All posts by Mark Shead

Open Letter to School Board

Open Letter from Mark Shead to USD234 School Board:

I shared some of the information in this letter at the last board meeting. However, there is an upper limit to how much can be conveyed in three minutes no matter how fast one talks. Hopefully this format with links to supporting materials will be a bit more effective at fostering the discussions on how technology can be used to create educational outcomes that will propel our community forward.

One-to-one devices

The first area I’d like to discuss is the idea of giving kids a one-to-one device–especially when the distribution of such a device becomes the goal rather than a particular program tied to a particular educational outcome.

In some of the discussions about the bond issue, I was told that there was a fear kids would somehow fall behind if they weren’t given some type of one-to-one device like a tablet or laptop. I wasn’t clear exactly what academic outcomes were thought to be in danger if gadgets aren’t deployed.

Simply giving kids computers has been tried in a number of large experiments with well documented results. In one of the largest randomized studies in the US researchers concluded, “we find no effects on any educational outcomes, including grades, test scores, credits earned, attendance and disciplinary actions.” In fact the only thing measured that was an “improvement” was simply the amount of time kids spent using a computer.

Another randomized study in Peru, showed some increases in Raven’s Matrix scores, but only for kids who didn’t have access to a computer previously. There was no increase to the sample as a whole. Worse, they found that having an individual device reduced the amount of time children spent reading books.

Uruguay made a country wide deployment of laptops to school children. There researchers were able to track test scores as laptops were rolled out from district to district. They said, that “the program had no effects on math and reading scores.” They pointed out that the use of laptops to do research on the Internet and to look up information didn’t provide any improvement over pre-laptop methods. (Uruguay Study)

As bad as those results sound (given the huge amount of money that was spent with no significant academic return on investment), two economists from Duke University tracked a million kids in North Carolina who were given computers and found, “Students who gain access to a home computer between the 5th and 8th grades tend to witness a persistent decline in reading and math scores.” Of particular interest for Fort Scott, they found that the negative effects were especially predominant among students from poor families. Also from that study (article about study), “The introduction of home computer technology is associated with modest but statistically significant and persistent negative impacts on student math and reading test scores. Further evidence suggests that providing universal access to home computers and high‐speed internet access would broaden, rather than narrow, math and reading achievement gaps.”

I point out all these studies because it is important to see how easily huge sums of money can be spent with no academic benefit. This is especially true if decisions are being made based on “fear that students will fall behind without one-to-one devices” and the misconception that “exposing” kids to devices is somehow beneficial. (I’ll talk about exposure in a minute.) The actual evidence suggests that school systems should be more fearful about making huge investment in gadgets in ways that aren’t tied to programs designed to support specific educational goals. Worse than just being a waste, some of things schools are trying are actually creating negative outcomes. This doesn’t mean you shouldn’t use computers in education, but it does mean that you need to decide on the educational outcomes you want to achieve FIRST and then find programs that are getting those outcomes elsewhere. Once all that is in place you may find you need certain devices to reach your goal. Starting with the device and trying to work backwards to find educational outcomes that they can support has been a huge failure in every study I’ve seen where that has been tried.

“Exposure” Theory of Technology Education

The second thing I kept hearing is that USD234 needs to “expose” kids to technology. While technology can be a beneficial thing when used correctly (and the previously mentioned studies show that it can be easy to get wrong), it is a bit of a stretch to think that giving every kid a computer merely so they can be “exposed” to it is going to help kids academically. There are some good ways technology can be used for education, but becoming skilled at technology isn’t like catching chickenpox.

Consider the following: Lets say you decided that the school system really needs kids prepared to go into the medical field. So you go look at doctors and see that they wear lab coats and carry stethoscopes. In an effort to “expose” kids to the medical field, you give all the students lab coats and stethoscopes to carry around. Now perhaps you’d inspire kids to think about the medical field, but the academic benefit of carrying around a stethoscope is nothing. So what should you do if you want kids prepared for the medical field? Have them focus on biology, chemistry, algebra, calculus, and physics. In other words, having them focus on mastering existing high school classes is going to be much more important than trying to “expose” them to the tools that doctors happen to use.

In addition, most of the devices that are easy to manage in a classroom are specifically designed to insulate the user from the technology that makes it work. Chromebooks and iPads are designed for people with no experience with technology to be able to easily use. You may be able to run a good curriculum on the device, but merely using the device isn’t going to teach you anything substantial about how computers work because all of that is hidden away.

If you want kids to actually learn technology, they need to be able to do all the stuff that Chromebooks and iPads are designed to hide. There are programs that do this. For example Cisco’s Network Academy for high school students. Also old desktop computers and networking gear are probably some of the best pieces of equipment to really learn about how technology works if you have a good teacher and curriculum.

