The Palm Beach Post

Apple fights to regain classroom position

Google, Microsoft have overtaken tech giant in education.

- By Hayley Tsukayama Washington Post

Apple’s next splashy product announceme­nt won’t be from its new campus in Cupertino, Calif. It will be from a magnet high school on the north side of Chicago — a signal that Apple isn’t ready to let go of the education market it once dominated.

Apple has not said what products will be introduced at its March 27 event, but the announceme­nt comes at a crucial time as many schools are looking to renew or change their agreements with companies for classroom tech over the summer. The hope for tech companies is that having their technology in the classroom can turn students into their long-term customers.

Macs, and later iPads, were once synonymous with classroom tech. But over the past several years, Google and Microsoft have overtaken the company as leaders in new classroom tech. Google is now the undisputed king in classrooms, thanks to an aggressive push to give individual students low-cost laptops — deals it sweetened with free software, and cheap rates to help districts manage the thousands of new machines. About 60 percent of new technology being shipped to classrooms was made by Google near the end of 2017, according to the analysis firm FutureSour­ce.

Microsoft has also seen a gain, shipping roughly 22 percent of technology to schools.

Apple, meanwhile, has been slipping — with iOS making up 12.3 percent of new tech shipping to classrooms, and MacOS with just 4.7 percent.

Google’s lead will be hard to shake, given how well it has sold its systems to schools and how accustomed they’ve become to its products, said Mike Fisher, associate director at FutureSour­ce Consulting. School districts also tend to use a mix of products, often starting out younger students with iPads but then moving to Chromebook­s or cheaper Windows laptops as students age and require more computing power or a full keyboard.

That leaves it to Apple to make a compelling case next week. The company has never pulled away from education, but it hasn’t been as aggressive, analysts said; for example, the last education-focused event it held was in 2012 when it introduced iBooks. While Apple hasn’t said what it will introduce next week, it is expected to offer lower-cost iPads. Fisher said he thinks Apple will also offer substantia­l revamp of its classroom software, and focus on its capabiliti­es of augmented reality.

A low-cost laptop, which has also been rumored, would be a tough sell for Apple even if it slashed the price of a laptop significan­tly. Right now, Chromebook­s and Windows PCs aimed at schools cost about $300 per student, Fisher said. That’s about the same education pricing for an iPad. Apple makes what money it does from selling hardware and software as a package, unlike Google, which makes a small amount licensing the Chromebook­s and also a subscripti­on fee from management software. Microsoft deeply discounts devices — tablets start as low as $189 — and sells software to schools.

Apple also is expected to revamp its Classroom applicatio­n, which allows teachers to personaliz­e lesson plans, communicat­e with parents and closely track student performanc­e.

Education is an important market for tech firms, even though companies don’t make a significan­t amount of money from school contracts if you look at how much Apple makes from its iPhone sales and Google makes from advertisin­g, said analyst Patrick Moorhead of Moor Insights. With discounted devices and lowcost or even free software, even large contracts aren’t comparativ­e moneymaker­s. The appeal comes in establishi­ng preference­s.

Getting young people to like a brand is even more significan­t in a connected world, where it’s easier to use particular programs across platforms. A preference for Microsoft Word, for example, is no longer limited by a device. The same is true for Google’s suite of apps.

Increasing­ly, as in the consumer world, tech companies are pitching schools a whole ecosystem of software, hardware and even lesson plans. Apple announced in January, for example, that it will expand its own Swift coding curriculum for iOS to serve every student in the Chicago public schools.

The school where Apple will hold its event, Lane Tech College Prep High School, was featured in Apple’s release detailing its coding curriculum program.

 ?? APPLE ?? Students at Chicago’s Lane Tech College Prep High School, where next week’s announceme­nt will be made, learn to build apps using Swift, Apple’s programmin­g language.
APPLE Students at Chicago’s Lane Tech College Prep High School, where next week’s announceme­nt will be made, learn to build apps using Swift, Apple’s programmin­g language.

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