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Upgrading Technology Infrastructure in California’s Schools

By Patrick Murphy, Niu Gao

As California schools move into online testing and online learning, an adequate technology infrastructure is no longer an option, but a necessity. To fully benefit from digital learning, schools will require a comprehensive technology infrastructure that can support a range of administrative and instructional tools. An earlier PPIC report found that most schools need significant technology upgrades in order to accommodate online learning. What upgrades do schools need most, and how much will they cost? How can policymakers help ensure that all students have access to 21st-century learning tools?

This report describes findings based on new statewide data. First, schools need high-density wireless networks, increased bandwidth, and overall network infrastructure upgrades. The challenges are greater in large schools, mostly because of the high cost of wireless networks for large groups of users. Second, IT staffing continues to be an issue in most schools. Only a third of schools have staff onsite to support desktop and local network configuration.

To estimate the costs of upgrading technology infrastructure, we created two scenarios. Our baseline scenario—which includes minimum bandwidth for digital learning, one device for every two middle- and high-school students, and one IT staffer for every 300 computing devices—would cost an additional $1.5 billion over the next three years. Our target scenario—which involves additional bandwidth and one device to every middle- and high-school student—would cost significantly more: $3.8 billion. In either scenario, staffing costs are more than 60 percent of the total.

As the state explores ways to address these ongoing technology needs, we offer several recommendations. First, continue and maintain sustained funding for technology investment, particularly for staffing. Second, provide targeted technical assistance to address severe staffing problems. Third, to ensure that all students have full access to digital learning, take advantage of federal funding and explore innovative partnerships with private sector to cover the cost of home broadband access for students from lower-income families.

Statewide Survey

PPIC Statewide Survey: Californians and Information Technology

By Mark Baldassare, Jennifer Paluch, Dean Bonner, Sonja Petek

Some findings of the current survey:

  • Less than half of California Latinos (48%) have home computers compared to about eight in 10 or more for whites (86%), Asians (84%), and blacks (79%). Just four in 10 Latinos (40%) have Internet access and a third (34%) a broadband connection at home.
  • Among households with incomes under $40,000, half have home computers, but only four in 10 (40%) have home Internet access and just a third (33%) have broadband.
  • Twenty-nine percent of Californians have DSL, 19 percent have cable modems, 5 percent have wireless, and 2 percent have fiber optic or T-1 connections. Just 7 percent have dial-up connections.

This is the 87th PPIC Statewide Survey and the first in the Californians and Information Technology survey series, whose intent is to inform state policymakers, encourage discussion, and raise public awareness about a variety of information technology issues. This survey includes the responses of 2,503 Californians in multiple languages, on both landline and cell phones, and was conducted in collaboration with the California Emerging Technology Fund.

Statewide Survey

PPIC Statewide Survey: Californians and Information Technology

By Mark Baldassare, Dean Bonner, Sonja Petek, Jui Shrestha

Some findings of the current survey:

  • Californians are becoming increasingly mobile in their Internet use—there have been double-digit increases in cell-phone and tablet Internet access.
  • Californians’ Internet use and broadband access at home are comparable to that of adults nationwide.
  • Most view broadband Internet as a public utility and would favor a program funded by telecommunications providers to increase access.

Mood of Californians:
General Direction of Things in California[PDF]
Economic Outlook for California[PDF]

Time Trends for the Mood of Californians:
General Direction of Things in California[XLS]
Economic Outlook for California[XLS]

This survey was supported with funding from the California Emerging Technology Fund and ZeroDivide.

Report

Has Managed Care Affected the Availability of Medical Technology?

By Joanne Spetz, Laurence Baker

The consensus among health care researchers is that managed care has played a key role in slowing the surging cost of health care.  However, one of the most powerful factors driving the long-term growth of health care expenditures is technology diffusion—the development and use of medical technology.  If managed care organizations cannot effectively control the long-term diffusion of technology, it is unlikely that they will be able to continue to curtail rising costs.  This study examines the relationships between managed care and technology diffusion over a ten-year period in 261 metropolitan areas throughout the United States.

Statewide Survey

PPIC Statewide Survey: Californians and Information Technology

By Mark Baldassare, Jennifer Paluch, Dean Bonner, Sonja Petek

Some findings of the current survey:

  • The share of Californians with broadband is up 7 points since last year, with Internet use increasing by 6 points, and Internet access at home by 4 points.
  • A large majority of Californians, 83 percent, believe access to high-speed broadband is important, including 76 percent without broadband themselves.
  • Latinos in California still lag well behind whites, blacks, and Asians in measures such as broadband adoption.
Mood of Californians:
General Direction of Things in California
Economic Outlook for California
 
 
This survey is supported by funding from the California Emerging Technology Fund and ZeroDivide.

Statewide Survey

PPIC Statewide Survey: Californians and Information Technology

By Mark Baldassare, Dean Bonner, Sonja Petek, Jui Shrestha

Some findings of the current survey:

  • The share of Californians using a cell phone to access the Internet has doubled in three years, from 19 to 40 percent.
  • Surfing the web via cell phone is up for all racial and ethnic groups.
  • Forty-one percent of residents in the San Francisco Bay Area use cell phones to work remotely; 31 percent in Los Angeles and 24 percent in the Central Valley do so.

Mood of Californians:
General Direction of Things in California [PDF]
Economic Outlook for California [PDF]

Time Trends for the Mood of Californians:
General Direction of Things in California [XLS]
Economic Outlook for California [XLS]

This survey was supported with funding from the California Emerging Technology Fund and ZeroDivide.

Occasional Paper, Report

Expanding California’s Technology Sector

By Jon D. Haveman

Testimony before the Assembly Subcommittee on Information Technology and the California World Trade Commission, Manny Diaz and John Morris, co-Chairs, November 21, 2002.

blog post

Video: Upgrading Technology in California Schools

By Linda Strean

When it comes to upgrading technology in California schools, money and training are big challenges. But leadership and collaboration are powerful tools that can help schools make progress.

California Economic Policy, Report

Recent Trends in Exports of California’s information Technology Products

By Jon D. Haveman, Howard J. Shatz

Documents changing patterns in California’s manufactured information technology exports during the recent boom and bust period (1997-2003). Finds that much of the decline in the total value of exports (which dropped by $25 billion or 42% between 2000 and 2003) stemmed from lower purchases of California commodities worldwide. Concludes that the vast majority of the drop-off in California’s share of U.S exports stems from redirection of purchases away from California to other states. Explores possible reasons why this has occurred.

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