The document appears to be a survey report on technology use in schools. It includes various charts and graphs summarizing data on topics like:
- The number of schools with 1-to-1 device programs and types of devices used
- Ownership and life expectancy of devices in 1-to-1 programs
- Interactive whiteboard and Apple TV use in classrooms
- Network infrastructure specifics like internet speeds and wireless authentication
- Common student information, admissions, accounting, and fundraising software
- Learning management systems, email, and security products used
- Technology staffing structures and support ratios
- Computer science and technology class offerings
4. Currently have a one-to-one program
In Development
19
41%
One – to –
One
How many schools have a one-to-one
program?
Yes
18
39%
No Plans
9
20%
Yes
In Development
No Plans
5. 25
20
One – to –
One
What Device are you using?
15
10
5
0
iPad
Windows Tablet
Chrome
Notebooks
BYOD
Planned 1:1
9
0
2
2
Current 1:1
16
2
0
1
Current 1:1
Planned 1:1
6. Device Ownership
Student Leases
1
5%
One – to –
One
School Buys &
Owns
5
28%
Who owns your devices?
Student Buys and
Owns
11
61%
Student Buys and Owns
School Leases
1
6%
Student Leases
School Buys & Owns
School Leases
7. Expected Device Life
8
7
One – to –
One
Anticipated Refresh
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
2 years
3 years
Expected Device Life
4 years
8. Total Number of 1:1 Programs
18
20
18
16
14
12
One – to –
One
Year
Program Started
9
10
8
4
6
4
2
1
2
0
Planned
10
8
6
4
2
0
2014 - 2015
2015 - 2016
TBD
9. Current 1:1 Program
Planning 1:1 Program
14
12
One – to –
One
14
12
10
10
8
8
6
6
4
4
2
2
0
0
Staff Increase
Yes
No
Tech and User Support – 7 (10)
Education Technologist – 6
Assistant Principal - 2
Network Administrator - 1
Yes
No
10. Reasons for not moving to a one-to-one program
Cost
One – to –
One
Reasons for not moving to one-to-one
Unconvinced of Educational Benefit
Counter-Cultural
BYOD
13. Apple TV (or similar)
40
35
Classroom
Technology
Apple TVs
30
25
20
15
10
5
0
Yes
No
Apple TV (or similar)
14. What do people say?
•AirServer. Used to mirror iPads. Only faculty have access to
the program, students are not able to mirror.
Classroom
Technology
Apple TVs
•Apple TV's are plugged into an HDMI to CAT6 converter that
runs back to our projectors. Each Apple TV has a hardwired
connection into the network. Same VLAN as faculty, separate
from Students. Students at this point cannot see the Apple TVs
•Barco Clickshare: USB dongle-based sharing of laptop content.
Chromecast pilot: share chrome screens to the Extron system.
•We try to make all the classrooms similar. Standard
configuration is a PC, DVD/VCR, Document Camera, Projector
and an Apple TV. The key part that ties them all together is a
Presentation Video Scaler/Switcher (Kramer). This allows the
teacher to quickly switch from source to source. Regardless of
all this it the Apple TVs that are the most finnicky piece of the
typical classroom tech.
16. Staffing &
Technology
Management
To whom does the IT Director / IT
Department Report
IT Report
President
Principal
Assistant Principal
CFO
COO
Dual-Report
CIO
Controller
Number of Schools
15
14
6
4
2
2
1
1
Average User : IT Ratio
341:1
19. Internet Speed
1Gb or More
Network
Infrastructure
Internet Bandwidth
> 100Mb - < 1Gb
100Mb
>20 Mb - <100Mb
20Mb or Less
0
2
4
6
Internet Speed
8
10
12
14
22. Student Information System
Blackbaud
Products and
Vendors
Student Information Systems
20
Rediker
8
PowerSchool
7
Schoolmaster
2
0
5
10
15
20
25
Also Making an Appearance
Pinnacle SIS
(2), RenWeb, WebEIM, Edvance, SeniorSystems, Whipple Hill
33. Class Offered Next Year
Computer Literacy
Education &
Curriculum
Java Programming
Computer Literacy
Offered?
19
25
Web Design / Programming 21
Digital Media
Technology Class Offerings
No
51%
Yes
49%
18
Programming (non-Java)
13
Mobile App Development
6
Arduino Programming
4
Other Neat Classes
MIDI Music Class, Alice, Game
Design, Robotics, CAD, Networking
35. What do people say about their e-Book vendors?
•This is one of our current challenges
•Too many platforms with different logons
Education &
Curriculum
E-Book Vendors
•They need to hear from the schools and listen to what works best for etext deployment
•This is one of our current challenges
•Too many different methods of getting texts
•All have their compromises... parents don't like all the options... Kno has a
promising platform
•Apple iBooks is great, Pearson is not.
•Better quality books for the iPad - Flash/HTML issues and annotation
issues (iBooks)
•Kno is a good partner for us
36. Schools using MOOCs: 2
Education &
Curriculum
MOOCs and Self-Created Textbooks
•We will offer Ohio State University's Calculus 1 Course to select
seniors second semester.
•Augmenting our math curriculum.
Schools Creating their own books: 25
41. Where are we going?
•Classrooms will have MORE
• Screens
• Flexibility
• Video
• Interactivity
•Classrooms will have LESS
• Wires
• Digital Whiteboards
Interesting Stat:Windows Laptops – 1 uses HP, one uses Lenovo
The school leasing was iPads, the student leasing was windows tablet
Interesting thing – both the windows tablets have a 4 year expected life . . . Another interesting thing is that when the school owns or leases the device, folks have a 2 or 3 year refresh rate, but when the students own or lease it, it’s almost always 3 or 4 years . . . There are a couple 2s, but mostly 3 or 4.
This year, the number of one-to-one programs DOUBLED!
Things that stand out – folks really likeAirServer and Reflections . . . Hardwiring the apple TV is key . . . They can be a big pain to get working right . . . Separate VLAN