Now this is stimulus

Summary: As I sat through a DSL install at one of our schools this morning, I Tweeted my excitement at finally leaving a fractional T1 behind at this particularly remote school. The bandwidth, usually running around 200kbps, has seriously hampered our efforts to roll out e-learning tools, so a 6MBps pipe (2 aggregated 3MBps DSL lines) is a huge upgrade.

As I sat through a DSL install at one of our schools this morning, I Tweeted my excitement at finally leaving a fractional T1 behind at this particularly remote school. The bandwidth, usually running around 200kbps, has seriously hampered our efforts to roll out e-learning tools, so a 6MBps pipe (2 aggregated 3MBps DSL lines) is a huge upgrade.

"6MBps?" you say...that's nothing! And you're right. It's painfully slow by modern standards and yet is hardly the worst had by many schools in the States. Obviously, urban schools are going to see much greater bandwidth and fiber penetration; even the other schools in our district (aside from the one, lone school noted above) can get 15MBps cable. Our little town is not that extraordinary among other rural communities, though.

6MBps is fine for the small school of about 150 students and will allow us to fully implement Google Apps, web-based RTI software, and provide students with a much snappier online experience. However, as one of my Twitter friends put it this morning, dampening my excitement over my new DSL lines,

Damn we had faster than that back in 99 @ my high school and by the time i left in 03 we had fibre, you guys get screwed badly!

I didn't add punctuation; he can only express his surprise so well in 140 characters, but you get the idea. It certainly won't support widespread video over the web or more really bandwidth-intensive collaboration efforts. He's in Australia, by the way, where they are no stranger to vast stretches of rural land. Regardless of where he lives in Australia, though, be it Sydney or the outback, it's readily apparent that the country is and has been ahead of us in broadband adoption and penetration in too many places.

I'd hate to say anything against Australia. Aside from an abundance of cane toads, sharks, and other poisonous, deadly, and unpleasant creatures, it seems like a very nice place. However, it also seems like, with the billions of dollars we've dumped in various "stimulus" packages and "loans" to big corporations, some money could have gone to initiatives like those my Australian Twitter buddy was more than happy to send along.

In one case, 400 IT jobs were created to provide full-time tech support in Australian high schools. These jobs accompanied distribution of 200,000 netbooks to high schoolers; the broadband was already largely in place and the students will be allowed to keep the computers if they graduate.

In another initiative, IBM was awarded a $70 million (Australian) contract to install enterprise-class wireless at 463 schools, creating local contract jobs wherever possible for the duration of the project.

These projects, among others, are part of Australia's Digital Education Revolution. The title might be cheesy, but the government is pumping money directly into school technology and the curriculum to use it.

To me, this seems like it will have far more direct benefit than No Child Left Behind. Australian readers, am I only seeing one side here, or is this further evidence that the US continues to lag behind other countries in educational technology and e-learning opportunities?

Topics: Enterprise Software, Networking, Software

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6 comments
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  • Right Acronym

    [i]To me, this seems like it will have far more direct benefit than No Child Left Behind.[/i]

    NCLB actually stands for, "no carrier left behind." Like the other one, it means that everyone holds back to the slowest in the group. It would, for instance, be UnAmerican for cities to roll out municipal networking -- that would interfere with the profitability of the cable and telephone companies, who (after all) are guaranteed a reasonable profit by the various regulatory agencies.
    Yagotta B. Kidding
  • My High School

    When I graduated from my remote, very rural (and small) high school in '95, the teacher's office had 33.6kbps dial-up, that usually connected at 14.4kbps, and no computer lab (butt-load of typewriters, though). Now, 14 years later, my high school has 56kbps dial-up, that usually connects around 33.6kbps, and a computer lab of about 20 computers, all in the 5+ year old range.

    Saying that, I think the US would greatly benefit more from pumping these billions of dollars into education, our future, than into the banks that caused the financial messes in the first place.
    barneytheblueheeler@...
  • Our gov't can' t do it.

    Our government simply can't do this. I'm guessing it takes half of every dollar our gov't spends, simply to account for the dollars, and make sure no one is cheating the system, and that the reports on what was actually done get read and filed. Not that ANY of that actually helps ANY kid, or school.
    Then you add in the 50% minimum boost in the money needed in the bill for pork barrel projects simply to get the votes necessary to get through the Congress, and you can understand why a $150,000 per school job in Australia turns into a half million here...
    ajole
  • RE: Now this is stimulus

    I suspect one of the advantages Australia has had in this regard is that Schools are State run rather than district run so in some ways there is an economy of scale in effect. Planning is bigger. Another thing I suspect is happening is that Australians are starting to see themselves as potential world leaders if they adapt to new ways of thinking. It used to be education here just followed experiments from England and the U.S. taking things on just as the other two countries were realizing the approach wasn't working so we'd lag behind. The internet has sped up the information gap and planners are seeing that it is important to have the information as quickly as possible in order to try ones own ideas rather than just taking on others. Even the government here is pushing for faster and more expanded internet.
    fcorless@...
  • Could size have something to do with it?

    Australia has a population of 21,760,257 people.
    The Unites States has a population of 306,414,000 people.

    That's 284,653,743 more people here in the US then in Australia.

    Now, assuming that the same percentage (per country) of those people are students, in schools, because you can roll out the latest tech for millions doesn't mean it can be done in the US for the same price and ease.
    John Zern
    • this argument doesn't make sense?

      Yes the USA is bigger than Australia. That means its GNP is proportionately bigger. i.e. more kids, but more bucks available as well.

      No-one would expect the USA to roll out school bandwidth for the same raw cost as Australia; what matters is how much it costs as a percentage of school capitation.

      Australia, being largely semi-desert, has large numbers of small disadvantaged schools in remote areas. Yes so does the USA but probably the US has less people proportionately in rural areas. A guess.

      I'd bet its actually more costly for the Aussies per school.

      At one point the *French* were ahead of the curve in data access (and this goes back to early internet days or before). Why? Centralised government and decisions to make damn sure the French had an infrasturucture to support high tech. Just like the French have a high speed train network (TGV) while other countries struggle.

      You decide a strategy, you force it through, and you keep on going. This is to do with political will.
      dgrainge