Posts tagged federal communications commission

Challenge to schools: Embracing digital textbooks

FILE – In this Jan. 12, 2012 file photo, Education Secretary Arne Duncan speaks in Gahanna, Ohio. Hardbound textbooks may be going the way of slide rules and typewriters in schools. Education Secretary Arne Duncan and FCC Chairman Julius Genachowski are challenging schools and companies to get digital textbooks in students’ hands within five years. (AP Photo/Jay LaPrete, File)

FILE – In this Jan. 12, 2012 file photo, Education Secretary Arne Duncan speaks in Gahanna, Ohio. Hardbound textbooks may be going the way of slide rules and typewriters in schools. Education Secretary Arne Duncan and FCC Chairman Julius Genachowski are challenging schools and companies to get digital textbooks in students’ hands within five years. (AP Photo/Jay LaPrete, File)

FILE – In this file March 12, 2010 file photo, FCC Chairman Julius Genachowski is interviewed in his office in Washington. Hardbound textbooks may be going the way of slide rules and typewriters in schools. Education Secretary Arne Duncan and FCC Chairman Julius Genachowski are challenging schools and companies to get digital textbooks in students’ hands within five years. (AP Photo/Jacquelyn Martin, File)

WASHINGTON (AP) ? Are hardbound textbooks going the way of slide rules and typewriters in schools?

Education Secretary Arne Duncan and Federal Communications Commission chairman Julius Genachowski on Wednesday challenged schools and companies to get digital textbooks in students’ hands within five years. The Obama administration’s push comes two weeks after Apple Inc. announced it would start to sell electronic versions of a few standard high-school books for use on its iPad tablet.

Digital books are viewed as a way to provide interactive learning, potentially save money and get updated material faster to students.

Digital learning environments have been embraced in Florida, Idaho, Utah, and California, as well as in individual schools and districts such as Joplin, Mo., where laptops replaced textbooks destroyed in a tornado. But many schools lack the broadband capacity or the computers or tablets to adopt the technology, and finding the money to go completely digital is difficult for many schools in tough economic times. And, in some places, adopting new textbooks is an arduous process.

At a time when technology has transformed how people interact and even led to social uprisings in the Middle East, education has too often lagged, Duncan said.

“Do we want kids walking around with 50-pound backpacks and every book in those backpacks costing 50, 60, 70 dollars and many of them being out of date? Or, do we want students walking around with a mobile device that has much more content than was even imaginable a couple years ago and can be constantly updated? I think it’s a very simple choice,” Duncan said in an interview.

Tied to Wednesday’s announcement at a digital town hall was the government’s release of a 67-page “playbook” to schools that promotes the use of digital textbooks and offers guidance. The administration hopes that dollars spent on traditional textbooks can instead go toward making digital learning more feasible.

Going digital improves the learning process, and it’s being rolled out at a faster pace in other countries, such as South Korea, Genachowski said in an interview. Genachowski said he’s hopeful it can be cost effective in the long run, especially as the price of digital tablets drops.

“When a student reads a textbook and gets to something they don’t know, they are stuck,” Genachowski said. “Working with the same material on a digital textbook, when they get to something they don’t know, the device can let them explore: It can show them what a word means, how to solve a math problem that they couldn’t figure out how to solve.”

Students can use the textbooks for video explanations to help with homework, they can interact with molecules, and they can manipulate a digital globe to see stories and data about countries, said Karen Cator, director of the Education Department’s office of education technology.

“We’re not talking about the print-based textbook now being digital. We’re talking about a much more robust and interactive and engaging environment to support learning,” Cator said.

About $8 billion is spent annually in the U.S. on textbooks for children in kindergarten through 12th grade, said Jay Diskey, the executive director of the school division of the Association of American Publishers. Diskey said textbook companies have been working on the technology for the past five to eight years to transform the industry, but that in many cases, schools simply aren’t ready.

“It’s not only the future, it’s the now. The industry has embraced this, but the difficulty does lie in the fact that schools are not yet fully equipped with the hardware. We hope that they get there soon,” Diskey said.

After the tornado last May destroyed several schools in Joplin, the decision was made essentially to go textbook free at three sites hosting high school kids from Joplin High School and the Franklin Technology Center. The United Arab Emirates donated money to buy each student a laptop.

