Following a summer symposium in the Chicago suburban
school district Leyden 212, the Chromebooks were selected as the
choice for transforming NH-M into a 1:1 learning environment. While
Apple iPads have been deployed to the younger grades of Kindergarten
through 2nd, the shift from low-level apps to higher-level
technology creation and cloud computing is more appropriate for
upper grade levels, which is made possible by NH-M becoming one of
the only official “Google Apps for Education” school districts in
the area.
According to NH-M Superintendent Todd Dugan, what makes NH-M's
adoption of the Google Chromebooks unique is the “overwhelming
community support in making this technology paradigm happen. When
two small rural communities with a combined population of 650 people
can help raise over $50,000 in funds in less than 8 months to
provide students with access to an education befitting the 21st
Century, that says a lot about the learning community we are blessed
to have here at NH-M. With a student population approaching 70%
poverty, providing students with ubiquitous online access is
extremely important. This shift to online learning engages kids by
speaking their language, and technology is the perfect disruptor to
the barriers of poverty.”
Pictured here are students in Miss Minde Moore's 3rd grade class
receiving individualized Math instruction on their NH-M logo-adorned Chromebooks.
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Also pictured are the 4th grade students in Miss Sallie Traeger's
4th grade class completing a Google Chromebook “scavenger hunt” on
the exciting first day of deployment. For more information on NH-M's
1:1 computing initiative, please visit the district's website at
http://www.nhm88.com
[Text received from TODD DUGAN,
New Holland-Middletown School]
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