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For Immediate Release
March 8, 2003
Contact:
Alison Cohen
617-618-2109
acohen@edc.org
U.S. Edtech Investment at Risk:
Report calls for renewed commitment to infrastructure and training
NEWTON, MA – EDC's Center
for Children and Technology (CCT) and
The Benton Foundation released their latest report, The
Sustainability Challenge: Taking Edtech to the Next Level, over the Internet today.
In the last 10 years, the United States has invested over $40 billion
placing computers in schools and connecting classrooms to the Internet;
the report cautions that this massive investment in educational technology,
or edtech, may be at risk.
The Sustainability Challenge outlines a number of critical next steps
that are needed to sustain America's edtech infrastructure and insure
that this investment helps support student achievement. The report offers
a "Sustainability Top Ten List" of reforms necessary for insuring
that the nation's edtech investments do not go to waste. The list includes:
- Accelerating teacher professional development
- Professionalizing technical
support
- Ensuring all Americans have 21st Century Skills
- Adopting a new national
goal to bridge the home and community digital divides
The report demonstrates that school districts that have implemented
successful and sustainable edtech strategies have certain elements in
common. "In these districts, for example, educational leaders have
articulated a clear vision for technology's role in the classroom," Margaret
Honey of CCT noted. "Their schools offer educators professional
development that goes beyond basic skill-building, and is available for
teachers when it is most relevant and critical to their teaching." The
full report presents these and other key building blocks in a "framework
for sustainability."
Highlighting survey data in which tech-savvy students said that most
of their computer use and learning took place at home, The
Sustainability Challenge also points out the growing need for all students to have home
Internet access. The report challenges policymakers to embrace the goal
that all students on reduced and free lunch subsidies should have access
to a computing device and Internet connection at home.
The findings in The Sustainability Challenge were based on fieldwork
in three midwestern cities and a series of roundtables held in New York,
Chicago and Washington, DC. The project was supported with a generous
grant from the Joyce Foundation of Chicago. The report is the third in
a series focusing on federal edtech investments, including The E-Rate
in America: A Tale of Four Cities and Great Expectations: Leveraging
America's Investment in Educational Technology. All three of the reports
are available on the CCT Web site.
Read The Sustainability Challenge: Taking EdTech to the Next Level
Education Development Center, Inc. (EDC) is one of the world’s leading nonprofit education and health organizations, with 325 projects in 50 countries. EDC brings researchers and practitioners together to advance learning and healthy development for individuals of all ages and institutions of all types. For more information, visit www.edc.org.
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