Chicago Sun-Times

HERE’S WHO CAN GET A LAPTOP OR TABLET FROM CPS FOR USE AT HOME

- BY NADER ISSA, EDUCATION REPORTER nissa@suntimes.com | @NaderDIssa

Even while Chicago Public Schools officials work to distribute 100,000 devices to students who need them for remote learning, the district estimates 15,000 kids will still be left without a computer and internet access.

CPS has acknowledg­ed from the start that its massive effort to quickly close the technology gap in a district with 271,000 students coming from low-income families won’t fully get the job done.

“We know that the digital divide will not be bridged overnight, and we are committed to finding additional resources for students,” CPS officials wrote in a recent letter to principals giving guidance for how to distribute the new devices.

For the laptops, iPads and Chromebook­s that are being handed out, including 37,000 newly purchased devices, priority is being given to the kids who have the most significan­t needs. The district has about 65,000 existing devices, and it’s still trying to figure out how to get another 15,000 devices for the remaining kids.

To start, the district is focusing on communitie­s that pass a certain threshold on the Hardship Index created by the University of Illinois at Chicago’s Great Cities Institute. That narrows things down to almost every neighborho­od on the South and West sides.

From there, CPS told principals to prioritize students in the following categories: eighth graders and high school juniors and seniors; special education students; English learners; students without a permanent home; and kids in AP or dual- credit courses.

There’s no order of priority between those, but students who check more than one box will be given first dibs, CPS said.

As far as pickup goes, each school will come up with its own plan. CPS recommends principals use a staggered method so fewer pickups are happening at the same time, and distributi­on should be set up outside the school.

Parents or guardians are urged to contact their school if their child needs a device, and the adults will be required to pick up devices on their kid’s behalf. Identity verificati­on will be required, and if a parent doesn’t have a valid ID, a utility bill can be used, CPS said.

Each device will come with a charger and instructio­ns on how to use it. Parents and students will be asked to sign a form accepting responsibi­lity for the device, but CPS said families won’t be charged if it’s damaged or lost.

The district does, however, want to get back all the devices once this remote learning period is over. So each device will be tracked in a database along with the name and ID number of the student who’s using it on loan.

 ?? SUN-TIMES FILE PHOTO ?? Fourth graders work on computers at Roswell B. Mason Elementary School.
SUN-TIMES FILE PHOTO Fourth graders work on computers at Roswell B. Mason Elementary School.

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