At our rather large high school in Thailand, we have a 1 to 1 laptop program. Every student in the high school has a laptop, which they are supposed to bring to class. After a year and half working with these laptops, I discovered the joys and pitfalls of such a system.
The really nice thing about the laptops is that you can plan activities that require a computer much more easily than schools where you have to book time in a computer lab. Having done both, the laptops are just plain easier to work with.
Another advantage of the laptop program is that a greater percentage of the students you work with have an intermediate level understanding of how their computers work. They can manage their documents in a relatively organized fashion, install software, navigate the web, and use a search engine, all with relative ease. It has been very rare when I have not been able to explain to one of my students how to accomplish a task. I find myself being able give instructions to the students using higher level skills and more complicated phrases than my previous school.
For example, I can tell the kids to ‘copy and paste’ and to ‘create a screen-shot’ and most of the kids know how to do this stuff. I can also give instructions like ‘copy the URL for the image and paste it into the textfield on the image uploader’ and they can do it.
Another nice feature of the 1 to 1 laptop program is that it allows me to include a little bit of tech training in my lessons. Since it is likely that the students will be using a computer pretty regularly for the rest of their lives, it seems to me that the use of a computer is one of the most important skills I can pass along to my students.
Since the students have access to a computer at any time, you can use a number of online tools quite effectively. I have mentioned in a previous article about using Google Docs for collaboration online, and with my classes I have also successfully used blogs, wikis and other resources I have found online with my students.
There are a number of problems with the use of the laptops however which need to be pointed out.
The first problem is that if you plan a lesson that involves everyone needing a laptop and one or more students does not have their laptop, you can find yourself going to your backup pretty quickly. Students have difficulty keeping their laptops virus clear because of all of the file sharing they do. They also sometimes just forget their laptops at <insert the location here>.
Another problem, at least at our school, is that there seem to be some limits as to how many students can access a wireless acccess point at the same time. So once the first 15 or so students in your class get started, the next 5 or 10 students are locked out. This can be pretty frustrating pretty quickly.
Students will also tend to use their laptops for inappropriate things during your lessons. The student in the back that you think is diligently using their laptops for taking notes is probably text chatting with their friend in Physics or Biology. Students who are supposed to be carefully working from a PDF version of their textbook are actually surfing blogging sites looking for next year’s fashion. This can be real problem, and as usual you need to rely on your own classroom management skills to try and curb this kind of behaviour. Some schools install special software on the network server to limit students access to the internet, but the kids in your class will probably just turn to computer games instead.
When all is said and done, I have enjoyed the access to a 1 to 1 laptop program I have had at my current school. There have been some problems, but they have not been insurmountable. It is likely that more and more schools will be looking to initiate similar programs, so we as educators must prepare for the future.
David Miles says:
We have this program for our high school, well grade 10 up I think. Not sure about the 9s. And to be honest – it’s been hell. It’s a Windows school and everyone is strongly advised to buy windows, but they buy macs. Or they buy versions of Windows which don’t have decent network access – so they can’t do some of the stuff you need them to do.
I guess working with internet apps would potentially make it relatively platform independent, but the virus issue was a huge issue. In the end I gave up and was relieved to go back to the books with my grade 10s.
My 11s are better, they use their textbooks from their laptops. I haven’t really thought about using it to demonstrate stuff, I guess I’ve thought about how I can show them things (don’t have a projector yet!), but not too much about getting them to do it themselves. Part of that is because often they can’t – they need to be shown in order to follow (no projector yet)
*sigh. It has a lot of potential but I think there are some real teething problems the school needs to deal with to make it easier. Up til now they’ve been a liability – I spend more time trying to get things sorted so they work than actually teaching anything.
Having said that, I know they have more luck in some other courses. Maybe it was just my kids.
What sort of activities are you using the computer for in the maths classroom?
December 3, 2008 — 11:02 am
David Wees says:
Well first, all of my students are required to install Firefox and Geogebra as an early homework assignment in the year. Then I have less difficulties with capability problems, and it makes my life a bit easier for planning lessons.
I’ve used things like Google Docs, Google Sites, with the students, as well as more ordinary things like helping students with their projects and accessing web applets/scripts. Pretty mundane stuff mostly.
I have noticed exactly the same problems you have, I guess I’ve just always planned these activities so they can do them using a shared laptop if they have to, etc… you find work-arounds to the problems. I’ve also gotten into the habit of copying something I want to use online from where-ever-it-is to my school’s web server so that it is more likely than we can access it with a reasonable amount of speed.
As for OS compatibility, same problems, and I’ve basically restricted myself to using applications with are cross-OS.
December 4, 2008 — 12:31 am