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Ed-Tech Policy

Gates, Zuckerberg Pour Money Into School Connectivity Plan

By Ben Kamisar 鈥 December 04, 2013 6 min read
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CORRECTED

The push to bring high-speed Internet to more U.S. schools drew high-profile support Wednesday, as a nonprofit that promotes that mission announced that it has received grants from an Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg鈥檚 organization, Startup:Education, the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, and other donors, worth a total of $9 million.

The recipient of those investments, EducationSuperHighway, will use the money to help train schools to use and manage broadband connections while cutting down on costs.

鈥淲hen schools and teachers have access to reliable internet connections, students can discover new skills and ideas beyond the classroom,鈥 Mark Zuckerberg, Facebook鈥檚 founder and CEO, said in a release announcing the donation. 鈥淭he future of our economy and society depend largely on the next generation using and building new online tools and services, and I鈥檓 glad to support EducationSuperHighway鈥檚 work.鈥

The San Francisco-based nonprofit seeks to improve access to high-speed broadband in schools across the country with a four-pronged approach: indentifying which schools need broadband improvements, providing districts with technical expertise, helping districts pay lower prices for connections, and pushing for changes to the federal E-rate program.

鈥淭his is an historic opportunity to solve this problem at a moment when we are really at a tipping point,鈥 said Evan Marwell, the CEO of EducationSuperHighway. 鈥淲e think it is going to really make a difference for America鈥檚 kids.鈥

Zuckerberg鈥檚 Startup:Education foundation is the tech giant鈥檚 foray into education philanthropy. Most recently, the organization lead a contribution of , the Cambridge, Mass.-based company which creates and analyzes surveys for K-12 schools.

Education SuperHighway received $3 million from Startup:Education, $2 million from the Gates foundation, as well as $4 million from others, some of whom wished to remain anonymous, said Marwell. (澳门跑狗论坛 receives financial support from the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation for its coverage of the education marketplace and innovation in education. The newspaper retains sole editorial control over the content of this coverage.)

Currently, there is little centralized data that speaks to which schools have the greatest needs for high-speed connectivity, according to officials at EducationSuperhighway鈥攕o the organization has tried to pull together that information on its own. Since there is little centralized data to help the organization identify which schools need improvements, EducationSuperHighway developed its own internet speed tests. Based on information it has gathered through partnerships with 26 state departments of education, the organization鈥檚 research found that more than 70 percent of public schools lack the bandwidth required for digital learning.

Marwell said that the $9 million will mostly be used to help provide technical expertise and reduce the connection costs to America鈥檚 schools.

While the goal might be lofty, Marwell says that his group鈥檚 goals are attractive to tech-moguls like Zuckerberg and Gates because they are realistic.He estimates that 70,000 of the nation鈥檚 100,000 schools need to be upgraded, a number he calls 鈥渕anageable.鈥

鈥淚t鈥檚 achievable, we don鈥檛 have to invent any new technology, and there鈥檚 a funding source,鈥 he said. 鈥淲e are really at a tipping point...but the thing that is holding us back is the Internet infrastructure.鈥

Lindsey Tepe, a program associate in the education policy program at the New America Foundation, in Washington, said that the donation could be a smart way to allow schools to leverage the expertise of EducationSuperHighway into making smarter decisions about infrastructure.

鈥淚f done right, this could be a really great way to make the [E-rate] fund more efficient in its dispersement,鈥 she said in an interview.

A National PlanWhile interest in 1-to-1 student-to-digital-device programs and other digital-learning efforts continues to grow, education technology experts estimate that . In June, President Obama announced his ConnectED program, which aimed to expand high-speed broadband and wireless Internet to virtually all American students within five years. In announcing the plan, the administration said that the average school鈥檚 Internet connectivity matches that of a typical home, except schools have to provide access for hundreds of students and faculty.

鈥淭here are a lot of opportunities that are simply closed out to students and teachers that don鈥檛 have access to technology,鈥 Richard Culatta, the director of the Department of Education鈥檚 office of education technology, said in an interview. 鈥淚f you look at where the most engaging, interactive resources are for learning these days, they are not coming from a textbook鈥攖hey are coming from digital resources.鈥

He added that third party groups like EducationSuperHighway that don鈥檛 stand to make a profit from the expansion of technology are an important piece in the modernization puzzle.

鈥淚t鈥檚 really important that we don鈥檛 look at this just as a technology initiative,鈥 he said. 鈥淭he technology is essential, but the reason we are putting the tech into place is that it is the foundation for redesigning learning in this country.鈥

Hedging on E-rate reform

Many organizations, including Marwell鈥檚, argue that changing the E-rate program is a critical piece of any effort to address schools鈥 connectivity woes.

The federal program provides discounts for Internet services for schools and libraries and has contributed to more than 97 percent of U.S. classrooms today having web acess, according to the Federal Communication Commission, but many critics argue that the program is underfunded. While the program is capped at about $2.4 billion, schools and libraries request about twice that sum for improvement projects. The FCC, which manages the program, is currently mulling an expansion of the E-rate program, which would seek to fulfill many of the goals in the president鈥檚 ConnectEd proposal.

Many groups are pushing to to help match the demand. The program currently delineates between Priority 1 funding, which covers basic connections, and Priority 2 funding, which covers internal connections. Since requests for Priority 1 funding use up the vast majority of the available funds, most of the Priority 2 requests that could be used for internal routers and wireless hotspots remain unfunded.

Others, including Republican FCC Commissioner Ajit Pai, have argued that the program needs to and suggest that incentives could be created to ensure that money is spent wisely.

Providing every school with high-speed broadband would become much more difficult without changes to the E-rate, Marwell argued.

鈥淲e鈥檒l eventually get there,鈥 Marwell said. 鈥淏ut itnstead of taking five years, [it] will take 10 to 15.鈥

Correction: The original post incorrectly reported donations made by Startup:Education and the Gates foundation. Education SuperHighway received $3 million from Startup:Education, $2 million from the Gates foundation, as well as $4 million from others, some of whom wished to remain anonymous. Panorama Education received $4 million in seed funding from Startup:Education, not from the Gates foundation.

A version of this news article first appeared in the Digital Education blog.