The future in hand
Marisa O’Neil
Gone are the days of students passing back purple-tinged, chemically
scented worksheets hot off the mimeograph press.
And at some Newport-Mesa middle schools, laser-printed,
photocopied sheets may also become obsolete. Thanks to a $700,000
technology grant, seventh-graders at Ensign Intermediate School and
sixth-graders at TeWinkle Intermediate School are tapping, using
shorthand graffiti and beaming their assignments on brand-new,
hand-held computers.
“You can do about everything on the Palm Pilot,” 11-year-old
TeWinkle student Maria Hernandez said.
The Palm Pilot Tungsten E hand-held computers -- 1,000 of them -- rolled out to the students in February, after months of training for
teachers. With a color screen, wireless keyboard, word processing
programs and Internet capabilities, the units are the district’s
attempt to get technology into the hands of as many students as
possible, said Steven Glyer, director of educational technology.
This year, students and teachers have just started to get up to
speed and discover the computers’ capabilities. Though the students
will have to hand them back in at the end of the school year for next
year’s students to use, the teachers will be able to further delve
into their capabilities next year.
“Year one is just getting them in kids’ hands,” Glyer said. “Next
year, day one when kids show up at school, the teachers will be much
better positioned to implement them right off the bat. Next year
we’re going to see some huge growth in how they’re used.”
Maria and other students in Maggie Ostler’s sixth-grade math and
science class are using the hand-held computers to do homework
assignments, brainstorm ideas and fill in worksheets.
Beaming assignments
To pass out the high-tech worksheets, Ostler went to the student
in the front of each row and pointed her computer directly at theirs
to beam the document to them. Those students then turn around and
beam it to the student behind them.
Filling in the blanks of the worksheet involves tapping on the
unit’s screen with a stylus and either typing the answer in with
on-screen keys or using the stylus to write it using shorthand
graffiti.
“I’m getting used to the graffiti,” 11-year-old Vanessa James
said. “But I don’t know how to do Ts.”
Vanessa said she uses hers to play games, draw and do her
homework. Because her home computer is broken, it still allows her to
get her assignments done.
Maria does her homework assignments and schedules assignments on
her tasks list and has put her friends’ phone numbers on her
hand-held computer. Lots of students, she said, play games on theirs,
too.
“But Mrs. O confiscates them if she catches us,” she said.
Sometimes the students do get distracted during class, playing
games or doing other non-school-related things on their units, Ostler
said. But part of the payoff is that they are excited to use them for
their assignments, too.
A lighter burden
Ostler can now upload information from each student’s hand held
into her computer and check it from home with an Internet connection.
Before they had the units, she had to carry home 60 notebooks to
grade.
Using the computers has motivated her to think of new teaching
methods to incorporate them into her lessons.
“And when we can’t get into the computer lab, my kids still get to
use technology and learn the skills they need,” she said.
Plans for next year include updating the networks, allowing all
students to have Internet access from their seats or buzz in for
game-show-style quizzes.
Early critics of the program questioned the idea of giving
middle-school students $200 pieces of equipment that could be lost or
broken. Each student had to sign an agreement that they were
responsible for the unit.
Loss and damage rates have come in below the 10% for which the
district had prepared, said Mark Wagner, the project’s coordinator.
District officials talk to parents of children who’ve lost the units
to determine how to pay them back.
Children of families who can’t come up with the money have the
option of community service for the district, Glyer said.
“We’ve been pleasantly surprised that parents have been so
cooperative when their children are responsible for the damage,”
Wagner said. “People seem to recognize that this is a good thing for
their student’s education.”
* MARISA O’NEIL covers education. She may be reached at (949)
574-4268 or by e-mail at [email protected].
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