Showing off their connections
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Deirdre Newman
This is your mission, should you choose to accept it: integrate
all the varied computer networks on campus into one single network
that serves both Macs and PCs.
Estancia High School Principal Tom Antal accepted this mission
over the summer, making technology funding a priority and
transforming his school into a districtwide model.
On Tuesday, the school hosted an open house to show off its
technological achievements, from the computer labs to classrooms.
One of the biggest advantages is that students and staff can now
log onto any computer on campus with the same username and password.
“One of the major benefits is if a student was working on a senior
project in the English department and then came to the library, they
couldn’t use the computers there,” said Mark Wagner, an advanced
placement English literature teacher and technology coordinator at
the school. “Now they can.”
Estancia was one of the first schools to receive technology
support from the state through digital high school grants.
Inevitably, being the first meant it was also the first school to
have outdated equipment.
When Antal found out over the summer that this funding from the
state was going to be cut off, he decided to move funds from other
projects to technology to keep Estancia on the cutting edge.
Between the funds the school received last year and moving money
around over the summer, the school was able to spend about $102,000
on equipment, software licensing, training and other technological
needs.
Now, Estancia is the only school in the state that has integrated
their PCs and Macs -- the technological equivalent of getting
Democrats and Republicans to agree on an issue.
In addition to enabling students and staff to log in and retrieve
files from any computer on campus, other benefits can be found in
classrooms, where teachers take roll by computer -- the day’s
attendance record is automatically sent to the main office -- and in
the language lab, where students can work on different activities in
different languages in individual booths at the same time.
“It’s connected by the headphones, and [my headphones] can jump
from one kid to the next every five seconds, so if they are sleeping,
I can hear that,” said Monica McCrea-Steele, Spanish teacher.
The $88,000 language lab is so new that it hasn’t even been used
by students yet. It is expected to open sometime next week,
McCrea-Steele said.
The technology upgrade should enhance students’ attitudes about
their projects, said Bob Sterling, who teaches Advancement Via
Individual Determination.
“It’s a great cycle,” Sterling said. “They make a great-looking
project, we validate them and then they want to make a better
project.”
Assistant Supt. Paul Reed said he was impressed with the school’s
focus on technology.
“I think it’s very exciting,” Reed said. “They’ve done some
incredibly innovative things that directly translate into benefit for
kids.
“It seems to be a wise investment,” he said.
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