American Institutes for Research released a study of how iPads were used in a subset of schools that adopted them. This is the first phase of Superintendent John Deasy’s $1.3 billion plan to give an iPad or similar device to every student and staff member in the district.
Things are not going well so far. AIR found a need for more technical support.
“School staffers working on the project that sent iPads to 30,490 students and 1,360 teachers at 47 campuses last year “needed to spend their time on technical troubleshooting rather than supporting technology integration into instruction in the first year of implementation,” according to a summary of the report.
“In May, AIR visited 15 schools, observing that iPads were being used in less than half of classrooms it viewed, although the devices were present in 79 percent of those rooms.
“Three of the schools, two unidentified high schools and one elementary school, weren’t using the iPads. The report notes that several schools had put the devices away in late spring 2014 “for different reasons.”
And more problems:
“A July report by LAUSD’s inspector general found 31 percent of 9,910 iPads sampled were missing, because LAUSD “was unable to provide the current location and number of iPads distributed to each school after numerous requests were made over a five-month period.”
“The missing iPads were valued at $1.6 million, according to the inspector general’s report.
“Additionally, last month Superintendent John Deasy ordered a contract to buy iPads and digital curriculum be re-bid amid concerns over favoritism.
“Emails between district administrators and Pearson representatives — an Apple subcontractor that was picked to create curriculum for LAUSD’s iPads — indicate Pearson pitches were later made part of the district’s bidding criteria, a practice that can eliminate competitors.
“Earlier this year, the school board voted to drop its iPad-only plan and spend up to $40 million to pilot six different types of laptops and tablets at 27 schools.”

Who cares about scholarly research? Don’t confuse me with facts, my mind is already made up. The modus operandi of these political hacks.
LikeLike
If you happen to have a few minutes to spare for the public good, here is how to file a request for a Grand Jury inverstigation. Anyone can do this. Imagine hundreds of requests filed today asking that Deasy and his whole administration be investigated by the Grand Jury
Thanks Rene for getting this to us.
———————
Have you filled out your Grand Jury Complaint Form asking for the
Los Angeles Grand Jury to investigate Superintendent Deasy for
abuse of power ?
If not review the forms attached.
1) Grand Jury Complaint Example Form with 2nd Page Instructions
2) Blank Grand Jury Complaint Form (to be printed out for mass dissemination)
A) Any adult can file a complaint. Superintendent Deasy has wasted millions
in tax payer dollars, abused the due process rights of teachers, and created an
unstable educational system by removing and firing teachers on the basis of
ALLEGATION. This is against the public interest and Must be investigated. Any
public citizen can ask the Grand Jury to investigate Superintendent Deasy.
You do not have to be a LAUSD employee to file a complaint.
B) COMPLAINT SUBMISSIONS ARE CONFIDENTIAL. Mail the complaint
to the address on bottom of instruction sheet. YOUR NAME WILL NOT
BE GIVEN TO LAUSD.
C) Read BOTH the Instructions and the Complaint Example Form Carefully.
The EXAMPLE Form is an Example. Adapt your complaint to your personal
circumstances. For general citizens, waste of tax payer dollars, abuse of
human rights, and an unstable educational system are all legitimate interests
of a general public citizen. If you have questions, email.
D) District bulletins 5813, and 6211 specify district policies regarding rehousing.
To file a complaint that these policies are NOT BEING FOLLOWED print out and include
ONLY THE FIRST PAGE of each bulletin.
E) The bulletins are located at these web addresses. Give them time to load.
Bulletin 5813
Click to access Reassignment%20Housing%20of%20District%20Certificated%20and%20Classified%20Employees.pdf
Bulletin 6211
Click to access EMPLOYEE%20INAPPROPRIATE%20CONDUCT%20POLICY%20%26%20PROCEDURES.PDF
LikeLike
Sorry guys…wrong one above. Those are forms for wounded teachers to use.
Here is the info for everyone on how to file a Grand Jury request.
Ellen Lubic
September 18, 2014 at 2:03 pm
Colleagues…anyone can file a Grand Jury form asking for investigation of LAUSD. Just think if hundreds were to be filed today.
Form below…………………………………….
CITIZEN COMPLAINT FORM
DATE:
1. Who: Name:
Address:
City, State, Zip Code:
Telephone: ( ) Extension:
2. What: Subject of Complaint.
3. When: Date(s) of incident:
4. Where:
5. Why/How: Attach pertinent documents and correspondence with dates.
Complaint Guidelines Rev 01/17/2013
2.Briefly state the nature of complaint and the action of what Los Angeles County
department, section, agency, or official(s) that you believe was illegal or improper. Use additional sheets if necessary.
