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Schools

Technology-Driven Education in New Jersey: More than Child's Play

Time and money, two decidedly low-tech challenges, could well be the biggest obstacles facing technology-enabled education in New Jersey

The following story appears today on the NJ Spotlight website. This is part two of a series that began with .

When school starts in the fall, all kindergarteners in Auburn, Maine, will greet their new teachers, sit in their small chairs and start playing and working with their iPad2s.

The school committee in this city of about 23,000 near Lewiston voted in early April to provide about 285 children who are attending school for the first time with their own tablet computers.

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"It can close the gap for many students; it can also accelerate the learning for many others," said Thomas Morrill, the district superintendent, explaining that he believes moving to this technology will boost the district’s literacy rate from about 60 percent to 90 percent in the next three years. "It will change the way we do business in classrooms."

As news about the iPads spread first across the city, then the state and then the nation, a debate began to rage over this decision to give children who can’t read or write, and who sometimes throw things, the latest in portable computing.

Find out what's happening in Lawrencevillewith free, real-time updates from Patch.

"Not every school system has the foresight and also the tenacity to make sure our kids are going to successful," Morrill told the school committee in introducing his proposal. "There will be obstacles. We must persevere."

Click here to continue reading this story from NJ Spotlight.

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