Faced with budget constraints many schools cut spending on classroom applications
By Laura Devaney Associate Editor eSchool News
Published: 09-06-07
By Laura Devaney Associate Editor eSchool News
Published: 09-06-07

School leaders reported that items such as professional development and instructional applications are among the first tech-related expenses they cut when budgets are tight. But the report from ed-tech consulting firm The Hayes Connection says this is a short-sighted approach that harms both teachers and students.
“When asked about tradeoffs and choices some technology directors cited the basics--cutting out travel to technology conferences as well as reducing or delaying purchases of instructional software for students” the report says.
“Interestingly few technology directors cited reducing tech-support costs as a way to cut budgets in a more significant way--this despite the fact that tech support is the fastest-growing cost area for school technology budgets.”
Hayes formerly president of education research firm Quality Education Data (QED) explained the thinking of many school leaders this way: “People tend to take the practical short easiest approach when they’re in a situation to cut budgets--they cut around the edges and I think that’s true in business too. You cut the thing that’s fastest and easiest but I don’t think that’s serving in the long run what needs to be done.”
According to QED’s 2002-03 “Technology Purchasing Forecast” tech support accounted for 14 percent of a typical school’s technology budget. In a survey Hayes’ new firm released last year called “America’s Digital Schools 2006” tech support had jumped to 28 percent of school technology budgets.
One answer for budget-strapped districts lies in reining in the growing costs of tech-support staffing the reports says.
“As the number of platforms has multiplied exponentially an idiosyncratic mix of aged and new hardware is expected to be maintained by school and district tech specialists” it says.
“Many school districts focus on the ‘small’ savings to be realized by reducing software spending (currently 22 percent of tech spending) professional development and travel while not looking at the elephant in the room.
“Many school districts focus on the ‘small’ savings to be realized by reducing software spending (currently 22 percent of tech spending) professional development and travel while not looking at the elephant in the room.
That elephant is ‘head count’--how many technical staff are employed by the district to maintain the crazy quilt of disparate hardware?