4. Names and addresses of other departments, agencies or officials involved in this complaint. Include dates and
types of contact, i.e. phone, letter, personal. Use additional sheets if necessary.
Communications from the public can provide valuable information to the Civil Grand Jury. Any private
citizen, government employee, or officer may submit a completed complaint form to request that the Civil
Grand Jury conduct an investigation. This complaint must be in writing and is treated as confidential. Prior to
submitting the Complaint Form to the Grand Jury office, please retain a copy for your records if needed.
Receipt of all complaints will be acknowledged.
If the Civil Grand Jury determines that a matter is within the legally permissible scope of its investigative
powers and would warrant further inquiry, additional information may be requested. If a matter does not fall
within the Civil Grand Jury’s investigative authority, or the jury determines not to investigate a complaint, no
action will be taken and there will be no further contact from the Civil Grand Jury.
The findings of any investigation conducted by the Civil Grand Jury can be communicated only in a formal
final report published at the conclusion of the Grand Jury’s term, June 30th.
Some complaints are not suitable for civil grand jury action. For example, the Civil Grand Jury has no
jurisdiction over judicial performance, actions of the court, or cases that are pending in the courts.
Grievances of this nature must be resolved through the established judicial appeal system. The Civil Grand
Jury has no jurisdiction or authority to investigate federal or state agencies. Only causes of action occurring
within the County of Los Angeles are eligible for review.
The jurisdiction of the Civil Grand Jury includes the following:
a.Consideration of evidence of misconduct against public officials within Los Angeles County.
b.Inquiry into the condition and management of the jails within the county.
c. Investigation and report on the operations, accounts, and records of the officers, departments or
functions of the county including those operations, accounts, and records of any special legislative
district or other district in the county created pursuant to state law for which the officers of the
county are serving in their ex officio capacity as officers of the districts.
d.Investigation of the books and records of any incorporated city or joint powers agency located in the
county.
Mail complaint form to: Los Angeles County Civil Grand Jury
Clara Shortridge Foltz Criminal Justice Center
210 West Temple Street, Eleventh Floor, Room 11-506
Los Angeles, CA 90012
LikeLike
So, the missing $1.6 million is just the cost of doing business with tax dollars? No locater devices on those ipads? Absurd, malfeasance.
LikeLike
Laura,despite the negative aspects of AIR’s report, there are reasons to doubt it. Turns out AIR takes a lot of money from Grates, and the fellow in charge is Matt Hill who is given gifts from AIR and os also paid by Gates. I am not sure what it means. However We are not mistaken if we assume the report ought to be much worse than it is
LikeLike
Does the name Prof. Harold Hill ring a bell?
LikeLike
Today’s LA Times LATEXTRA Section AA pg1 Sept 18, 2014
Title: District study faults use of iPads
One teacher out of 245 classrooms (out of 19 schools) used online curriculum
4 out of 5 high schools rarely used tablets
There was no High School math curriculum provided (with math one of two areas tested in Common Core)
At least one school preferred the District’s own reading program over Pearson’s
Without identifying the ‘district leader’ or technical specialist’ the article quotes them as saying that deployment was a priority and that prof development was shorted.
The article notes Deasy’s previous comment that the project was “an astonishing success.”
This has to be either serious mismanagement, or lying on Deasy’s part.
Or, maybe they really do have better Koolaide at the district offices.
LikeLike
I wish AIR would come to my district and do a study about our district’s attempt at distributing tablets to all 7th and 9th graders. They would find a similar waste of time spent on tech issues due to the horrible choice of device our district picked that can barely pick up wi-fi (I would kill for an iPad)
http://kafkateach.wordpress.com/2014/08/24/byod-seriously-bring-your-own-device-2/ .
Then the corporation in charge of delivering the charging carts did not properly equip them and teachers were forced to spend hours of their own time hooking up the chargers and charging tablets after school http://kafkateach.wordpress.com/2014/08/21/dongles-dongles-and-more-dongles/.
No wonder teachers aren’t using them! They didn’t even provide any paid trainings. Just threw tablets at the teachers the first week of school and said “use them.”
LikeLike
Definitely a solution in search of a problem.
LikeLike
When ancient civilizations mysteriously disappeared like the Mayans or Anasazi, they didn’t run out of water, they had acquired tablet computers.
