California K-12 High Speed Network A State Program at your Service

22
California K-12 High Speed Network A State Program at your Service EXPANDING K-12 access to rich content resources to enhance teaching and learning ENABLING those resources to be reliably available PROMOTING K-20 collaboration

description

California K-12 High Speed Network A State Program at your Service. EXPANDING K-12 access to r ich content resources t o enhance teaching and learning ENABLING t hose resources to be reliably available PROMOTING K-20 collaboration. The Short History. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of California K-12 High Speed Network A State Program at your Service

Page 1: California K-12 High Speed Network A State Program at your Service

California K-12 High Speed Network

A State Program at your Service

E X P A N D I N G K-12 access to rich content resourcesto enhance teaching and learningENABLINGthose resources to be reliably

availablePROMOTINGK-20 collaboration

Page 2: California K-12 High Speed Network A State Program at your Service

The Short History 2000-01, K-12 was added to the California Research and

Education Network (CalREN), which previously served the UC and CSU systems.

2000-01 through 2003-04, funding for K-12’s services were passed by University of California to CENIC.

2004 the State legislature shifted funding to an LEA through the CDE (thereby capturing the expenditure as a Prop 98 expense).

To accomplish the shift, CDE issued an RFP and awarded the K-12 High Speed Network to the consortium led by Imperial County Office of Education and including Butte COE and Mendocino COE.

In 2006, AB1228 codified the program under Education Code §11800 and established goals for the K12HSN.

Page 3: California K-12 High Speed Network A State Program at your Service

The CalRENThe California Research and Education Network (CalREN) serves the California K-20 community:

State of California’s University of California (UC) system

State of California’s State University (CSU) system State of California Community College system Private California Universities that opt to connectThe vast majority of K-12 Community

Page 4: California K-12 High Speed Network A State Program at your Service

As of November 2013, 88% of California School Districts and almost 7,800 schools (83%) are connected to CalREN through K12HSN

In this aggregation model, districts are able to procure affordable connections to one of the 72 K12HSN Node Sites

CENIC - CalREN

Page 5: California K-12 High Speed Network A State Program at your Service
Page 6: California K-12 High Speed Network A State Program at your Service

DataLink - Detailed Breakdown

*

Page 7: California K-12 High Speed Network A State Program at your Service
Page 8: California K-12 High Speed Network A State Program at your Service
Page 9: California K-12 High Speed Network A State Program at your Service

Key Bandwidth Drivers in K12Common Core State Standards

Technology Embedded in the standards1:1 initiatives

Online Computer Assessments (CAASPP)

Transition to off-premise services (cloud)E-mail, Student Information Systems,

Storage, Disaster Recovery

Page 10: California K-12 High Speed Network A State Program at your Service

ThemesIncreased “appetite” for bandwidthNetwork traffic growth rate is rapidly

increasingLeveraging and increased

collaboration amongst education segments

Technology embedded in instruction, not to supplement

Page 11: California K-12 High Speed Network A State Program at your Service

ConnectED GoalsCalls for connecting 99% of America’s students, through next-generation broadband (at speeds no less than 100Mbps and with a target of 1Gbps) to, and high-speed wireless within, their schools and libraries by 2018

Page 12: California K-12 High Speed Network A State Program at your Service

Circuit Pricing ExampleCircuit Size High LowAverage45 Mbps(13) $17,776 $2,247 $7,3601 Gbps(66) $10,235 $2,817 $4,30110 Gbps(13) $14,755 $5,635 $6,517

Page 13: California K-12 High Speed Network A State Program at your Service

Simple Math (by 2018)10587 Schools upgrading to 1 Gbps$4,301 monthly x 12 = $51,612$51,612 x 10587 schools = $546.5 M /yearE-rate Subsidy (65% average) = $355 MSubject to CTF (35% remaining) = $191.5 M50% of $191.5M = $95M potential K12 draw

Page 14: California K-12 High Speed Network A State Program at your Service

ChallengesThe 4 “R” s

RuralRemoteRedwoodsRTI $ model

Page 15: California K-12 High Speed Network A State Program at your Service

Equity of Access For Student Learning

At school sites

At communities centers

At student/family residences

Page 16: California K-12 High Speed Network A State Program at your Service

Wireless Mobile Broadband in California:

An Assessment

CPUC Mobile Testing ProjectFourth Round Testing,February 2014

 Ken BibaManaging Director,Novarum

Page 17: California K-12 High Speed Network A State Program at your Service
Page 18: California K-12 High Speed Network A State Program at your Service

Plan for rural broadband collapses

Page 19: California K-12 High Speed Network A State Program at your Service

http://www.pressdemocrat.com/article/20140303/articles/14030982

Ben Ewing looks for music on Pandora on his iPad, which is set up at a window in order to reach his neighbor's wi-fi signal, at his home near Occidental on Friday, February 28, 2014. Ewing has his neighbor Jim Robinson's permission to piggyback the wi-fi network Robinson set up with a tree-mounted wireless antenna. (CHRISTOPHER CHUNG / The Press Democrat)

Page 20: California K-12 High Speed Network A State Program at your Service
Page 21: California K-12 High Speed Network A State Program at your Service
Page 22: California K-12 High Speed Network A State Program at your Service

For more information, please contact Paul Tichinin,

707-467-5001 or [email protected] Wong or Russ Selken

(760) 312-6512 or (530)532-5772email: [email protected] or [email protected]