Bleeding Edge

Bleeding Edge

by Mike Masnick




Microsoft High

from the are-they? dept

Many people have submitted this story in the past couple of hours. Microsoft is apparently designing a $46 million public school in Philadelphia that will embed technology "everywhere from classrooms and administrative offices to the desk of the football coach." They say that it will be a "paperless school" with online textbooks and laptops for quizzes. Oh yes, the "paperless school". Remember all those stories about the "paperless office" and how well those turned out? The announcement is pretty clear on a few things: Microsoft isn't donating any of the money and they (supposedly) don't have the inside track on supplying any software. It will all be put out through open bid. Microsoft's sole role is to provide technology "expertise" (and, of course, to receive lots and lots of publicity). Of course, this also means that they can easily design the school in ways that will make it nearly impossible to use any non-Microsoft technology. They could simply design into the spec very specific features that Microsoft technology definitely has, which others might not. Also, while I'm all for using technology to help in the education process, I get worried when the focus is on the technology, rather than the education. A project like this will have everyone focused on the wrong thing: how do we build technology into the education process, instead of can the education process be enhanced by technology?

5 Comments | Leave a Comment..

 
 

Reader Comments

(Flattened / Threaded)

    Sep 5th, 2003 @ 1:58am
  • No Subject Given

    by Kevin

    The colaboration of two monopolies, Microsoft and Public schools, in a expensive and misguided endeavor, that can only make both of them look more clueless! This will be like watching a train wreck, I cant wait!

    (reply to this comment) (link to this comment)

  • Sep 5th, 2003 @ 8:45am
  • Open Source Version?

    Why doesn't the Open Source World pick op on this and do some designing on their own? It only seems logical that this would be yet another way to crash Microsoft's party.
    If it could generate just a little bit of mainstream publicity, think about what it could do if there was "OpenSource High" that specifically set out to design a paperless school that wasn't stocked full of closed and proprietary software.
    I think I'll start stirring this idea in the pot for a while, and see what I can come up with. Anyone with me?

    (reply to this comment) (link to this comment)

  • Sep 5th, 2003 @ 9:24am
  • Paperless School

    by CharlesW

    A quote I remember from a long time ago about the paperless office, and it works for the paperless school too - "The paperless office of the future is right down the hall from the paperless bathroom."

    (reply to this comment) (link to this comment)

  • Sep 5th, 2003 @ 1:00pm
  • Microsoft Failure 2.0

    by LittleW0lf

    Considering that an all Microsoft Navy Ship didn't work so well (and had to be towed back to dock,) this might be fun.

    Hold on class, we would have had an announcement right now, but our announcement server got rooted and the attacker installed msblaster 5.1 on the machine. We are putting in its replacement, but the machine keeps rebooting unexpectidly after BSOD.

    Please turn on your computers and get ready for today's lesson, "Why OpenSource is evil." First, I'll have to help half of you since your computers are infected with a virus, which will soon infect the other half. Oh, Timmy, don't open that attachment, you know better than that.

    (Of course, the only thing I use Windoze for, other than a victim on my attacker network, is freecell, but the opensource folks have three clones that work just as well and don't blow up unexpectidly.)

    (reply to this comment) (link to this comment)

  • Sep 6th, 2003 @ 7:37am
  • No Subject Given

    by thecaptain

    Can you say Indoctrination Center?

    I knew you could...

    (reply to this comment) (link to this comment)

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