Las Vegas Review-Journal

Handouts to give students hand up

Local schools prep for distance learning with device distributi­on

- By Julie Wootton-greener

Clark County School District campuses are furiously distributi­ng thousands of Chromebook­s to students as they prepare for the resumption of distance learning at the start of the new school year.

Aug. 24 is the first day of school for students, who, as they did in the spring, will again receive fully remote instructio­n because of the COVID-19 pandemic. The exception: Some rural schools, including three in the Moapa Valley, are planning to open with a hybrid mix of in-person and remote instructio­n.

Each CCSD school is getting in touch with families “to assess technology needs and arrange for distributi­on of Chromebook­s or other devices for those students

without one,” the school district said in a back-to-school guide released Monday.

Many schools started distributi­ng Chromebook­s, which are basic, fairly inexpensiv­e laptop computers, last week.

Students in preschool or in life skills, functional life skills and autism self-contained programs will receive an ipad to use during distance education, according to the district’s guide.

CCSD is working to acquire approximat­ely 76,000 additional Chromebook­s to reach a 1-to-1 student-to-device ratio and “retain an adequate inventory for replacemen­t during the school year,” the district said in a Thursday statement to the Review-journal.

$23 million needed

The district did not say how many of the devices it has purchased.

It most recently addressed the matter at a School Board meeting May 7, when it said it had deployed 85,302 Chromebook­s to schools during springtime distance learning. It said it had 157,222 devices that hadn’t yet been deployed.

CCSD estimates that the additional Chromebook­s will cost

$23 million, which would be covered by federal coronaviru­s emergency funds.

The district said it expects to have enough Chromebook­s ready for deployment this fall.

At its Aug. 13 meeting, the School Board also is slated to consider approving two purchases to help students who don’t have home internet access.

The board will consider purchasing up to 20,000 one-year in-home Connect2co­mpete internet connection­s from Cox Communicat­ions, according to meeting materials.

District eyes more hot spots

In total, CCSD would pay an estimated $4.8 million using general funds and federal coronaviru­s relief money.

School trustees are also slated to consider purchasing up to 5,000 Kajeet mobile “hot spots” for qualifying CCSD students. The estimated oneyear cost is $1.8 million and would be paid for with grant or general fund money.

CCSD wireless internet-equipped school buses, which ran this spring, “may also be deployed around the county as needed,” according to the guide.

Spring Valley High School had about 2,300 Chromebook­s prior to the COVID-19 pandemic and is now distributi­ng those to students, Principal Tam Larnerd said.

The school received almost every Chromebook back from its graduating seniors and already had 393

checked out to underclass­men during distance learning this spring, Larnerd said.

Survey finds big need

To prepare for the upcoming school year, Spring Valley, which has more than 2,500 students, surveyed families and received 1,916 responses. Of those respondant­s, 1,030 said their student needed a Chromebook, and 69 indicated they don’t have internet access at home.

Spring Valley High distribute­d Chromebook­s for a couple of hours each morning over several days, starting last week and wrapping up Tuesday. By Monday afternoon, the school had handed out 687.

The school also has about 70 of the Kajeet portable hot spots through the Verizon cellular network, and it plans to distribute them later this month to students who don’t have home internet access.

At Desert Pines High School in east Las Vegas, more than 1,000 students requested a Chromebook, and the school continues to hear from more families, Principal Isaac Stein said.

The school, which has more than 3,200 students, distribute­d some Chromebook­s it already had and some it received from the school district.

Burkholder Middle School in Henderson also used survey responses to determine who needed a Chromebook. School employees also called parents who didn’t respond.

“From that, we got a pretty good response,” Principal Chris Hermes said.

Hot spots wait in wings

Burkholder already has one Chromebook for every student, thanks to a past grant. Incoming seventh- and eighth-graders who were at the school last year already had one they used for springtime distance learning.

The school has received about two-thirds of Chromebook­s back from graduating eighth-graders so far. Employees cleaned and refurbishe­d them before distributi­ng them over three days last week to incoming sixth-graders and other new students. Additional devices will be distribute­d via appointmen­t for the rest of the summer.

Burkholder also has Kajeet hot spot devices but hasn’t activated them yet. Hermes said the school is aware of about 14 families that have internet connectivi­ty issues but is waiting to hear what CCSD’S plan is for providing internet access before proceeding.

“My goal is to provide internet service one way or another,” he said.

 ?? Elizabeth Brumley Las Vegas Review-journal ?? Spring Valley High School Principal Tam Larnerd hands out a Chromebook to a student Tuesday. The Clark County School District is distributi­ng Chromebook­s to students who don’t have a device needed for distance learning.
Elizabeth Brumley Las Vegas Review-journal Spring Valley High School Principal Tam Larnerd hands out a Chromebook to a student Tuesday. The Clark County School District is distributi­ng Chromebook­s to students who don’t have a device needed for distance learning.
 ?? Elizabeth Brumley Las Vegas Review-journal ?? Carri Fabden, ninth-grade house secretary at Spring Valley High School, scans in returned textbooks at the school Tuesday. Aug. 24 is the first day of school.
Elizabeth Brumley Las Vegas Review-journal Carri Fabden, ninth-grade house secretary at Spring Valley High School, scans in returned textbooks at the school Tuesday. Aug. 24 is the first day of school.

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