In inner-city Philadelphia, a pilot program is arming its high schoolers with laptops. But in countries like Norway-and increasingly in the developing world-that's the norm. Why is the United States so behind? And is it worth it to play catch-up? "You can learn so much from the bathrooms," muses Bing..
In inner-city Philadelphia, a pilot program is arming its high schoolers with laptops. But in countries like Norway-and increasingly in the developing world-that's the norm. Why is the United States so behind? And is it worth it to play catch-up?
"You can learn so much from the bathrooms," muses Bing Howell, a London-based education consultant who joined my tour around Philadelphia's School of the Future. While I am here to understand the school's one-laptop-per-child program, and our tour guide is keen to show off the SmartCard-operated lockers and electronic blackboards, Howell just wants to go the bathroom. "They speak volumes about whether the kids feel valued," he explains.By that standard, the students at the School of the Future are being prepared for lives in the executive suites. The men's room, with floor-to-ceiling tiles, pristine white sinks and urinals, and not a hint of the smoke-and-piss smell typical of most high school latrines, was even more impressive than the combination-lock-less lockers.My August tour of the School of the Future (and its bathrooms) is a relatively low-key affair. A partnership between Microsoft and the School District of Philadelphia that cost $62 million to build and opened in 2006, the high school has received far more official visits, like a delegation of Hong Kong high school principals and the education minister of Greece. Tony Franklin, the warmly competent face of Microsoft at the school, walks us through the building on a friendly auto-pilot.Built on a small hill at the edge of an enormous city park, next to a giant Gilded Age-era Civil War memorial, the school building sits above its neighborhood. Several buildings directly across the street are boarded up and others-like Philly Discounts Clothing, Golden Dragon Chinese and American Food, and Dollar Plus-testify to the neighborhood's poverty. By contrast, the blindingly white School of the Future, designed in a modernized classic style reminiscent of Richard Meier's starchitecture, stands out like a beacon. Out front, a pair of black metal sculptures celebrate classical education, depicting little Roman children crowded around toga-clad educators. Inside, the open-plan cafeteria, eerily quiet before the beginning of the school year, looks more like a university student union than a public high school. The ultra-wired conference room with sunny floor-to-ceiling windows and earth tone walls looks more Silicon Valley than stodgy, ragged, East Coast metropolis.In the world's largest economy and leading technological innovator, the laptops-in-schools concept is still rare.Of course, the one-laptop-per-child concept is not unique to the School of the Future. The eponymous American nonprofit has famously distributed thousands of low-cost laptops everywhere from Peru to Cambodia. What is notable is that in the world's largest economy and leading technological innovator, the concept is still so rare. America, after all, is the country that invented the computer. (ENIAC, arguably the first true computer, was built just a few miles from the School of the Future, at the University of Pennsylvania.) But while the United States integrates computers on the patchwork, pilot-program model of developing countries like Peru, many of our economic peers-especially in technophilic Scandinavia-are embracing them as universal, an essential part of 21st century education. As an American high school student might ask: What's up with that?
