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$1.25-million investment in technology to be felt in Victoria classrooms

Greater Victoria School District purchasing 2,300 more portable computers
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Students and visitors gather around Chromebook computers Tuesday at .J. Willis school, during the Coding Quest event for Grade 4s and 5s put on by the Greater Victoria School District. Don Descoteau/Victoria B次元官网网址

Students in the Greater Victoria School District will have more opportunities to use computers as part of their daily learning environment, with SD61 making a large investment in technology for this fall.

The district announced Tuesday that it is purchasing more than 2,300 new Chromebooks and iPads into classrooms at all three educational levels, to be available for the start of school. The move will bring the average ratio of students per computer to 4 to 1 in elementary and middle schools, and six to one in high schools.

B次元官网网址淚tB次元官网网址檚 going to be a big step for some of our schools,B次元官网网址 said district vice-principal for learning, Dave Shortreed, noting that while some schools are at those ratios already, others are basically starting from scratch. B次元官网网址淲e wanted to make sure that weB次元官网网址檙e taking care of all schools so each kid has an equal opportunity and access to technology.B次元官网网址

Spending $1 million on computer hardware B次元官网网址 1,770 Chromebooks and 585 iPads B次元官网网址 accompanies a $250,000 investment to upgrade wireless infrastructure across the district. SD61 purchased 1,600 laptops and iPads last year as part of the Technology for Learning initiative.

Much of these kinds of purchases in past have been paid for through fundraisers held by school Parent Advisory Councils.

The goal for this increased investment, Shortreed said, is not only to ensure the computers are used appropriately in the classroom and enhance the teaching of the curriculum, but to better prepare students for their futures.

B次元官网网址淭hey are taking in so much media, that they need to learn how to navigate it, they need to know how to create it, and need to know and see how they can be masters of it for their own end so they can enter this world prepared.B次元官网网址

Meanwhile Tuesday in the auditorium at S.J. Willis school, several dozen enterprising Grade 4 and 5 students from 10 SD61 schools were using Chromebooks and the video games they created to help describe science projects. The event, titled Coding Quest, gave the children a chance to show off their coding skills through games that related to the projects.

Rogers elementary schoolmates Elly Parker and Marin OB次元官网网址橰egan put together a mock-up of a vintage arcade game to surround their Donkey Kong-inspired game. Their science project was about blood and goal of the game was to heal a cut, with characters representing platelets and collagen.

Another stand, set up by a pair of View Royal elementary Grade 4 students, had music as a theme. Classmates Claire Downtown and Dylan Ringma wrote code that turned the computer keyboard into a makeshift piano, with certain keys representing notes.

B次元官网网址淚 think itB次元官网网址檚 good to learn these skills, because they can come in handy in the future,B次元官网网址 said Dylan, adding that coding is a good way to keep oneB次元官网网址檚 mind busy on something useful.

Claire, who plays the piano, agreed with her classmateB次元官网网址檚 estimation of the value of this skill. B次元官网网址淚 think programming is really important, and itB次元官网网址檚 so much fun to make character move across the screen just by using two blocks of code.B次元官网网址

Shortreed described two things happening for students participating in Coding Quest:

B次元官网网址淵ouB次元官网网址檙e seeing a science fair feel, but in addition to that youB次元官网网址檙e seeing kids learning how to make video games and (learning) the background behind a video game B次元官网网址 at the same time, theyB次元官网网址檙e teaching their favourite science concept that they learned this year,B次元官网网址 he said.

editor@vicnews.com

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Grade 5 student Elly Parker, left, and Grade 4 classmate Marin OB次元官网网址橰egan stand with their biology-based science project, which utilizes the Chromebook computer and borrows from the game Donkey Kong. They were among students from 10 SD61 schools taking part in an event called Coding Quest on Tuesday at the S.J. Willis school. Don Descoteau/Victoria B次元官网网址




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