St. Gabriel's Launches 1:1 iPad Initiative To Flip Classrooms

St. Gabriel's Catholic School in Austin, TX has unveiled a technology initiative designed to use iPads and videoconferencing to improve student learning through performance-based outcomes and a comprehensive evaluation of metrics.

The school, which serves students in grades preK-8, will provide each class through grade 3 with classroom iPads and provide individual iPads to all students in grades 4 and 5, and all classrooms will be connected via videoconferencing to museums, laboratories, and other learning environments.

The new technology will be integrated into the curriculum and students will be able to use the iPads to access their schoolwork remotely. Through use of a "flipped classroom" approach, students will watch Khan Academy video lessons at home and then complete assignments while in the classroom to allow teachers to directly observe student learning and meet the needs of each student as an individual.

The school is also making iPads available to St. Gabriel's language specialist to help students who require specialized support. This includes use of phonics and apps tailored for a student's individual learning needs.

The school has also announced that it will make available the findings it gathers from student metrics as the program is implemented.

"Our mission is to raise our children to be world-ready leaders," said Head of School Steve Balak. "This means we must equip them with the right tools and 21st Century skills necessary for success. We also recognize that any new classroom tool must have a positive impact on learning and performance, which requires a rigorous commitment to evaluation. We are proud to launch a comprehensive strategy not only to put the best technology into the hands of our students and teachers, but also to adequately and honestly assess its impact. It is not about technology for technology's sake; it's about using technology to obtain results. Technology is a tool, not a toy."

The initiative builds on an existing commitment to technology at St. Gabriel's, where students in grades 6-8 have participated in a 1:1 laptop program for more than five years. The school also offers an elective in robotics and a First Lego League robotics team at the school has received several awards and won national championships four times.

"Our faculty is committed to ensuring students are equipped with the skills necessary to adapt to the ever-changing world around us," said Misty Poe, head of middle school. "We have seen the benefits of our middle school laptop program; it is one of the reasons we continue researching and framing curriculum based on evidence of best practices in innovative teaching methods."

More information is available at sgs-austin.org.

Featured

  • Stylized illustration of an AI microchip connected to a laptop, server rack, and monitor with a chart

    HPE and Nvidia Expand AI Infrastructure Partnership

    Hewlett Packard Enterprise and Nvidia have announced an expanded partnership to accelerate enterprise artificial intelligence adoption through new modular infrastructure and turnkey AI platform offerings.

  • shield with an AI microchip emblem hovering above stacks of gold coins

    Report: AI Security Spend Surges While Traditional Security Budgets Shrink

    A new report from global cybersecurity company Thales reveals that while enterprises are pouring resources into AI-specific protections, only 8% are encrypting the majority of their sensitive cloud data — leaving critical assets exposed even as AI-driven threats escalate and traditional security budgets shrink.

  • digital learning resources including a document, video tutorial, quiz checklist, pie chart, and AI cloud icon

    Quizizz Rebrands as Wayground, Announces New AI Features

    Learning platform Quizizz has become Wayground, in a rebranding meant to reflect "the platform's evolution from a quiz tool into a more versatile supplemental learning platform that's supported by AI," according to a news announcement.

  • teen studying with smartphone and laptop

    OpenAI Developing Teen Version of ChatGPT with Parental Controls

    OpenAI has announced it is developing a separate version of ChatGPT for teenagers and will use an age-prediction system to steer users under 18 away from the standard product, as U.S. lawmakers and regulators intensify scrutiny of chatbot risks to minors.