Essentials Magazine Essentials Summer 2014 | Page 20

TECHNOLOGY budget. For years, the district had been considering overhauling its technology and moving toward a 1-to-1, student-to-device strategy, but those plans had not taken off, recalled Michael Martinez, its director of educational technology. But worries that the district lacked a sufficient number of computing devices or reliable Internet connectivity to give the common-core tests online became a “primary mover” in Toledo officials’ decision to begin making those technology upgrades, he said. The urgency of the school system’s needs became clear, Mr. Martinez recalled, when he explained to district leaders that they would have to convert multiple academic classrooms into computer labs to accommodate common-core exams. As a result, the district last year contracted with a company to improve wireless technology by replacing switches, establishing wireless hubs, and making other renovations. It is also buying about 3,000 computing devices for students, as it moves toward a 1-to-1 project. By ramping up Internet speed and adding devices, the district will also create more instructional opportunities for teachers and students, Mr. Martinez predicted. Planning for the common core “opened the doors,” he added, and “allowed [the technology project] to happen. Right place, right time.” Another major purchase in the Toledo district, the replacement of a K-8 English/language arts curriculum for about $3.4 million, was strongly influenced by Ohio’s adoption of the common standards, said Bob Mendenhall, the school system’s curriculum director. The district had reviewed its math materials and concluded that they could be aligned to the common core without a major purchase, Mr. Mendenhall said, but its language arts resources were outdated. The common core “accelerated our replacement plan,” he said. Additionally, in order to prepare teachers for that shift in curriculum, the district has spent about $350,000 on professional development, including the creation of “curriculum maps” to help educators understand the standards—though those costs are covered by federal funds Ohio received through winning the Race to the Top competition. The common core’s impact on the district’s spending on assessment, meanwhile, has been more nuanced. Toledo officials needed a K-8 assessment system that could prepare students for common-core test content—and ready them for the overall experience of taking computer-based exams, said Mr. Beard, the district’s data manager. But they also needed a system that could churn out results that could be used for Ohio’s statewide teacher-evaluation system and that also could help school officials identify struggling readers in grades K-2 and meet a state mandate that pupils read on grade level by the end of grade 3. 20 essentials | summer 2014 Ultimately, Toledo wound up purchasing the STAR assessment system for its local needs, produced by Renaissance Learning, of Wisconsin Rapids, Wis., at a cost of $240,000 during the 2012-13 academic year and $137,000 this year. Overall, the purchase of the STAR system reflected “very much a conscious desire to purchase something aligned to the common core,” Mr. Beard said. Refresh’ the Curriculum In the Baltimore County, Md., school system, officials are only now delving into what the common core means for spending, said Richard L. Gay, the purchasing manager for the 108,000-student system. The common core typically isn’t the trigger for any single purchase, but instead acts as a “framework” that is shaping spending across the board, Mr. Gay said. For instance, the district recently agreed to buy a $5 million elementary curriculum for language arts to replace outdated materials, and the new materials will have to be common-core-aligned. Over the next four years, the district, which has a general-fund budget of about $1.4 billion, plans to spend about $200 million on a 1-to-1 computing program. In planning for that project, district officials found that they needed to overhaul their wireless systems—which in turn will help with common-core online testing. Preparing for the common core “is not something we’re going to be able to take care of overnight,” Mr. Gay said. “Dollars are tight,” he added, and “we’ve been flatlined taking care of what we have.” As districts weigh spending decisions, some states are making purchases that they believe will help them. In New Mexico, for instance, state officials in 2012 issued a request for proposals to provide professional development to help prepare teachers in English/language arts, math, and other subjects for the common core. They received 13 responses from bidders and selected two of them—Knowledge Delivery Systems and Solution Tree—which are receiving a combined $1.4 million a year to train teachers across the state on the standards. District participation in the professional development is voluntary. About 80 percent of the state’s school systems are taking part, said Leighann Lenti, the deputy secretary for policy and programs at the state education department. Ms. Lenti said it was possible the state could have spent the same amount of money on professional development as one of the regular investments it makes in training, even if it hadn’t adopted the common core in 2010—though the standards clearly influenced the state to act when it did. “We put a lot of time and energy into supporting our teachers,” Ms. Lenti said. “When you refresh your standards, you need to refresh your curriculum, and you refresh your support for teachers.”