Breaking Up the Bottleneck
        
        
        
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The new affordability of ultra-high-speed networks is relieving K-12 schools of insufficient bandwidth and opening them up to a world of digital education.
  
                MAKE THE CONNECTION: Hybrid 
                  networks—combining high-speed wireless 
                  and optical fiber                 technology—link sites to 
                each other and to an aggregation site.
 THOUSANDS OF AMERICA’S K-12 schools are  struggling to meet the demands of the digital era. Standards  for student curricula, teacher credentials, and in-school  security are rising rapidly. To keep pace, school districts are  doing an admirable job of installing the internal high-speed  computer networks and basic internet service needed totake advantage of new electronic learning opportunities.
However, partly as a result of this progress, virtually all US  schools are or will be running into severe bottlenecks with their  external network connections due to insufficient bandwidth.  These restrictions to online access and speedy connectivity are  caused by great numbers of students and teachers simultaneously  attempting to utilize media-rich internet, data, and interactive  video applications through conventional, external  last-mile connections. These “pipes” cannot support schools’  ever-increasing network throughput requirements.
The vast majority of US schools’ current “high-speed”  broadband connections are leased dedicated phone-company  pipes known as T1s, which operate at a maximum transmission  speed of 1.5 million bits of information per second  (Mbps). Along with advanced coaxial cable lines that offer  speeds of 3 to 5 Mbps, T1s are a significant improvement  over original dial-up modems, but they will quickly collapse  under the weight of most schools’ peak network loads as the  use of online, interactive, multimedia applications grows.
These high-quality multimedia services are extremely bandwidth-  intensive. Compounding the swelling bandwidth requirements  is the likelihood that distance-learning connectivity will  need to be available not just in computer labs, but ultimately  at each desktop, so that various educational offerings can be  simultaneously accessed by individual students. Consequently,  the number of students concurrently requiring extremely  high-speed online access can be expected to grow exponentially—  as will schools’ aggregate bandwidth needs.
The plain truth is, based on their location, population density,  and demographics, tens of thousands of schools are  unlikely to gain access to affordable, last-mile fiber connections  in the next three to five years, if ever. Without rapid  deployment of fiber optics or other robust broadband technologies,  school systems–mostly in outer suburban and  rural America–aren’t merely going to fall behind schools in  our major cities, but also those in academically progressive  nations such as Japan and South Korea.
  Bridging the Digital Divide
Based on the current laws of physics and economics, a ubiquitous  broadband solution for K-12 schools will require the deployment of hybrid networks. These would consist primarily  of optical fiber backbones and high-speed wireless pipes  in locations where distance, demographics, and fragmented  landline competitors dictate a more economical solution.
Facing such a challenge was the Iredell-Statesville Schools  district in North Carolina. To live up to its mission to “rigorously  challenge all students to achieve their academic potential  and to lead productive and rewarding lives,” the district  determined that its most pressing need was improved infrastructure—  an ultra-high-speed and reliable network. Its solution  was to install a digital microwave network to manage  centralized, web-based administration functions, launch  media-rich learning across all classrooms, and prepare for the  future of interactive, video-based distance learning. Iredell-  Statesville’s new network connects 33 of its 35 schools and  four central office facilities. Their Ethernet network services  deliver 100 Mbps dedicated access between the district’s endpoints.  With access speeds approximately 67 times faster  than its former T1 technology, the district is loosening up its  bandwidth bottleneck and gaining traction in the new world of  digital learning.
  Without rapid deployment of fiber optics or other robust broadband technologies,school systems aren’t merely going to fall behind schools in our major cities, butalso those in academically progressive nations such as Japan and South Korea.
During the 2005-2006 school year, Iredell-Statesville  employed interactive learning across select schools and  classrooms and incorporated multimedia features such as  live internet websites into its curriculum. With 2006-2007  under way, the district plans to make use of its expanded  technological capabilities to extend its interactive-based programs  to students, teachers, and administrators across all  of its schools and central office facilities.
Behind the Scenes
Digital microwave broadband networks such as Iredell-  Statesville’s can support ultra-high-speed—10 Mbps to 1  gigabit (1 billion bits)—internet access and integrated data,  video, and VoIP services at capacity and reliability levels that  rival fiber connections. This can be most reliably accomplished  by utilizing radio frequencies licensed by the Federal  Communications Commission, which guarantees protection  against interference from other publicly available radio frequencies  such as those used to operate baby monitors,  garage-door openers, and weather-related radar systems.
Wireless networks, using what’s known as WiFi connections,  operate in the unlicensed radio spectrum, which typically  cannot deliver comparable carrier quality or symmetrical  throughput levels. To take advantage of those frequencies  with an ultra-high-speed network, the first step of deployment  is a line-of-sight path analysis. LOS matters because many  types of radio transmission depend on the line of sight  between the transmitter and receiver. Signals generally  travel in a straight line, and barriers in the visible field can  block signals.
  Microwave, a subdivision of the radio spectrum, operates  solely on a “visual” basis. Unlike low-frequency AM/FM  radio, microwave does not penetrate physical obstructions  and therefore requires the microwave community to operate  above obstacles. This entails one external antenna and  radio to transmit and, at minimum, one external antenna  and radio to receive.
The purpose of the antennas, which can be placed on  rooftops or standalone utility poles, is to provide microwave networks  with clear LOS. A licensed microwave radio is attached  to an antenna in one location and communicates with an antenna  and radio placed at an endpoint, such as a school.
In the case of Iredell-Statesville, the LOS analysis involved  calculations from about 20 different attributes to indicate  the optimal microwave paths between the schools and central  office facilities. These results were further refined  through on-site surveys and helped determine the type of  external structures the district would need to deliver ultrahigh-  speed, FCC-licensed microwave networks at fiber-quality  performance levels.
The external structures that support the connectivity  among Iredell-Statesville schools and central office facilities  are antennas mounted on concrete utility poles. The poles  range in height from 100 to 140 feet and resemble lighting  poles found in school parking areas or football fields. The  antennas form what’s called a ring network, and connect  each of the school sites to each other and back to the main  aggregation site at the district office.
The Iredell-Statesville example demonstrates the impact  of recent advances in digital technology, which have reduced  the complexity and cost of high-speed microwave networks.  Deployment of these systems has been made much easier,  quicker, and cost effective. By employing affordable broadband  access capacity to schools in underserved markets,  administrators are able to relieve districtwide bandwidth barriers  and gain ultra-high-speed, high-capacity entry to the  world of advanced digital education and security.
Stephen R. Leeolou is president and CEO of Conterra Ultra Broadband, a provider of broadband network services based in Charlotte, NC.