There may be some amazing things you can do with giving kids their own devices (assuming you are careful enough to avoid all the negative problems mentioned previously), but “exposure” is not an educational plan.

Managing Technology Lifecycle and Funding

The third thing I want to address is technology management. Back in the mid 90s, there were several school systems that passed long term bonds to buy computers. When I work with businesses to establish technology management plans, I use that as an example and it nearly always elicits a laugh because it is so intuitively unsustainable. From there it prompts a good discussion about how the business needs to approach and budget for their technology lifecycle.

I’ve talked to a local teacher who claims that the school is still using all the computers that were purchased 25 years ago and suggested simply issuing another bond whenever you need to replace computers was a good financial management strategy. This made me realize that it may not be common knowledge just how long computers are expected to be useable. Just for reference 25 years ago is when the 486 was selling for around $10,000 to $30,000 (double those amounts if you want to know what it would have been in today’s dollars) and the Pentium had yet to be invented. Schools would have been purchasing 8088, 286 or maybe 386 hardware running at 25 Mhz. (That is 40 times slower than a typical smart watch today.) If USD234 just finished up the last payment on a bond that a previous board had used to buy computers 25 years ago, would you be praising your predecessor’s financial genius? Could you imagine paying interest for the last 25 years on the purchase price of a 25 Mhz computer that hadn’t been used for the last 17 to 20 years?

Maybe you can get school computers to last 3 to 7 years with a few outliers on either side of that. Maybe devices used in the classroom will only last 2 to 3 years on average. (Take a look at the wear and tear on three year old textbooks for a quick guestimate.) Please don’t use money that the community will be paying interest on for 25 years to buy something that is only going to last 2 to 7 years. In simple terms, you really need to think of your computers as an ongoing expense and budget for them the same way you do for electricity and water. Maybe you can get your all-in costs for student computers down to $75 per device per semester. Costs have come down enough that it might be possible. The point is, that when considering technology you need to be looking at those yearly numbers to make decisions and not spending bond money on technology that has no chance of being used for more than a fraction of the bond payment period.

Studying Computer Science

The final area I’d like to address is preparing students to be able to enter the field of computer science. A lot of stuff gets lumped into computer science. Just to be clear computer science isn’t about plugging computers in or knowing how to use Excel and Word. Computer science is a branch of mathematics and isn’t about computers any more than astronomy is about telescopes.

If you want kids to do well in computer science courses in college, having them focus on algebra, calculus, statistics, probability, and discrete math (if it is offered) is going to give you much greater returns than having them carry a computer around. That isn’t to say there aren’t some great things you can do with a computer, but if you have to choose between spending an extra $150 per year per student on a computer, repair, software, etc. vs. spending that on getting great math results, math is a better overall investment–and not just for people going into computer science.

You’ll find a number of very successful computer scientists in Silicon Valley send their kids to schools that specifically avoid technology in the classroom.  (With limited use as creation tools when they get to high-school.) They aren’t trying to keep their kids away from computer science (see this video). They just know that the focus in high school is on getting kids to think and master high school subjects as the foundation of what they will choose to study in college. Technology can often be an impediment to and distraction from that goal rather than an enabler.

If you do want to teach computer science concepts in high school, the programs that seem to be working well are the ones that integrate it into the math curriculum. For example the Bootstrap World program has a free curriculum being taught in New York and other places that is having a lot of success in using a simple programming language to teach algebra concepts. The curriculum is free, but there is a two day training in New York at the end of February aimed at teaching math teachers how to use it. Also in March there is a meeting of the Special Interest Group in Computer Science Education being held in Kansas City.  The creators of the curriculum are going to present their preliminary findings.  There are of course other successful programs out there, but this is the only one I know of where we could invest 1.5 hours of drive time and get a chance to talk to its creators.

So in summary:

  1. One-to-one devices need to be driven by educational goals not the other way around.
  2. Exposure to technology isn’t an educational plan.
  3. Don’t pay for things over  a period that is longer than their expected life.
  4. Students that want to study computer science in college will be best prepared by investing in math skills.

The community is going to be paying on the bond for the next 25 years. Hopefully the information and links in this letter will do a small part toward creating useful discussion. Hopefully that discussion will lead to decisions that can give Fort Scott the strongest possible academic foundation as we head toward 2040.

Sincerely,

Mark Shead

Circles Meeting

Over 30 people attended a meeting at Papa Don’s on Wednesday, for Circles USA–a program that is designed to help people get out of poverty by providing them with social support. The Circles program is being used by more than 75 communities. People join the program as “Circle Leaders” to learn how to better manage their resources to get out of poverty. These Circle Leaders come to weekly classes over an 18 month period where they receive training and a meal. The classes include training in managing personal finances as well as special sessions taught by members of the community. For example, a banker might come in and explain how to go about opening and maintaining a bank account. After the 10th week, Circle Leaders are paired with two Allies to help them. The Allies are there to help provide, support, advice, and accountability that will help the Circle Leader follow their plan for getting out of poverty.

