Graduation Day for Linux
Dealing With Peer Pressure and Lots of Schoolwork

Brian Proffitt
While the acceptance of Linux clients and servers has ultimately been
positive in every school system they have helped, there have been some
lessons learned along the way. The biggest challenge, acccording to
Nelson, is getting the teachers on board, both with how to use the new
software on a day-to-day level and also with how to teach with the lab machines.
"Computers should not be used as expensive workbooks teaching basic
skills. Once we get beyond this we can deal with the questions about
'what educational software does Linux run?', Nelson explained. "Linux runs the educational
software kids should be using. They should use computers just like
literate adults do. They should write, use the Web for research, share
email with friends and learning partners, they should evaluate
information and present their conclusions with effective presentation
tools. They should use computers to be creative with art and music
tools. Most importantly of all, they should know that the computes will
always be up and ready for use. You don't need 'Reader Rabbit' or 'Math
Blaster' to do any of this."
Occasionally, the argument is raised that students are not getting the
benefits of using the software that they supposedly will be using out in the real world.
"We do sometimes get the questions about having kids use the same
software they will use in the marketplace. We tell them we are doing
just that! We then have folks sit down and use OpenOffice and I've never
failed to get a response like, 'I can use this. Is it really free? You
can send this home with all your students for free?' Yes, yes, yes...," Nelson related.
Harrison fully agrees: "We need to teach concepts, not products." He
added that as of now, OpenOffice.org is close enough to MS Office to
teach the same skills needed for these types of applications. Besides, he added, most of their students start
learning computers in the 4th grade. Who knows what products will be
available when they graduate from high school?
There have been some technological hurdles as well, though they may seem
rather minor to most network admins.
"We have learned a lot about how different schools use computers. Many of
our workstations are out in the classrooms. The demand is more
distributed in these circumstances," Nelson said. "In lab settings when 30 kids come in
and all hit Enter at the same, well, the server starts working pretty
hard. We've learned that you can never have enough memory. 2 or 3 gigs of RAM for a 30-user lab keeps things moving along just fine, though."
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