This Dad is not a fan of parents spending money on devices for their kids to take to school. Especially when there’s no choice in the matter…
I’ve just had the dubious pleasure of shelling out the better part of $2000 so two of my (public) high school age kids can be properly equipped to receive education this year. No, I wasn’t buying solid gold pens and Cartier school bags. I was buying something much less useful. Apple iPads. And I couldn’t escape the nagging feeling that all I was really doing was providing them with weapons of mass distraction.
In the 2007 federal election campaign, Kevin Rudd promised that if he were elected Prime Minister, he’d spend $1 billion giving every high school child (in years 9 to 12) a laptop with high-speed internet access.
Rudd was elected and he came good with the promise. Six years later, 967,000 laptops had been handed over to high school students (at a cost of $2.4 billion, but you didn’t really believe it would be done on budget, did you?).
My Grade 12 child was the beneficiary of this free(ish) program, so I don’t have to buy him a computer, just pay all the extra fees that weren’t covered by Kevin’s promise (like the extra support and networking needed). Unfortunately the free(ish) computer gravy train stopped at the 2013 Budget station and was never seen again. It was unceremoniously axed by a government that had bigger bills to pay.
The reason for the cash splash (according to the 2008 budget papers) was ‘to prepare one million secondary students for the jobs of the future’.
Parents love computers in schools (especially if they’re free), so the move was a sure-fire vote-winner.
Teachers also generally regard computers as a Good Thing to have in schools, even if they can’t immediately think of anything to do with them.