The project plans to post information about the program to their Facebook Page. People looking for more information can contact [email protected]. Below is a video that tells a bit about how the program is helping a single mother in another community.


https://www.youtube.com/embed/6vMKWFf8uhw

Presbyterian Church Sunday Serve

The First Presbyterian Church organized their 5th “Sunday Serve” this weekend.  Members of the congregation take a  few Sunday mornings each year to help serve others.  The church worked with the Good Neighbor Action Team, the city of Fort Scott, and the Chamber to identified some projects that would make a difference in the community.  After meeting for prayer at 7:45 they divided into teams and went to work. This Sunday’s projects included repairing a shed and playground near the church, doing yard work at the St. Andrew’s Chapel downtown, cleaning windows on Main street, painting some areas downtown, planting flowers, and putting curtains in some of the second stories of downtown buildings.

Pastor Jared Witt said he sees their efforts as a way for faith communities to “play their own small role in wider community development.”  He says that the volunteers have a lot of fun getting together to do these types of projects and it gives people an opportunity to take on leadership roles that might not be as active participating in traditional church activities.  The congregation has been enthusiastic about the projects and Witt says it is been inspiring to see how much can get done in a single Sunday morning with 100 people working together.

 

New Jail For Bourbon County Discussed

At 7pm on Thursday, there was a meeting about the need for a new jail in Bourbon County.

Sheriff Bill Martin gave some background on the jail. He said the jail was built in 1977. It was made to house 27 inmates, 4 of them females. Average of 35 housed in jail now. The jail is so small the they can’t segregate prisoners as needed, so they have to send them somewhere else. In 1977 the goal was to rehabilitate prisoners. Courts would do things like order them to get their GED if they had not high school diploma.

Bill Martin would like to put in a 110 bed facility in order to try to make money by having other counties house prisoners in Bourbon County. He says the jail is the biggest liability to the county due to attempted suicides.

Someone from the audience asked why there were successful suicides now when there had not been in the past. The Sheriff said it was because “the climate of the inmate had changed.” He said that in 1977 you’d never think of people committing suicide in the jail.

He said that half of the people who are in the jail are not guilty.

Sheriff Martin listed the following problems:

  • Showers are rusting
  • Plumbing is leaking
  • Bathrooms are small
  • Heating is inefficient
  • Cameras are in the right place
  • Some windows are cracked
  • It is possible for males and females to communicate through the walls
  • Intercom system is old
  • No sprinklers

Artie Lucas of Goldberg Group Architects said a study done by his company projects 90 inmates in 10 years. They passed out schematic diagrams of various jail designs.  He said their design that would house 110 inmates would only require 15 full time employees which is the same number of people who are running the current jail. A question was asked why it takes 15 people to staff the current 27 bed jail. Mr. Lucas didn’t know.

The Sheriff from Cherokee County (population 21,000) said that Bourbon County paid  them $130,000 to house prisoners. He said he wasn’t worried about losing income from Bourbon County because there would be other people needing them to house inmates.

There was concern that housing inmates would cause their families to move to town. The Sheriff from Cherokee County said this isn’t the case because the jail would just be a temporarily holding facility and Bourbon County would be able to reject anyone they didn’t want to house from another institution.

The current cost per meal at the jail is $3 per day. Other jails said their cost is closer to $1 per meal.

People asked a Commissioner from Cherokee County if the income from housing inmates covered the debt of building their new jail. He said it wasn’t, it is being paid for with a .5 cent sales tax.

The numbers in the handouts seemed to indicate that the jail could pay for itself by housing inmates from other counties. Former Sheriff Grey said he has never seen a jail pay for itself by housing out of county inmates. The Commissioner from Cherokee County agreed.

The loan amortization schedule in the proposed plans show yearly payments for $421,579 per year on a $6 million loan for a 110 bed facility.

 

Downtown Busy Thursday Night

June 6th at 8pm
June 6th at 8pm Downtown Fort Scott. Click for a larger image.

The South end of downtown had only a few parking spaces left Thursday evening. The Tumbling Tigers Gymnastics, Common Ground Coffee Shop and Crooner’s Lounge all helped  draw visitors at a time when the area is traditionally empty.

Good Old Days 2013

This weekend was the 32nd annual Good Old Days festival in downtown Fort Scott.

This composite photo shows one of the dogs jumping into the pool.
This composite photo shows one of the dogs jumping into the pool. Click for a larger version.

MO*KAN Dock Dogs were at the event with many animals competing to jump the farthest into a large swimming pool. There were also pony rides, a carnival, musical performances and more. Below are a number of pictures from some of the events on Saturday morning.