LikeLike
Too bad AIR was not asked to provide a template for what is needed to correct all the failures they so clearly refer to.
That figure would certainly be nothing short of an atomic bomb to Deasy and his pals. He certainly knew what was needed, but didn’t have the time or the willingness to be honest about these costs when he first introduced the plan. It was hard to convince everyone that spending 1.3 billion was okay, let alone the hundreds of millions more needed to actually make the whole project work.
LikeLike
This iPad fiasco is just one example of how tech often has a net negative impact on education, while providing a net profit to Silicon Valley.
LikeLike
This seems to be a prime example of one of the many ways in which the “leaders” of a district fall astray of what public education should be about.
School districts adopt something they think will help make all students successfully pass the test without asking the professionals. The ones that should have a say in what new program or gadget is adopted are the ones that work with kids, think about what motivates, inspires, and enriches the lives of their students. Teachers would also know that there needs a developed plan to implement new changes, and time to discuss what is working, what is not, and where do you go from here. It is the teachers that need to be asked.
My district, the one I desperately need a break from and so have taken a leave of absence to rethink my role in public education, spent too much money on a new reading program. All must get trained in it, all must use it. There are so many teachers at my school that have been teaching for more than 20 years. We know how to teach reading well. We also know when to get help from our colleagues when we need to know more. I know, mandated new programs are an old problem, but one that we must find a way out of. Teachers must take back their profession. This same district continues to hold on to close to 19 million dollars that schools, teachers, students don’t have access to. So many problems, so many issues, and it is the kids and families that are loosing out.
We must find a way to have our voices heard.
LikeLike
A TEACHER’S PERSPECTIVE ON
HOW THE I-PADS ACTUALLY
WORKED IN PRACTICE:
Apart from the corruption involved—
conflicts of interests; going thru the
motions of a sham bidding process
when the winner had already been
chosen, etc.—one thing people forget
is that the $1.3 Billion Ipad purchase
was a majorly dumb-ass idea on
so many OTHER levels it’s hard to believe.
First of all, the bond money Deasy
blew on the Ipad debacle was
meant for the construction and
repair of existing BUILDINGS and
related infrastructure. Deasy and his
allies made the looney argument
that the portable hand computers constituted
PART of the building infrastructure…
WTF???!!!
After a stretch like that, even most
pliant gymnast would be on muscle
relaxants for weeks.
Another consideration is that, in practice,
Deasy was warned by teachers (like
the one BELOW) about all the problems
that would crop up in the actual
implementation.
Mind you, these are problems that
played out, and still would have played
out…
1) even if spending a billion-plus dollars of construction
bond money on I-pads was legally allowable (it ain’t)
and
2) even if the entire process was conducted
on the up-and-up, with no corruption
or conflict of interests (it wasn’t).
The whole I-pad purchase was, again,
a majorly dumbass undertaking from
the get-go, and this, again, was pointed
out by UTLA, parents, and community members.
Right now, that same bond money that
was blown in the Ipad fiasco..
… that same money would have gone
to repair… for example…
desperately-needed air-conditioning in the older
LAUSD school buildings. Instead, it went to
I-pads, and this has meant that children are now
sitting in classes that are the equivalent
of ovens… drenched with sweat, unable
to even concentrate… in this brutal
heat wave that we’re enduring this week.
Thanks Dr. Deasy! (while Deasy sits in his
air-conditioned, luxury office on the 24th
floor of LAUSD Admin. building at
3rd and Beaudry downtown as this
plays out.)
Below is a link to an article on a blog
written by LAUSD teacher Martha
Infante—who teaches in South Central.
This is from her own individual blog.
In this blog post, she goes after OTHER aspects
of the Ipad debacle not covered in the
media — the fact that, apart from the
implementation of Pearson’s Common
Core testing, these I-pads were
completely useless.
Again, this is written from the
point-of-view of a the teacher on
the ground giving the actual skinny
on what actually went on with
how the Ipads performed:
Martha offers countless other criticisms:
—students getting robbed while
taking them home (as they have for
much less expensive items)
—With no policies and safeguards
in place, these devices would “disappear”
from schools and find themselves on the
black market. (they have);
—current and former administrators
refused to take responsibility for missing
computer devices”;
—students do not want to use
these devices with only Pearson
software installed on them;
—diversion of bond money that
should have gone for building repairs,
cleaning, resources, and overall
infrastructure, etc.;
—LAUSD greatly overpaid for them;
—each school’s wifi network could not
handle the usage by their entire student body.
