Normal 0 0 1 21 120 C Allen 1 1 147 10.2006 0 0 0 Solutions for Training: Public Education Archives

Recently in Public Education Category

California Turns E-Books Into a Digital Textbook Future

"This first-in-the-nation initiative will reduce education costs ... and help ensure every California student has access to a world-class education." (Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger, 5/6/09)

Continuing his commitment to find savings in these challenging budget times while improving California's education system, Governor Schwarzenegger today will highlight his first-in-the-nation digital textbooks initiative at Calabasas High School. The Governor introduced this initiative as way to provide schools and students a new way to access textbooks that is less expensive, easier and lighter.  The first phase will bring high school math and science classes access to free digital textbooks by fall 2009 - with additional content to follow.

Governor Schwarzenegger's first-in-the-nation digital textbook initiative puts California on the road to a technologically advanced, higher quality and lower cost education system.

  • High School Students will have access to science and math digital textbooks by the beginning of the school year. A list of standards-aligned digital textbooks for subjects such as geometry, algebra II, trigonometry, calculus, physics, chemistry, biology/life science and earth science courses will be released this August.
    • Digital books and content has already been submitted and will soon be reviewed. All content developers can submit materials to the California Learning Resources Network by June 15 in order to be reviewed in time for this upcoming school year
  • Phase two of the initiative is currently being developed. This includes making digital textbooks available for all grades, incorporating interactive content and eventually creating a statewide web site highlighting available books.

This initiative has the potential to save California's schools millions of dollars. The average textbook costs about $75 to $100 per student.  For a school district with about 10,000 high school students, the use of free digital textbooks in just science and math classes could save up to $2 million dollars.

  • Switching to digital textbooks will free up funds for other spending priorities. Last year, the state's share alone for school books and other instructional materials was $350 million, this is funding that can be used elsewhere after free, digital textbooks are made available.
  • Schools can take advantage of this program and save money even without computers or laptops. Teachers can print out material and it would still cost a fraction of the price of a traditional textbook.

Digital textbooks will allow students to learn on new and multiple levels. Traditional hardbound textbooks are adopted in six-year cycles, meaning six years of missing information. Digital textbooks can be updated much more easily, allowing students to learn about current discoveries and technological advances as they happen.

  • Frequently updated digital textbooks will better prepare California's students to compete in the global economy. Knowledge is power - the more students have, the greater opportunity they have to succeed.
  • Digital textbooks open the door to more interactive learning. Students will be able read about a science experiment then watch a video demonstration - giving them more than one way to digest the information.

With a deep recession and a deep deficit, California is doing everything possible to help schools do more with less.

Open Government wants your ideas

How can we strengthen our democracy and promote efficiency and effectiveness by making government more transparent, participatory, and collaborative?


Participate!

Open Government Dialogue is a website by the National Academy of Public Administration that opens idea contribution to the public.  Read...and share your ideas at: http://opengov.ideascale.com/

Categories include Transparency, Participation, Collaboration, Capacity Building, and Legal & Policy Challenges.

On January 21st, the President issued the Memorandum on Transparency and Open Government, calling for an unprecedented level of openness in government. In the memorandum, the President outlined three principles for promoting a transparent and open government: transparency, participation, and collaboration. Now, the President is calling on you to help shape how that commitment is fulfilled. This online brainstorming session, open from May 21st to 28th, 2009, will enable the White House to hear your most important ideas relating to open government.

This platform allows you to submit ideas, discuss and refine others' ideas, and vote the best ones to the top. We are seeking innovative approaches to policy, specific project suggestions, government-wide or agency-specific instructions, and any relevant examples and stories relating to law, policy, technology, culture, or practice. The National Academy of Public Administration, a Congressionally chartered, non-profit, non-partisan institution, is hosting this brainstorming session on behalf of the White House.

 

National Educational Technology Plan

The U.S. Department of Education is developing a new National Educational Technology Plan to provide a vision for how information and communication technologies can help transform American education. The plan will provide a set of concrete goals that can inform state and local educational technology plans as well as inspire research, development, and innovation. A draft plan is expected in early 2010.

The plan development team is looking for insights from the field to help us understand how to improve education through the innovative use of technology.

Contribute your recommendations... and explore what others have recommended.

National Educational Technology Plan
https://edtechfuture.org/