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Palm Awards $2.3 Million in
Technology Grants to U.S. K-12 Schools and Colleges
Educators Will Study How Handhelds Affect Teaching
and Learning
CHICAGO, June 25, 2001 -- In its second round of grants from the
Palm Education Pioneer (PEP) program, Palm, Inc. (Nasdaq: PALM) today announces
it is awarding $2.3 million in Palm(TM) handheld units to elementary and
secondary schools, colleges and universities to enable innovative teaching
and learning, and to gain insight into how handheld computers affect teaching
and learning. This research will help determine best practices for integrating
handhelds into curriculum and teacher training. Palm named the grant recipients
on the opening day of the National Educational Computing Conference (NECC)
here at McCormick Place.Palm, a pioneer in the field of mobile and wireless Internet solutions and
a leading provider of handheld computers, awarded grants to 87 individual
K-12 classrooms and nine "research hubs" for a total of more than
175 classrooms. The first PEP grants were awarded to 15 K-12 schools in
January. SRI International's Center for Technology in Learning (CTL) in
Menlo Park, Calif., administers the program, and develops and conducts evaluations
to study the learning uses, experiences and effectiveness of Palm handhelds
for teaching and learning.
"We believe that partnering with educators in doing research on
the best practices and impact of handheld computers in education is one
of the most important projects we can undertake," said Mike Lorion,
vice president of education markets at Palm, Inc. "Research from
PEP grants gives educators valuable insight into how handheld technology
can be used in teaching and learning. This information helps us to create
tools that evolve with the needs of education. We added new research hubs
to broaden our research and also extend some studies into the college
pre-service and in-service environment."
The new PEP research hubs are school districts, universities and research
institutes with the infrastructure and planning in place to help teachers
use Palm handhelds effectively. PEP research hubs receive multiple classroom
sets of Palm handhelds, and will train and provide ongoing support to
teachers. In addition, they will work closely with the SRI International
evaluation team. Research hubs are the University of Michigan, College
of Engineering and School of Education's Center for Highly Interactive
Computing in Education (Hi-CE) Program, Ann Arbor, Mich.; the Concord
Consortium, Concord, Mass.; the University of California at Berkeley School
of Education's WISE (Web-Based Inquiry Science Environment), Berkeley,
Calif.; Kent State Research Center for Educational Technology (RCET),
Kent, Ohio; the Archdiocese of Dubuque School System, Dubuque, Iowa; Beaufort
County School District, Beaufort, S.C.; University of Nebraska at Omaha
College of Education, Office of Internet Studies (OIS), Omaha, Neb.; Fremont
Union High School District, Sunnyvale, Calif.; and the Gulf of Maine Aquarium,
Portland, Maine.
"SRI is committed to researching, understanding and integrating
new technologies in the teaching and learning process," said Roy
Pea, director of the Center for Technology in Learning at SRI International.
"The PEP grants deeply involve the participation of teachers and
students in locally innovating the uses of handheld computers for K-12
education. The new PEP grants expand our co-investigation with teachers
into the impact that handheld technologies can have on teaching and learning.
We expect the PEP program to make a significant contribution to the development
of handheld learning for education."
The PEP classroom grants are split between urban, rural and suburban
K-12 schools, both public and private. Individual school projects will
cover a wide span of academic areas in primary grades, middle schools
and high schools. Examples include the following:
- Students at Buford Elementary School in Lennox, Calif., will study
social studies and language using Palm handhelds to investigate the
lives of U.S. presidents in a Sherlock Holmes fashion. Using eBooks
downloaded to their Palm handhelds, students will write down relevant
questions, clues, notes and discoveries and beam their findings to each
other.
- At Goodrich Middle School in Lincoln, Neb., students will use Palm
handhelds to create fitness portfolios. Working work with the University
of Nebraska's Department of Health and Human Performance, students will
use the portfolio to store their fitness goals, daily progress, caloric
intake and out-of-school fitness activities.
- Sherrard Elementary School in Moundsville, W.Va., will use Palm handhelds
to investigate changes to the territory 200 years after the Lewis and
Clark expedition mapped it out. The students will work with the University
of Idaho and with GLOBE (Global Learning and Observations to Benefit
the Environment) team members from Wheeling Jesuit University to conduct
scientific experiments using certified GLOBE trainers and GLOBE scientific
equipment.
- Environmental science students at Cranford High School of Cranford,
N.J., will use Palm handhelds in the field to determine the effects
of development, human resource consumption and consumer purchasing decisions
on New Jersey waterways, agricultural, growing conditions and air cleanliness.
- Berkeley High School of Berkeley, Calif., will train lead writers
and editors in the use of Palm handhelds for newsgathering, sharing
resources and contacts, and fact checking as part of a project to create
the Jacket News Service (JNS), a daily online newspaper.
A complete list of the new 87 PEP K-12 grants and nine research hub awards,
listed geographically, is available at http://www.palm.com/
and http://palmgrants.sri.com.
About SRI International and SRI's Center for Technology in Learning
Silicon Valley-based SRI International (www.sri.com)
is one of the world's leading independent research and technology development
organizations. Founded in 1946 as Stanford Research Institute, SRI has
been meeting the strategic needs of global markets for 55 years. As part
of its strategy to bring its innovative technologies to the marketplace,
SRI licenses its technologies, forms strategic partnerships and creates
spin-off companies.
SRI's Center for Technology in Learning
(CTL) is world-renowned for its design, evaluation, and implementation
of educational technologies. The staff, including psychologists, computer
scientists, content specialists, anthropologists and educators, conducts
innovative research and development for clients such as the National Science
Foundation, the World Bank, the US Department of Education, LEGO, Sun
Microsystems, and the Commonwealth of Virginia.
About Palm, Inc.
Palm, Inc. is a pioneer in the field of mobile and wireless Internet solutions
and a leading provider of handheld computers, according to IDC (December
2000). Based on the Palm OS(R) platform, Palm's handheld solutions allow
people to carry and access their most critical information with them wherever
they go. Palm(TM) handhelds address the needs of individuals, enterprises
and educational institutions through thousands of application solutions.
The Palm OS platform is also the foundation for products from Palm's
licensees and strategic partners, such as Franklin Covey, HandEra
(formerly TRG), Handspring, IBM, Kyocera, Sony and Symbol Technologies.
Platform licensees also include Acer, Garmin, Nokia and Samsung.
The Palm Economy is a growing global community of industry-leading
licensees, world-class OEM customers, and approximately 160,000
innovative developers and solution providers that have registered
to develop solutions based on the Palm OS platform. Palm went public
on March 2, 2000. Its stock is traded on the Nasdaq national market
under the symbol PALM. More information is available at www.palm.com.
*Palm OS is a registered trademark and Palm is a trademark of Palm,
Inc. or its subsidiaries.
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