[ale] Atlanta school converted to Linux by PTA
Jeff Hubbs
hbbs at comcast.net
Fri Mar 10 23:27:38 EST 2006
Daniel -
This is a tremendous story; thank you very much for sharing it and
congratulations on a job well done.
- Jeff
Daniel Howard wrote:
>Atlanta Linux Folk,
>
>Sorry to take so long to reply to this, my inbox has been rather busy of
>late. Yes, it was I and William Fragakis, two parents and now Atlanta
>Linux enthusiasts, who were tired of constantly running around fixing
>Windoz 95/98 problems, that with our principal, mounted initially an
>insurrection, and now promoted to revolution, at Morris Brandon
>Elementary School in Buckhead. Current status is that our school has
>tripled the number of working PCs in each class with zero viruses and
>spyware issues, miniscule maintenance requirements, and yes, Atlanta
>Public Schools is looking at our school as a proof of concept project
>and believe it or not, is seriously considering whether deployment on a
>district-wide basis makes sense. But we had to fight a long battle to
>get there.
>
>There are many issues that are sensitive, and should be discussed
>offline. The key however, is to have the support of the principal, PTA,
>and teachers at your school, and be squeaky clean in implementation.
>For example, we hardcoded the MAC addresses of every client to its
>server via the dhcpd.conf file, and turned off dynamic DHCP so that if
>someone crossed the wires to the server, it would not hand out IP
>addresses to the teacher's PCs.
>
>The most important element that allowed us to recommend the K12LTSP
>software was the fact that teachers were only using the PCs for web
>browsing, office applications, and finally that the Accelerated
>Reader/Math package we had been paying for was now available in a
>web-delivered version. That meant that if we switched to Linux, we
>could still do all the critical apps we had been doing in Windoz. We
>started with the computer lab, purchasing and installing 25 diskless,
>fanless thin clients (to show where the future of thin client computing
>was going), and then converted the former computer lab Dell PCs into
>servers and began installing them in the higher grades, moving down in
>grade level as we went. I sought the donation of PCs from local
>businesses and got over 100 that we converted to thin clients; we now
>have about 250 fully functional PCs in our school with a student to PC
>ratio of less than 3:1. Teachers are now scheduling PC activities daily
>for students, since in a 6 hour day, each student can get up to 2 hours
>of individual time on the PC. While test results are not in yet, one
>1st grade class recently got the top national score in the First-In-Math
>web site, and in another, some students doubled their scores one week
>after we upped the number of PCs in their class. I also recommended the
>installation of a cable modem to augment our local bandwidth, as the
>district feed was delivering dialup speeds regularly; Linux + higher
>speed Internet connection gave blazing results. We used an old PC
>running Squidgard/DansGuardian for web content filtering and site
>blocking. Later, we converted the entire 5th grade to a single server
>to show the scalability of K12LTSP for reducing the number of PCs to
>manage.
>
>Months after we initially offered to meet with district IT personnel, a
>meeting was finally arranged whereby we briefed them on the system and
>the result was a proposal, then counter-proposal, and finally a recent
>IT hire at Atlanta Public Schools who came to talk to us about it who
>'got it.' She immediately asked that we meet regularly with her team so
>they could observe the system in operation, evaluate the issues/risks,
>and make recommendations to her on proceeding with other schools. We're
>now working on a major briefing to district personnel based on the joint
>evaluation efforts of our parent volunteers and district IT personnel
>and the benefits/lessons learned of our project.
>
>My personal hope is that if they do decide to move to Linux, I will have
>personally touched the lives of every child in Atlanta. Linux empowers
>us...and I didn't really know that much about it when we started.
>
>So, in summary:
>1. Get the solid support of the PTA, principal, and teachers first
>2. It's easier to ask forgiveness than ask permission, but make it
>squeaky clean
>3. A cable modem or DSL small business connection costs only $100 a
>month and combined with Linux makes web browsing blazingly faster. But
>make sure it's filtered!
>4. Be prepared to address the usual onslaught of anti-Linux rhetoric
>
>For more info, contact me personally. If anyone outside of Atlanta
>Public School would like to see our system in action, contact me; since
>we're officially part of the system now, we'd have to go through them to
>help other APS schools. It's truly amazing to see what happens when
>kids have frequent access to working PCs and the teachers can use them
>without fear of failure in their instruction.
>
>Some fun anecdotes:
>
>"We're never going back to the old way for our computers!" Last year's
>PTA president.
>
>"I'll take as many PCs as you can give me, now that I see that they work
>so well!" A teacher.
>
>"What's this new K12LTSP software we have to get trained on? I just saw
>an email about training for it." "You've been using it for the last
>hour to read your email on the web." "Oh, I guess I don't need too much
>training." Another teacher.
>
>"You mean that's the same old computer that hasn't worked for the last
>several years, and now it works great? What is this stuff?" Another
>teacher.
>
>"You know what I love about the new Linux software? The educational
>application software is the same on every PC, and I don't have to find
>the CD rom disk, figure out on which PC it's installed, unjam the CD rom
>drive that the kids have jammed, and figure out which disk in the
>package runs the software and which disk has the bonus features." My
>daughter's teacher.
>
>"You guys rock!" Many teachers.
>
>Best regards,
>
>Daniel Howard
>dhhoward at comcast.net
>404.264.9123
>
>
>_______________________________________________
>Ale mailing list
>Ale at ale.org
>http://www.ale.org/mailman/listinfo/ale
>
>
>
More information about the Ale
mailing list