U.S. President Barack Obama wants the nation’s students to have access to
faster broadband in their schools and libraries.
The president Thursday announced an initiative, called ConnectED, with the
goal of bringing 100Mbps to 1Gbps broadband connections to 99 percent of
students, through schools and libraries, within five years.
“We are living in a digital age, and to help our students get ahead, we
must make sure they have access to cutting-edge technology,” Obama said during a
speech at a North Carolina middle school.
“So today, I’m issuing a new challenge for America—one that families,
businesses, school districts, and the federal government can rally around
together—to connect virtually every student in America’s classrooms to
high-speed broadband internet within five years, and equip them with the tools
to make the most of it.”
Obama asked the U.S. Federal Communications Commission to revamp its
existing E-Rate program, focused on wiring schools and libraries, to push faster
wired and mobile broadband into the same buildings.
ConnectED will also use existing federal funding to train teachers in
technology education, and it will allow schools to band together to get volume
purchasing deals on computing devices.
Reaction
ConnectED earned praise from some U.S. lawmakers and Internet
providers.
”I wholeheartedly support the president’s call to modernize the E-Rate
program in order to bring faster broadband speeds to our nation’s schools and
libraries,” Representative Anna Eshoo, a California Democrat, said in a
statement. “To enable a 21st century digital classroom, supported by
high-definition video, cloud-based services and other advanced applications, we
need bandwidth —- and lots of it.”
Comcast also supports Obama’s goals, said Sena Fitzmaurice, the company’s
vice president of government communications.
”We applaud the president for spotlighting the critical importance of
robust broadband connections in schools with the launch of the ConnectED
initiative,” she said in an email. “This program will build on the substantial
work by the FCC and the cable industry to bring high-speed Internet access to
all Americans—in schools, in libraries, and also in their homes because Internet
connectivity at schools must be paired with access at home to gain the full
educational benefits of the Internet.”
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