent Group Listserv 
[[email protected]] On Behalf Of John Rodkey 
[[email protected]]
Sent: Wednesday, December 02, 2009 6:03 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: [WIRELESS-LAN] Restricting of wireless access in classrooms

Build a Faraday cage around each classroom. [ 
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Faraday_cage ] Embed wire mesh in all walls, 
remove all windows, replace wooden doors with steel.   Your financial people 
will look askance on this, and future technologist who are now required by the 
faculty to ensure high wireless signal levels in every square centimeter of 
campus (especially classrooms) will curse the day you were born, but you will 
have provided a solution within the limits you've requested.

Seriously: you can't really talk with faculty about the ubiquity of wireless 
signals and the need to have a workable strategy and classroom discipline 
technique that allows for proper use of those signals?  This is really the 
conversation that needs to be happening.  As the saying goes, you need to win 
the hearts and the minds.  Faculty need to win their students' hearts and minds 
on this front.  Otherwise, you will have set the stage for a perpetual 
guerrilla warfare.

John Rodkey
Associate Director of IT
Westmont College

On Wed, Dec 2, 2009 at 11:02 AM, Urrea, Nick 
<[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:
I’m compiling research to give to our Faculty Technology Committee.
My question is has anybody successfully implemented a solution that restricts 
access to wireless internet in classrooms?
Also if you have tried and were not successful in restricting wireless access 
in classrooms let me know. Why didn’t the solution work.
No opinions please about how students can just go buy a mobile broadband card 
from a cellular carrier, or installing microwaves in the classrooms, or that 
teaching techniques should improve.


----
Nicholas Urrea
Information Technology
UC Hastings College of the Law
[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>
x4718

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