Even if it is successful, is the School of the Future truly the pilot program it claims to be?With its international reputation, the school has attracted a corps of young teachers excited about technology and education. When the school hires teachers-or even a new principal-students take part in the interview process. Interdisciplinary learning and team teaching are standard operating procedure.But even if it is successful, is the School of the Future truly the pilot program it claims to be? The school is clearly acting as a magnet school for teachers if not students and the building came in $15 million over-budget. "I'm not a fan of spending $62 million on one school," Temple's Ketelhut says. "There's an equity issue. It's one thing if it's a pilot and if it works we'll do it elsewhere. But is there money to do it elsewhere?"Even Tony Franklin admits that given the budget constraints of inner-city education, "a one-to-one laptop program in every school in the district is not realistic."Two weeks later, I am sitting in another high school classroom with one laptop for each student. A typical English class, they are reading a typical English class text: an excerpt from the 1959 play, A Raisin in the Sun, which chronicles the African American experience. The integration of computers merely meant that materials that would have been separate in an earlier era-the text, a video excerpt from a performance of the play, and an interview with Sean "P. Diddy" Combs about his recent made-for-TV revival-were all available on the same screen rather than in a book, a film screen, and a handout.The teacher, a middle-aged woman with blond hair and a vaguely British accent calls out to me as she pulls up the Q&A on the overhead screen showing the desktop of her laptop (covering up the Barack Obama wallpaper). "Daniel, do you know of Sean Diddy?"I did, of course, though for a man with so many aliases, I'd never heard that one before. The subtleties were lost in translation, I figured. After all, this was an ESL class. I was in Norway, a nation that is well on it's way to equipping every high school student in the country with a laptop.In 1996, the Norwegian education ministry decided to promote digital literacy to the status of a "core competency" no different than reading, writing, and math-simply something every student is expected to master. The central government never mandated one laptop per student per se, but in effect this is what is happening as county school districts have concluded that giving all their high schoolers laptops is the best way to meet the national goals. Roughly half of Norway's upper secondary school students now tote laptops; within a few years, they all will.Kjell Atle Halvorsen, who teaches educators how to use technology in the classroom and researches technology in education issues at the Norwegian University of Science and Technology, explains why his nation has embarked on such an ambitious, universal one laptop per child program. "There is the general feeling that we just have to do this, that we have to make this technology available to everybody," he says, sporting the unofficial uniform of the global technorati-black shirt, jeans, and octogon-shaped glasses. "We have to do it for economic development reasons, because for the kinds of jobs these kids are going into its required. [We also have to do it to avoid having] active and non-active citizens, which is a democratic issue," since government hearings are now podcast and public services are more and more accessed online. "[It's] also as a symbolic gesture to tell the world that we're really with it, we're there, we're out front."When I met him in his tiny office with a view of the Norwegian countryside, he was in the midst of writing up a study of North Trondelag County, one of the first counties in the country to fully implement one laptop per child in its high schools. Unlike the School of the Future in Philadelphia which acts as a magnet school for teachers, the universal implementation in North Trondelag means every teacher has to deal with the technology whether she likes it or not. As one high school administrator told me, "Many of our teachers are 50 years old. They hate computers." At another school a sign was posted at the front of the room decreeing: "DO NOT WRITE ON THE SMARTBOARDS."Surprisingly, the divide is not a simple one between young and old; there seem to be three generations. There are the over-50s, who are downright hostile to technology. Then there are the 35-50s who grew up without computers and are so wowed that they completely embrace them for everything. And then there are the younger teachers, aged 22 to 35, who grew up with computers and integrate them for tasks where they're helpful, but have students put them away for lessons where they would be a distraction. Having the computer open at all times is just too tempting, one young Norwegian student teacher told me. "Just clicking on Windows is more interesting nine times out of 10 than the teacher. [To learn, they] need eye contact and body language."In Norway, teachers are learning by trial and error about when laptops come in handy. Some Norwegian schools have banned the addictive multiplayer web game, World of Warcraft. (The School of the Future has blocked MySpace for similar reasons.) But the applications for learning foreign languages, like speech-recognition software, can be very helpful. Computers are also helpful for creating a public sphere in the classroom and community. In elementary schools, children now create book report blogs rather than just write up assignments and hand them to the teacher. The perennial book report question-"Would you recommend this book to a friend?"