Beyond that, there were practical uses
that were prevented by the Person/Common
Core programmed priority that went along
with, and were built in to these devices:
—No opportunity to Skype with schools
around the world,
—no ability to make “Prezis” ( (SaaS
use Ipads for class presentations
using presentation software and storytelling
tool for presenting ideas on a virtual canvas.)
— no general internet access to look stuff up.
—Once testing was over, these devices
were sent back to the district.
—teachers were totally left out of
the decision-making;
MARTHA INFANTE:
“No one asked us, the teachers, and every last prediction came true. When people started asking questions, they were silenced.”
(Regarding one of those being “silenced”, Martha hyperlinks to the times
article “LAUSD has enough yes-men; it needs Stuart Magruder,”
about a parent member of the Bond Oversight committee who voiced objections,
and was canned in Parliamentary maneuver by LAUSD Board Member
Tamar Galatzan… a corporate reformist whose campaign was
bankrolled by Eli Broad and Bill Gates, among others.
http://www.latimes.com/opinion/editorials/la-ed-magruder-20140617-story.html
Martha continues…
MARTHA INFANTE: “Now I start my school year with students sharing cell phones with each other to do research (contrary to popular belief, not all students from poverty have internet access). I research ways to write grants for a class set of kindles, because these are the most affordable and at least they can connect to the worldwide web.
“But worse, I suffer the insult of a Bostonian man telling me that he is more interested and invested in improving the lives of our students than I and thousands of others of educators are and have been.
“I am not content to let this ride out. My students don’t have a voice (yet) and I do. Stay tuned for more blogging this year, and thank you for reading.”
—————————————————-
Here’s the entirety of Martha’s blog article:
http://dontforgetsouthcentral.blogspot.com/2014/08/ipads-are-good-for-students-arent-they.html
Don’t Forget South Central: iPads Are Good For Students, Aren’t They?
————————————————–
————————————————–
“Don’t Forget South Central: iPads Are Good For Students. Aren’t they?
“If you believe technology can replace teachers, then yes. I do not believe it. Let me back up. Hi! My name is Martha Infante and I have been in education for 24 yea…
“As a career classroom teacher, it has been a surreal experience to live trough the transformation of my profession.
“If you believe technology can replace teachers, then yes. I do not believe it.
“Let me back up.
“Hi! My name is Martha Infante and I have been in education for 24 years. I love teaching. I would also love a class set of computers for my students to do research and projects, but our schools have been decimated in recent years with budget cuts and we are only now recovering. In fact, this is what got me started in blogging.
“Why is the iPad issue so controversial? It might be because our Superintendent John Deasy, who sees himself as a champion of civil rights, believes iPads will equalize educational opportunities for students from poverty. Not more teachers, counselors, clean buildings, resources, training…but iPads.
“The Los Angeles Unified School District, however, is paying $768 per device for its students, teachers and administrators, making it one of the nation’s most expensive technology programs.
“After we overpaid for these devices with bond money, they made their appearance in my school for one purpose only: to test children. No opportunity to Skype with schools around the world, no ability to make Prezis, no general internet access to look stuff up. Once testing was over, these devices were sent back to the district.
“What did we give up when choosing these expensive devices? Well, the money that could have gone to infrastructure went to iPads. As a result, schools have ant, roach, and rodent issues, broken classrooms and buildings, and few devices to use for instructional purposes.
“I have a real problem with not involving teachers in the conversation. My main concern was that students would get robbed (and possibly injured) while taking their iPads home. This happens regularly in the neighborhood where I teach, for much less valuable items.
“With no policies and safeguards in place, these devices would “disappear” from schools and find themselves on the black market.
“At Dymally Senior High, “current and former administrators refused to take responsibility for missing computer devices,” the report said.-LA Times
“Students will not want to use these devices with only Pearson software installed on them.
“Was each school’s wifi network enough to handle the usage by their entire student body?
“No one asked us, the teachers, and every last prediction came true. When people started asking questions, they were silenced.
“LAUSD has enough yes-men; it needs Stuart Magruder
“Now I start my school year with students sharing cell phones with each other to do research (contrary to popular belief, not all students from poverty have internet access). I research ways to write grants for a class set of kindles, because these are the most affordable and at least they can connect to the worldwide web.
“But worse, I suffer the insult of a Bostonian man telling me that he is more interested and invested in improving the lives of our students than I and thousands of others of educators are and have been.
“I am not content to let this ride out. My students don’t have a voice (yet) and I do. Stay tuned for more blogging this year, and thank you for reading.”
LikeLike