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Google Communications Education

Google is Equipping More Rural School Buses With Wi-Fi and Chromebooks (theverge.com) 59

Google on Monday said it was formally expanding its Rolling Study Halls program, or school buses equipped with WiFi, computers and on-bus educators to help rural students with work beyond school hours. From a report: Google today announced an expansion of its Rolling Study Halls initiative to over 16 additional school districts, giving "thousands" of students access to Wi-Fi and Chromebooks on their buses. Google has piloted the program in North Carolina and South Carolina over the last couple years, focusing its efforts on rural communities where some students have lengthy bus rides between home and the classroom each day.

Providing students with dependable Wi-Fi before and after school is a boon for those who might lack broadband internet at home, giving them two opportunities daily to complete assignments or study for exams while on the bus. Google contributes mobile Wi-Fi routers, data plans, and Chromebook devices.

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Google is Equipping More Rural School Buses With Wi-Fi and Chromebooks

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  • by Jeff White ( 5134215 ) on Monday April 02, 2018 @11:56AM (#56367379)
    Is this really meant to get students used to the idea they will have to work outside of work hours when they grow up and get a career? :P
    • by Actually, I do RTFA ( 1058596 ) on Monday April 02, 2018 @11:58AM (#56367399)

      No, because "work hours" and "careers" won't exist then. Instead, it'll be all gig economy things. This is to get them used to the idea that they should spend 100% of their time giving Google data.

      • by Anonymous Coward

        No, because "work hours" and "careers" won't exist then.

        Of course they will. Lazy commies are going to keep complaining that they should get shit for free, but rational people will be working.

    • No, it is really meant to assist with the data collection. The earlier you can get them hooked into a spyware device the better.
    • I mean, I had a good 40 minute bus ride back in school. My goal was all homework done before I got off.
      • I tried that but I never solved the problem of the ink bottle tipping over when the driver swerved to avoid a mammoth.

  • Study? Ha! (Score:2, Informative)

    by Anonymous Coward

    My 12-year old son would LOVE this idea...it would make it much easier to play games on his school-provided Chromebook if he had internet access for the long bus ride home. I can assure you that Chromebook gets used for much more gaming and YouTube watching than for actual schoolwork. No, they can't install apps, but there are lots of games available via the browser...

  • >> two opportunities daily to complete assignments or study for exams while on the bus

    My kids went through a mix of public and private schools. Homework is barely even a thing anymore.

    Let's be honest about what this will be: an extra 60-120 minutes of gaming per day on the bus, inside the closed Android/Chromebook ecosystem. (Not that that's necessarily a bad thing.)
    • by Anonymous Coward

      Homework is barely even a thing anymore.

      educating your kids is YOUR responsibility, if they don't have homework it's YOUR fault

  • by b0s0z0ku ( 752509 ) on Monday April 02, 2018 @12:28PM (#56367573)

    Ever tried to work on a laptop in a moving car or bus, especially one with as crappy a suspension as a school bus? Motion sickness city.

    If Google was so damn generous, they'd donate laptops with 4G modems and access, so students can do homework at home, not in a rolling distraction-box.

    • Even if you don't get motion sick, you're likely to get a few more busted units from the thing flying off their lap.

    • I developed an immunity.
    • by steveha ( 103154 )

      If Google was so damn generous, they'd donate laptops with 4G modems and access

      You heard it here, folks: b0s0z0ku has spoken, Google's gift isn't generous enough to meet b0s0z0ku's standards.

      Note that TFA says this is an expansion of an earlier pilot program that has been working out. But according to b0s0z0ku's thought experiment, it won't work. Silly Google!

      P.S. I get carsick in buses too, but I'm not going to snark at Google over this. Maybe school-age kids can use a Chromebook in a bus without gettin

      • I used to get MORE motion-sick in moving vehicles (esp while reading) when school-age than I do now. Parking at a community center is the only smart idea of the lot.
      • "Google's gift isn't generous enough to meet b0s0z0ku's standards."

        Because corporations have a duty to maximize profit, I don't believe they can ever really be called generous.

    • by antdude ( 79039 )

      That is why I avoid reading and watching in moving vehicles. I easily get carsick. :( I'd rather sleep!

  • by Archfeld ( 6757 ) <treboreel@live.com> on Monday April 02, 2018 @01:45PM (#56368029) Journal

    Now all we need is all rural school buses equipped with seat belts. At least they will be able to use the Wi-Fi and Chromebook's to say a final good-bye to their loved ones or report that they survived the crash.

My sister opened a computer store in Hawaii. She sells C shells down by the seashore.

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