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Google is equipping more rural school buses with Wi-Fi and Chromebooks

Google is equipping more rural school buses with Wi-Fi and Chromebooks

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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.

Each Rolling Study Hall also has an “onboard educator” who’s able to provide direct assistance. This program is the work of a partnership between Google and the Consortium for School Networking (CoSN). Today’s additions are spread across 16 districts in 12 states. Those states are:

  • Alabama
  • Colorado
  • Georgia
  • Kansas
  • Minnesota
  • New Mexico
  • Oregon
  • Pennsylvania
  • South Carolina
  • Tennessee
  • Texas
  • Virginia

CBS News has a good write-up on one of the earlier pilot trials in South Carolina’s rural Berkeley County, where Google just so happens to operate one of its data centers. The company says it has “awarded more than $1.9 million to local schools and nonprofits” since 2009.

Caldwell County, North Carolina — another home to one of Google’s backend operations centers — has been participating in the Rolling Study Halls program since 2016. Some of the district’s students are definitely spending a good chunk of their day on the bus:

Approximately 67 percent of the Gamewell Middle School population is assigned to one of the nine standard yellow buses. More than 400 miles are logged on the Gamewell Middle School buses each day, and throughout the district, the average bus route is 1.5 hours in the morning and in the afternoon.

That puts things in perspective, doesn’t it? I had it pretty easy as a suburban kid.

At least in North Carolina, each bus went through a six-week setup process, during which it was loaded up with Wi-Fi, devices, and cameras that the school could monitor remotely through a live feed.

Just last week, Apple introduced a new iPad and education software that it hopes will help cut into Google’s dominance of classroom devices. But programs like Rolling Study Halls show how Google is trying to establish Chromebooks as vital learning tools — even before students step off the bus in the morning.