Arab Times

Expands program T-Mobile pushes Net to ‘schools’

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NEW YORK, Sept 15, (AP): T-Mobile is pushing to offer internet service to schools that are doing online learning with a program aimed at low-income students who don’t have access. In the US, millions of students don’t have high-speed internet or computers at home – a difficult enough situation when it was just about trying to get homework done, but a much bigger problem when many school districts have moved part or all of the school day online during the coronaviru­s pandemic.

School districts are spending big to address the crisis. The LA Unified School District is investing $100 million in online learning, including computers and internet service for kids who don’t have them. T-Mobile wants to expand its business that serves large organizati­ons like big companies and schools.

It had already planned to give districts 100 gigabytes of free wireless data per year per student, a commitment the company made while pursuing its acquisitio­n of Sprint. But since that allotment wouldn’t last more than a few months if kids streamed school all day, T-Mobile is adding two paid plans as well: $12 a month per household for 100GB, or $15 a month for unlimited data. The carrier says those prices are discounted to reflect the free-data offer.

Matt Staneff, T-Mobile’s chief marketing officer, and Mike Katz, an executive who leads the T-Mobile division that caters to large organizati­ons like schools and big companies, spoke with The Associated Press about the company’s new effort to serve schools. The conversati­on has been edited for length and clarity.

Question: Is providing connectivi­ty to schools something that you see as a big business opportunit­y?

Staneff: Sure, there’s business opportunit­ies there. But the motivation of doing this is that we recognize there’s a problem in society of kids not being connected. We want to do more than just try to win customers. This is a huge problem.

Q: And you think 10 million kids have connection issues that stops them from being able to do online school? Estimates vary, but I’ve seen higher numbers. (A new study says between 15 million and 16 million public-school students don’t have adequate internet connection­s or devices for online school.)

Staneff: There’s another data point that says 56% of school-age kids have had trouble completing their homework. And that’s a little bit broader because it’s not just the internet. A lot of them do it on a phone. They have internet access. It could be that they need a bigger screen, which is why we’re also offering at-cost, larger-screen devices. We’ve looked at the enrollment­s in the school lunch program, we’ve looked at all the Census data. That’s what this number is.

Q: What have you been charging schools for getting internet to students who don’t have it?

Katz: It ranges greatly. I can tell you this program is now going to be our main education program. The district, they can get unlimited starting at $15. That’s value that’s not available anywhere else in the market, and it enables schools to then pass through service at no cost to the students.

Q: So does the new program offer better pricing for schools than what’s available to them from T-Mobile now?

Katz: It’s netting so prices are lower than what we’ve done at any time.

Q: How long will this be available?

Staneff: Once you sign up, you’re good for five years.

Also: BEATTYVILL­E, Ky:

John Ross worries about his children returning to their classrooms this fall with coronaviru­s cases rising in Kentucky, but he feels he doesn’t have much of a choice: His family’s limited internet access makes it nearly impossible for the kids to keep up with schoolwork from home.

“They’re going to have their education,” the father of three in rural Lee County said as he recalled his children’s struggles to do their work this spring over a spotty cellphone connection.

Lee County, a community of around 7,000 people deep in the Appalachia­n Mountains, is one of many rural school districts around the country where the decision over whether to bring students back into classrooms is particular­ly fraught. As in other places, parents and officials are concerned about the virus, but dramatical­ly limited internet access here also means kids could fall seriously behind if the pandemic keeps them home again.

On average, the United States is still seeing about 1,000 deaths a day from the virus, according to data from Johns Hopkins University. The country has had more than 5 million confirmed cases and more than 167,000 deaths over the course of the pandemic.

Roughly 3 million students across the United States don’t have access to a home internet connection. A third of households with school-age children that do not have home internet cite the expense as the main reason, according to federal Education Department statistics. But in some rural places, a reliable connection can’t be had at any price.

The void is especially acute in eastern Kentucky. An AP analysis of census data shows that nearly half of students attending public school in Lee lack home access to broadband.

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