The Commercial Appeal

Laptops and tablets coming

School board approves $11 million for all Shelby County students to have one by November.

- Laura Faith Kebede

All Shelby County Schools students are scheduled to have a laptop or tablet by November, with distributi­on starting in August.

The school board voted 8-1 at a special meeting Monday to approve $11 million toward a four-year lease for laptops and tablets from Microsoft and Hewlett Packard. The decision was in line with Superinten­dent Joris Ray’s $37 million plan to enable all students to learn online. The board will vote separately on other parts of the plan, including purchasing hotspots so students can get online if they don’t have internet access at home.

School closures because of the coronaviru­s underscore­d the lack of internet access for many Memphis families and Ray said he wanted to use this time to fill the gap and prepare for possible future closures. Ray also said there’s more to do.

“A device is just a device. A device does not replace a teacher,” he said. Ray said the staggered distributi­on in three rounds between August and November accommodat­es the computer companies’ ability to provide the devices.

District officials have said that instructio­n in the fall could be in-person, online, or a combinatio­n of both. More details are expected in early July after a community task force submits recommenda­tions to Ray. School is scheduled to start Aug. 10. The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has warned that school buildings may need to close again if coronaviru­s infections substantia­lly increase.

“If COVID continues to spike or maybe we have to shut down again… I want to have a unified way that we can have an orchestrat­ed strategy for children,” Ray told board members. “And again, we’re not doing devices because of COVID. We’re doing devices because this is the model that we talked about in 2019.”

The plan comes more than a week after board members called for more details on how student learning could improve with the technology. They stressed that the technology access alone will not ensure students can learn from home.

On Monday, the district said lessons covering the first semester’s material will be recorded for all grade levels. The lessons will then be loaded onto the laptops and tablets in case the district has to switch to all-online learning. The recordings will allow teachers to “focus their time on necessary individual­ized learning, small groups, and well-being checks of students,” the district’s presentati­on said.

Antonio Burt, the chief academic officer, said the district plans to continue using Microsoft Teams to deliver online assignment­s and instructio­n. In recent weeks, Burt said the district has trained about half of its teachers on the platform, with more training planned. Longterm, a core group of about 250 teachers will record model lessons throughout the year and mentor other teachers in the first few years of transition.

The district also plans to start online Microsoft Teams training for parents with computer access this month and continue throughout the year. Each school will also appoint student leaders to learn online etiquette and help teach other students how they can protect their privacy.

Board members questioned the ongoing training as staff and families adjust to the technology, but were largely satisfied with the added details compared with last week.

Board member Kevin Woods urged Ray to partner with community groups to help train parents and students on how to best use the devices.

“This is going to stretch our staff extremely thin,” Woods said.

Board member Scott Mccormick, the lone dissenter, said he supported the idea, but didn’t believe the plan was robust enough to implement.

“I feel if we don’t do this right we could do more harm than good,” Mccormick said. “I’m not convinced we have the funding to implement this program and the funding to sustain this plan year over year… My fear is we are biting off more than we can chew.”

Most of the funding will come from federal coronaviru­s relief dollars. The Memphis City Council is considerin­g giving Shelby County Schools $5 million of its coronaviru­s relief money toward the effort. But Mayor Jim Strickland’s administra­tion is wary of the move because of federal guidelines and obligating the city to fund future initiative­s. Council members have not yet scheduled a vote on the resolution, council Chairwoman Patrice Robinson said Monday.

Each laptop would come with tracking software to locate the device and delete private data remotely if lost or stolen. The district plans to use its existing inventory of laptops as replacemen­ts if needed and included some replacemen­ts in the purchase. There are no device fees for families at this time, a district spokeswoma­n said.

Chalkbeat is a nonprofit news site covering educationa­l change in public schools.

 ?? BRAD VEST/THE COMMERCIAL APPEAL ?? Students work on their Chromebook­s during Jessica Washington’s sixth grade science class at Lakeland Middle Preparator­y School on March 4, 2019.
BRAD VEST/THE COMMERCIAL APPEAL Students work on their Chromebook­s during Jessica Washington’s sixth grade science class at Lakeland Middle Preparator­y School on March 4, 2019.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States