Rell Budget Contains $15.5 Million For School Laptops
Rell Budget Contains $15.5 Million For School Laptops
By Noreen Gillespie
Associated Press
HARTFORD â Students, put down your pencils.
In the budget Republican Gov M. Jodi Rell presented to the General Assembly this week, $15.5 million is set aside to purchase laptop computers for high school English classes.
âIf we want our students to be on the leading edge of learning, weâve got to provide cutting-edge technology and teaching innovation,â Rell said. âLaptops go far beyond improving keyboarding skills.â
Education Commissioner Betty Sternberg proposed the initiative last fall as a way to improve high school studentsâ writing ability.
If the plan is approved, 19,000 laptops would be purchased for the stateâs 600 ninth and tenth grade classrooms. About 300 classrooms would be equipped by the 2005-06 school year, and the rest would have the technology by the following school year.
The laptops would not be given to individual students. The computers would be kept in locked units in each classroom.
âThis will create the situation where youngsters are really writing using the laptops, which is the way most of the world does it right now. Itâs just we donât do it in class,â Sternberg said.
The state Department of Education has pushed for the program in part because the state wants to begin administering the writing portion of the stateâs tenth grade standardized test by computer.
The department is considering a computerized version of the Connecticut Academic Performance Test for the 2008-09 school year. But it wants students, particularly those who have not had exposure to computers, to have a chance to get used to using the machines first.
Students write more when they use computers, Sternberg said, and when they write more they learn to become more clear and concise writers. Word processing technology also gives students the ability to cut and paste sentences and paragraphs, aiding the revision process, educators claim. Tools like spell check and grammar check can also enhance studentsâ writing skills, Sternberg said.
âYou still have to know your grammar and your spelling,â Sternberg said. âItâs a facilitating tool.â
Educators hope the proposed laptop program will help create a more seamless transition to college and the workplace. Rell said she has heard concerns from business leaders that schools need to do a better job producing students with up-to-date computer skills.
The proposal could be one of the few new spending initiatives in Rellâs budget, given a projected $1.2 billion deficit for the fiscal year that begins July 1. Rell has said the budget, which she unveiled Wednesday, contains difficult choices because of the budget hole.
Rep Andrew Fleischmann, co-chairman of the legislatureâs Education Committee, said he wanted to see the governor and the Education Department present evidence that laptops affect student performance. Because of the budget deficit, lawmakers need to make sure they are investing in initiatives that work, he said.
âIf someone learns how to write well, they can do it on a computer, on a pad, or on a chalkboard. It doesnât matter. A good writer is a good writer,â said Fleischmann, D-West Hartford. âIâm not saying that Iâm opposed to the idea. What Iâm saying is Iâd like to see evidence that this improves studentsâ ability to learn.â