Search PalmPower's 487 Palm-related article archive 
Home
EasyPrint
News details Click here for the RSS feed's XML code. This is not a browser URL.
Articles-only Click here for the RSS feed's XML code. This is not a browser URL.
HANDHELDS IN EDUCATION
One school district's approach to handheld integration
By Mark A. Evans

The PDA battle rages as people are thrown into the decision-making process to determine what PDA to purchase. Companies are doing rollouts of PDAs to improve customer relations, complete faster service turnaround, and do quicker inventory checks.

It is no different in schools across the nation. Customer relations (student and parent relations) are important to schools. Faster and better service (better education, more knowledge in real time, and higher scores) are crucial to a school's survival. And with all the items (especially items that require longer than one year follow-up documentation) that need to be inventoried, what school could turn away better inventory systems? Some schools across the nation are utilizing PDAs in the classroom already, many through collaborative studies with PDA makers and universities or other research oriented organizations.

But how does a school district (public, private, independent, etc.) make the move to begin purchasing PDAs of any brand and model, and how does a district determine that PDAs even should be purchased?

I am a District Instructional Technology Teacher for the Klein ISD (Independent School District), a suburban/rural school district north of Houston, TX. In our district, the move to integrate technology into the classroom is happening at a tremendous rate compared to our rollout of services and programs in the past. With grants, bond money, and a surge of technological focus, our district is rapidly putting its students and schools on the proverbial technology map. And we have just begun to encounter the decision making process involved in the PDA movement.

In the past, our district as a whole has been very conservative by waiting, watching, and studying results of other districts' methods in just about every category imaginable. Our district is largely residential, so business tax dollars don't contribute to our district as they do in many other nearby districts. It has been smart to watch and learn before proceeding. Although there is an awakening to doing things a new way, some of that conservativeness is warranted, especially with regard to valuable technology dollars. With this history and perspective in mind, our district has begun to move forward with evaluating the use of Personal Digital Assistants for use within our district. It will be exciting to learn what other districts in our area are doing, and I hope to report that information once school starts again this month.

Typically, our district has established a standard as a baseline for what technology can be purchased. This sound decision is based on the fact that certain technology will work on our servers, while some of the decision was made due to certain software applications not working on Windows 2000 computers. Additionally, much of the decision is based on security issues of running on a secure network.


1  ·  2  ·  3  ·  Next »
Other articles you might like
Home > Solutions (189 articles)
   Miniature data warehousing is now possible
   A cheap way to schedule repeating tasks
   The Franklin Electronic ROLODEX, an inexpensive and very functional PDA substitute
Get Weekly Email Updates
Subscribe to our regular weekly email newsletter. It's packed with tips, reviews, deep analysis, and the latest news.
 
Other PalmPower Articles
Palm gets up to date with new Tungsten family of handhelds
Create handwritten email with riteMail
Presenter-to-Go puts PowerPoint presentations on your Palm OS handheld
Looking for the cutting edge
Gain remote access to databases and PLCs
PalmSource Open House showcases what's new in the Palm community
Analysis: handheld market share
More from the ZATZ journals
Computing Unplugged: The iPad: Apple's latest heartbreaker
David Gewirtz Online: CNN commentary and analysis
DominoPower: Lotusphere 2010: mobility and collaboration
OutlookPower: Running auto-respond rules when Outlook is closed
-- Advertisement --

BLOGGING AND PODCASTING WITH ONE EASY-TO-USE TOOL
Now you can publish your thoughts, opinions, and comments in your own blog or podcast.<p />

  • Supports multiple authors and multiple blogs or podcasts.
  • Generate and publish RSS feeds for iTunes and other directories.
  • Post photos, images or animations.
  • Get feedback and have conversations with visitors to your site. <p />

Personalize your blog or podcast with your own unique domain name -- or integrate it with your existing site by setting it up as a subdomain.

Tap here and get blogging or podcasting within minutes.

-- Advertisement --

Sent Items Organizer
When you need to file your sent email into their proper folders based on keywords or who it's to. It's also perfect for shared mailboxes.

It also adds a "Send And File" toolbar button while you're composing (similar to the way Lotus Notes used to work) for quick and easy filing.

Find out more!

ZATZ Home  ·  News  ·  Back Issues  ·  Credits/Trademarks ·  Link To Us
Copyright © 1998-2010, ZATZ Publishing. All rights reserved worldwide.
Editor's Login