The response from students has been mixed, said Angie Besendorfer, the district’s assistant superintendent. She said the transition has proved difficult for some kids accustomed to a standard routine of answering questions at the end of a chapter, but administrators are pleased with the online learning and hope 8th-graders also will go essentially textbook free.

“It’s a little bit more work on the side of the students in that they are having to think and problem solve and do things differently, and some of our kids are not so fond of that, whereas other kids like it a lot,” Besendorfer said.

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Follow Kimberly Hefling on Twitter at http://twitter.com/khefling

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/f70471f764144b2fab526d39972d37b3/Article_2012-02-01-Digital%20Textbooks/id-af9da0dfcd3944c1a91d9914d97d1f5c

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Regulator overhauls fund to get broadband to all Americans (Reuters)

WASHINGTON (Reuters) ? All Americans will have broadband access to Internet and telephone services by the end of the decade under new rules adopted by U.S. regulators.

The rules also reform a broken system of phone charges fraught with inefficiency and should result in $2.2 billion in savings passed down to consumers, the Federal Communications Commission estimates.

The FCC voted unanimously on Thursday to modernize its universal service program, aiming to help the 18 million Americans who have no access to broadband where they live and work.

The new rules will shift the roughly $4.5 billion in public money spent annually to subsidize telephone service for rural families to high-speed Internet in rural America and costly-to-serve areas.

Challenging terrain, long distances from existing networks and low population density are among the factors creating gaps in infrastructure as broadband providers consider these areas not profitable to serve.

“We are taking a system designed for the Alexander Graham Bell era of rotary telephones and modernizing it for the era of Steve Jobs and the Internet future he imagined,” FCC Chairman Julius Genachowski said at the agency’s open meeting.

Broadband buildout to unserved areas could begin in early 2012 under the plan, bringing high-speed Internet to hundreds of thousands of homes in the near term.

The plan approved on Thursday would phase out funding for landline phone service over a period of years as companies move to a competitive bidding process for securing funds for broadband.

Companies now receiving phone service subsidies would get first dibs in some areas to receive support for deploying broadband service.

The rules will also reform the complex system of payments among carriers called intercarrier compensation, gradually reducing per-minute intercarrier compensation charges.

The FCC earlier in the year proposed modernizing the $8 billion universal service fund — paid for through fees added to consumers’ telephone bills — to spur infrastructure investment while removing inefficiencies in the program.

The new rules overhaul the largest portion of the universal service program to directly support fixed and mobile broadband while phasing out spending on duplicative services offered by several phone companies serving the same area.

The new Connect America Fund created by the rules will have a firm $4.5 billion a year budget, the first budget constraint ever imposed on the program.

FCC Commissioner Robert McDowell said the fund will not be able to exceed its annual $4.5 billion cap through 2017 without agency approval.

“It is my hope that competitive forces will flourish and the development of new technologies will create additional efficiencies throughout the system,” McDowell said.

He added that such advances should substantially diminish the need for subsidies in this area, and perhaps the day would come when Congress could deem no support is necessary.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/internet/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20111027/wr_nm/us_fcc_usf_reform

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FCC Fridays: September 23, 2011

We here at Engadget Mobile tend to spend a lot of way too much time poring over the latest FCC filings, be it on the net or directly on the ol’ Federal Communications Commission’s site. Since we couldn’t possibly (want to) cover all the stuff that goes down there, we’ve gathered up all the raw info you may want (but probably don’t need). Enjoy!

Phones

Read – Fujitsu F04D
Read – HTC PI06110 Radar (AWS)
Read – Huawei C2931
Read – Huawei C8511
Read – Huawei C8651
Read – Huawei G6050
Read – LG E510G
Read – LG L85C
Read – Motorola WX306
Read – Samsung GT-E2600
Read – Samsung SGH-I857
Read – Samsung SGH-I937 (Focus S)
Read – ZTE Movistar Vega
Read – ZTE V860

Tablets and peripherals

Read – Archos A100H
Read – Kobo Vox
Read – Motorola HZ720
Read – Motorola KZ500 bluetooth keyboard
Read – Samsung HM6000

FCC Fridays: September 23, 2011 originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 23 Sep 2011 10:27:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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