¶ … Internet Access to Students
The Elizabeth Martin Elementary School does not currently offer Internet Access to its students. This proposal offers information about the problem and the proposed solution. It is recommended that Internet access be provided within the next 120 days. A proposed program for the installation and implementation is made part of this proposal. A budget has been prepared, and made part of this proposal. The total cost of installation and implementation is $20,500.
The Elizabeth Martin Elementary School, located at the intersection of Wabank and Millersville Roads, Lancaster Township, and part of the School District of Lancaster, does not currently have Internet access available for its students. Several teachers use dial up access, mostly via a slow modem connection and using AOL as the Internet provider, to show students Internet sites as part of the learning experience. At best, students huddle around a computer with a teacher attempting to see what is on the screen.
The school has 15 classrooms, a library, and two teacher lounges. A total student population of 401 students, the school provides education for students from Kindergarten through Sixth Grade.
There are a total of 49 computers available in the school for student and teacher use. (This does not include administration computers, used by the administration and support staff in the management of the school. This proposal does not include Internet access for those computers, but access could be added to this proposal for a minor (less than $550) budget increase.
There will be an additional 31 computers provided to this school within the next 30 days. Perhaps best described as "hand me downs" these slightly older computers are still functional and available from a recently updated computer lab from another school within the district. That school recently received an endowment, providing new computers from a local business. This proposal provides for the connectivity of 80 computers to the Internet for access by the students.
According to the U.S. Department of Education, since 1994 the National Center for Education Statistics (NCES) has surveyed the nation's public schools to measure what proportion of them is connected to the Internet. "By the fall of 2000, almost all public schools in the United States had access to the Internet: 98% were connected. In comparison, 35% of public schools had access to the Internet in 1994," the May 2001 study reported. The Martin Elementary school remains in the 2% of public schools not connected.
Relying on the Martin students to connect to the Internet at home is unreliable and impracticable. According to a recent study by the National Center for Education Statistics, more school-age children in the nation use computers at school than at home (Newburger 2001). The survey "Internet Access in U.S. Public Schools, Fall 2001" obtained information on various measures of student access to computers at school, such as the ratio of students to instructional computers with Internet access, student access to the Internet outside of regular school hours, and laptop loans to students.
The study cites that only 21% of children in the nation used the Internet at home for school-related tasks. This would mean that 79% of the student population at Martin School - a total of 316 students - would not have Internet Access.
The U.S. Department of Education publication, the Parents Guide to the Internet offers the following information about the benefits of school students connecting to the Internet:
The Benefits of Getting on the Information Superhighway:
computer that is connected to the Internet allows you to turn your home, community center, local library, or school into a place of unlimited information and communication. The Internet can help your family:
Find educational resources, including up-to -- the minute news, copies of important documents and photos, and collections of research information on topics ranging from weather conditions to population statistics.
Get help with homework through online encyclopedias and other reference materials and access to experts.
Increase reading skills by providing access to interesting materials and suggestions for additional reading.
Improve technology and information skills necessary to find and use information, solve problems, communicate with others, and meet a growing demand for these skills in the workplace.
Connect with places around the world to exchange mail with electronic pen pals and learn about other cultures and traditions.
Locate parenting information and swap ideas with other families.
Learn and have fun together by sharing interesting and enjoyable experiences."
Clearly, there seems to be little reason why the Elizabeth Martin School should not be connected to the Internet.
Proposed Program:
This proposal, if accepted, offers one clear goal:...
You'd be able to hook up to the network through your computer, interactive TV, telephone, or some future device that somehow combines the attributes of all three. Even wireless gadgets such as pagers, future versions of cellular phones, and newfangled "personal digital assistants" would be able to tap into the highway. The purpose: to provide remote electronic banking, schooling, shopping, taxpaying, chatting, game playing, videoconferencing, movie ordering, medical diagnosing...
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