One such area is technology support for IEPed students. The goal here is to provide digital tools that allow students with special needs to keep up with their class work. In many cases this can mean something like a Chromebook, which is essentially a web browsing laptop. I'm not a fan of Chromebooks, they are a corporate means of collecting users into a closed ecosystem. The intent of Chromebooks is to pass any online experience through Google's corporate lens (Chrome) and to keep people within that singular view in order to benefit what is very much a for-profit business.
Google struggles to treat education and students in particular as anything other than a commodity because people's internet attention is why Google is one of the richest companies in the world. Google is very aggressive about maintaining its monopoly which is why I'm reticent about things like GAFE, evangelizing groups like Google Certified Teachers and Chromebooks.
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The default response from the school board when we began talking about replacing my son's very old (he takes good care of it) laptop was to give him a Chromebook. Since we only pay lip service to developing digital fluency in Ontario and graduate a large majority of digital illiterates, this seems like a cheap and easy way to hand out tech, but in this case it is a kid who is already digitally skilled and who intends to make computer technology his life's work. He is already competing in robotics competitions and building computers. The courses he has signed up for in high school focus on digital engineering. Giving him a Chromebook is like giving a carpenter a toy hammer and expecting them to frame a house. It's neither individually appropriate nor particularly useful.
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When he is learning electronics next year in grade 9, he'll need to install Arduino on his computer and then use it to code circuits. It's free on a 'proper' computer running Windows, Linux or OSx, but Arduino can only be done on a Chromebook with a monthly fee (not covered by the school board). If he wants to run RobotC for his robotics classes, he can't do it on a Chromebook. If he wants to run 3d modelling software? Code in the IDE of his choice? Run the plasma cutter software? Sorry, none of those happen on a web browser. If all we're aiming to do is teach kids how to browse the internet like the consumers we want them to be and through a single, corporate lens, then we're doing a great job pitching Chromebooks at them.
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In discussing this issue with the school board I was told that my son doesn't need a full laptop because the specialty classes that require that software will supply it in class. His IEP specifies that he be given extra time to complete work, but that is impossible if the technology needed to do his class work is only available in a particular classroom. How does that help him finish his work after school, or on a weekend? It doesn't help him if he is trying to do work during his GLE support period either because other students are using the in-class equipment while he is elsewhere. There is no guaranty that the technology would be available at lunch or before or after school either, so the 'what he needs will be in the classroom' answer seems to be intentionally ignoring the extra time his IEP clearly states he needs.
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A Chromebook should be the last thing suggested. This, or course, begs the question: if Chromebooks aren't any cheaper and don't improve digital fluency, why are we using them at all? Well, it makes our monopolistic corporate
Whoever this is a win for, it isn't providing my son with the technology he needs to succeed. It also puts the pedagogy around understanding the technology we've made an intrinsic part of our classrooms on the back foot. As near as I can tell, other than feeding a corporate partnership and rolling out something so simple it can't really break (or do much), there is little to recommend the Chromebook, especially as an assistive device for a student who will need things it can't do in his classes next year.