Educational Technology Bust

It seems that Apple and Pearson are about to shell out big bucks, $6.4 million to be exact for ipadwhat appears to be a massive failure in supporting a tablet initiative in a thousand schools in Los Angeles:

The Los Angeles Unified School District has reached a tentative $6.4-million settlement over curriculum from education software giant Pearson that the school system said its teachers barely used.

The pact is the latest fallout from an aborted $1.3-billion plan to provide an iPad to every student, teacher and campus administrator in the nation’s second-largest school district.

The Board of Education is expected to vote on the settlement in October. The bidding process that led to the original contract is the subject of an FBI investigation.

This is from a piece in the Los Angeles TimesLA Unified to get $6.4 million in settlement over iPad software, that says that an FBI investigation is underway into the manner in which the contract was let. The writer also quotes an attorney for the school district, “one goal is to make sure schools are ready to use technology before they receive it.” Well duh!

I often say that forecasting technology applications is really tough, especially when it involves the future. We also know that we will be wrong twice… We will overestimate the near term and underestimate the long term. Although Pearson claims that their materials are being used effectively in many other schools, it seems that in this case these folks are in the near term of effective uses of tablet devices.

Read more here and here.

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I retired as a professor at Brigham Young University (BYU) in 2016 where I was Associate Professor of French and Instructional Pyschology & Technology. I arrived there in 1992 after my retirement as a Lieutenant Colonel from a 20-year career in the US Air Force. Most of that time was spent on the faculty at the US Air Force Academy (USAFA), during what I call my first career. For over forty years I have been creating interactive video applications for supporting language. The lab at the Language Learning Center at USAFA engaged in ground-breaking efforts conducted within a mentored learning setting. The lab’s work involved the development of technologies and instructional design strategies for the use of video in the language acquisition process as well as with architectures that support online learning and facilitate learning about learning. I have a BA in Political Science from BYU, an MBA from the University of Missouri, and a PhD in Foreign Language Education and Computer Science from The Ohio State University. At the Air Force Academy I was a key member of the team that designed what was then the largest interactive videodisc-based learning center on a college campus. When I retired from BYU I directed the ARCLITE Lab, which was involved in the creation of online learning materials for language learning as well as video and interactive technologies for learning.
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2 Responses to Educational Technology Bust

  1. Howard C. Lipsitz says:

    Hello:

    Thought I would reply to the web site. You are indeed a rare individual who has gone back into
    ET and presented a picture of your work and ET Magazine as a vehicle in which you
    presented your idea in a formal exposure for the audience. I congratulate you for the
    idea and devotion to your ideas. Larry and I worked on ET from early in 1961 through
    his passing to provide a platform for the presentation for ideas that involved innovation
    and creativity in the education and training setting,

    It is a rare person who knows that I worked for all those years on a daily basis. I took my
    name off the sheets in 1971. It is not a rare person who knows that Larry was at the
    leading edge in providing a platform for the flow of ideas on innovation and creativity
    that helped shape a formal flow of ideas.

    Again, congratulations on your site creation.

    Regards,

    Howard C. Lipsite
    edtecpbs@aol,com

  2. Howard, thanks so much for your comments but especially for your devotion to Larry and your joint efforts with Educational Technology. What you both did constitutes an incredible and lasting contribution to the field!

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