-is no longer rhetorical since classmates can look up each other's reports online. Similarly, the typical Norwegian high school field trip to Germany is now blogged about online rather than scribbled about in journals. Concerned parents can simply log in and see what their kid is up to.But the technology brings with it some problems, as well. At the School of the Future, one month into the school year, parents still hadn't been able to log on to the web portal because of bugs in the software.Though Halvorsen is a tech booster-"We have to make sure that this digital literacy is absolutely for everybody because so much depends on it"-he is cognizant of the county's growing pains. He concedes, "I think we may be putting too many computers into Norwegian schools too fast [and] skipping the debate on the fundamentals. What is really going on in the schools and how can we use the computers to improve the practices in the schools? But it will come." The testing period is just a necessary evil. "How can you have that debate related to a new technological situation if you don't have the technology available. It's the hen and the egg, as we say in this country." I nod at his obscure Norwegian expression.In a nation where even working-class jobs are high-tech and high-wage there is a base level of comfort with technology that poverty-plagued American cities like Philadelphia, where a 2006 study showed less than half the city's residents had home internet access, can never match. While the city is perfecting a citywide wireless network, at the School of the Future, students who lack internet access at home are counseled to go to McDonald's to do their homework on the fast food joint's free wireless system.It's not that Norway has no problems; it's just that it actually deals with them. Poor kids in Norway underperform in school just like poor kids in the United States. But seeing this problem, Norway addresses it with ambitious child-poverty-reduction programs. As a result, in Norway, only 3 percent of children grow up poor compared to 22 percent in the United States. Similarly, even in Norway, working-class parents tend to push their children in school less hard than professional parents. Halvorsen says one of the reasons one-laptop-per-child has been so universally implemented in Norway despite the lack of an official federal mandate has been pressure from "the well-educated digitally-advanced parents." In the U.S., well-educated parents send their children to certain schools, even certain school districts, while less educated parents are concentrated in others. As a result, parental pressure only affects certain schools and digital literacy remains spotty.Shortly after observing a class of Norwegian 17-year-olds competing to design the cheapest functional bridge (freeware courtesy of the U.S. Military Academy at West Point), I am back at the School of the Future. Sitting in the Philadelphia math class, it is hard to imagine that these students are the same age as they plot simple inequalities like "-2 < x < 3" on a number line.Kelly Cooper, just two years out of college, a red-headed transplant from the northwest corner of Pennsylvania where she grew up half an hour from the nearest gas station, tries to inspire her students with her enthusiasm. "I try to be really optimistic," she says. "They think I'm so passionate about math. I play that up a lot." But while an enthusiastic teacher can convince elementary school children to be excited about most anything, it is hard to get 17-year-olds excited about something as self-evidently dull as graphing inequalities. Without the requisite background math skills, it's virtually impossible to do more interesting work like bridge-building. In the Norwegian class, the latest technology allows students to do ever more sophisticated tasks. In Philadelphia, despite the technology, the students lagged far behind grade level. If you're reading at a 5th grade level, what good is an instantly searchable Complete Works of Shakespeare, anyway?Teachers are also discovering how to use technology to allow the handful of students who are truly excelling to do more advanced work. Some teachers includes hypertext links to more sophisticated readings for students who can handle them. Ms. Cooper e-mails extra assignments to her best students. But far more kids are behind than ahead.Trying to pull her students forward, Ms. Cooper goes far beyond the typical role of a math teacher not merely providing SAT tutoring but guiding students through the college application and financial aid rigmarole. She builds their resumes by organizing community volunteering projects on all the school holidays that are of little relevance to her kids, like Yom Kippur and Columbus Day. And she tries to open them up to the larger world beyond their neighborhoods, IM-ing with them during the presidential debates or Jeopardy."We're making gains, though I'm not going to get them caught up to where our kids in the suburban school are," she admits. "I do private tutoring with some kids from a private school and there's just no comparison between the two of them, which is really disheartening to see. Even my really bright students are just nowhere near where their potential is."As Professor Ketelhut puts it, "It's frustrating when people think we can find a single thing to ‘fix' the schools. Maybe their home is condemned and they're living in a car. The School of the Future is not going to change that student's life. Six hours a day isn't going to fix what happens the other 18 hours of the day. We can't give every kid a laptop like that's going to change everything."In the United States, laptops are too often regarded as a silver bullet that can transform an under-performing inner-city school, replacing traditional modes of learning. In Norway, laptops are seen as a necessary add-on to keep students up-to-date in a changing world. The School of the Future library (dubbed the "Interactive Learning Center") is lined with empty shelves-who needs books when you have web access?-while the library in the Trondheim city school I observed had hard copies of all the latest Norwegian novels, every major newspaper in the country, and even American magazines like Newsweek. Built in 2004, the Trondheim school was even more architecturally distinguished than the School of the Future though it hadn't hosted any principals from Hong Kong or education ministers from Greece.As Microsoft's Stacey Rainey said, "In education, there are always going to be the early adopters and the folks that kind of lag behind a bit." She was talking about various American schools but her statement could apply to countries as well. Despite our self-image, America is the laggard not the early adopter.While the rest of the world builds bridges, we just plot inequalities.Images Norway by Corey Arnold; Philly by Meiko Takechi Arquillos.