Classroom Teacher

Pros and Cons of Teaching with a Class of Laptops

Two years ago, we dreamed about getting a class set of laptops. Right now, we have access to a mobile laptop cart and our school has pretty good Wi-Fi in the building. What next?

  1. We love having laptops in the classroom
  2. But sometimes, a class of laptops can be a huge headache.
  3. and so, we’re dreaming of iPads.

We love having laptops in the classroom.

Having access to a class of laptops has changed the way we teach. Here are some examples of things we’ve done in our digital classrooms:

Sometimes a class set of laptops can be a huge headache

Having a class of laptops is wonderful. but there are some challenges:

It can take anywhere from minutes to half an hour for students to get their laptops working.

Most students become quite good at troubleshooting little problems, but imagine a day where everything seems to be going wrong, and you have 30 students asking for help. Sometimes a class of laptops is more trouble than it’s worth.

Maintaining a class of laptops is a full-time job

Fortunately, we work at a high school where there is someone on staff to maintain the labs, including the mobile laptop cart. There’ve been days that we have sent down seven or eight laptops to get reimaged or repaired. Sometimes the hard drives in our “rugged” laptops disconnect. Sometimes the batteries die and simply won’t hold a charge. Sometimes the darn things just won’t work.

Staying ahead of student vandelism is a game of cat and mouse.

Students get bored in class – even if they are using cool technology: they pop the keys off, scratch their names into the plastic (or screen), or just toss the laptops around.

Some of the tech savvy students like to check around and see how secure your image is. Some popular tricks that spread through word-of-mouth include changing the orientation of the screen or changing the name of applications in your start menu. (You can imagine what a creative student can do with Kid Pix, SMART Ideas 5, or First Class.)

There are software options to help monitor and track vandelism. If you teach in Ontario (Canada), you might be interested to know that all public elementary and secondary schools have access to NetSupport School Pro 10.5, which is licensed through OSAPAC.

NetSupport is pretty cool software.

We’re dreaming about iPads in the Classroom. What will the digital classroom of the future look like?

The thing about technology is that it’s constantly evolving. We love our class set of netbook laptops. But if we were to invest the money now, we would seriously consider getting a class set of iPads.

Sure, we understand that laptops are easier to lock down, deploy and maintain. There are also lots of great programs that we have installed on our Windows machines that simply aren’t available on iPad. And we recognize that if we’re having problems monitoring students now, just imagine the problems you’d face with an army of students playing angry birds while you were teaching.

But here’s why were thinking iPad.

We’re saving our pennies to get an iPad.

This post was written using Dragon NaturallySpeaking 11 Premium Wireless.

  • There are 1329 words in this post. Dragon made 43 word errors. So, we had an accuracy of 96.7% in this document.
  • If you include punctuation and capitalization errors, Dragon made an additional 14 punctuation and capitalization errors. So, we had an accuracy of 95.7% in this document.
Exit mobile version