NMH Lauded for New Technology In Education Initiative
February 12, 2003NORTHFIELD, Massachusetts
As portable computers become smaller and lighter, Northfield Mount Hermon (NMH) has demonstrated that the best portable computer weighs exactly nothing. In a bold move that maintains its role as a leading innovator in the use of portable computing technology, NMH puts the hardware back on the desktop, while providing even greater accessibility, flexibility, convenience, and security than is possible with laptop computers. NMH believes that its Next Generation educational technology initiative establishes a new best practice for providing students with a safe, productive, and portable computing environment. Other schools that are adopting NMH's approach, and the National Association of Independent Schools (NAIS) seem to agree.
Judges from the NAIS
Leading Edge recognition program
selected Northfield
Mount Hermon as its top pick from among 250 independent
schools competing in the technology category. Led by NMH Director
of Information Technology Jon Shannon, the school developed the
Next Generation Strategy for Teaching and Learning with
Technology—or NextGen, as it’s called at NMH—which builds on the
success of an innovative notebook computer program launched in
1997. The $1.4 million capital project was implemented in
September 2002.
The original laptop program provided individual access to the
school’s state-of-the-art network and the Internet in dorms,
classrooms, and homes via the notebook computers required of each
student. Since then the school’s knowledge of educational
technology has kept in step with technological advances in the
computer industry.
The NextGen program continues to provide personalized portable
computing, but eliminates the need for students to carry equipment
to and from classes. All teachers and students now have personal
virtual desktops that can be accessed from nearly any
Internet-connected computer in the world. Students use their web
browsers to access their virtual desktop, a real Windows desktop
that overlays their screen, and school software, information
resources, personal documents, campus news and intranet, as well
as the World Wide Web.
Students now bring the computer of their choice to school, and NMH
has outfitted each classroom and most public spaces on campus with
school computers and accessories. This means that the entire
community has its work and personal virtual desktops available in
almost any location. For example, a student working on a document
in a dorm room can move to a computer in the library, log on, and
find the document just as it was left. Furthermore, the virtual
desktop software and personal documents are protected on a
centralized collection of servers, safe from viruses and problems
caused by software that students install on their own computers.
A notebook computer and its accessories may constitute up to 12
percent of a young person’s weight. Without the extra weight to
carry, students’ necks and backs are healthier. Another benefit?
Students can no longer say they couldn’t complete their homework
because the computer crashed.
Northfield Mount Hermon School One Lamplighter Way Mount Hermon, MA 01354 phone: 413-498-3000 e-mail: info@nmhschool.org



