From the article: "Teens lag behind all other age groups in e-book adoption. Sixty-six percent of 13- to 17-year olds say they prefer print books to e-books, 26 percent say they have no preference and only 8 percent prefer e-books. One reason for this resistance: Teens like using social technology to discuss and share things with their friends, and e-books at this point are not a social technology."
After a pilot, Salisbury found iPads didn't support the kind of content creation, such as making movies or presentations, the district wanted in its classrooms. The five-year overhaul strives to move away from lectures to student-driven content creation, Ziegenfuss said.
“Tablets have not quite evolved to the point of easily creating content,” he said, adding that might be totally different in a few years.
McCrea: What were the hard parts of this initiative?
Smith: Staff development was a big issue.
Before the 1:1 rollout we spent at least six months on staff development. Going from 30 kids in a room opening textbooks to 30 kids opening computers is a significant shift.
We wound up with a number of early adopters who bought into the change and a bunch of others in the middle who were saying, "Give me time and we will get there."
Then there were staff members who refused to participate and threatened to retire. We stuck to our guns and told everyone that we were moving in this direction and that everyone had to be on board.
Four years later we're still not there yet but we've definitely made progress. Getting to 100 percent is going to take a while.