LAUSD 'Extremely Dissatisfied' with Pearson and Apple, Demands Refund

The story of Los Angeles Unified School District's beleaguered $1.3 billion 1-to-1 iPad program has taken a new twist: The district is now demanding a refund from Apple and has told the company it will not spend any more money on the Pearson software installed on the devices, according to reports.

According to Southern California Public Radio, which broke the story yesterday, the school district's attorney, David Holmquist, wrote a letter to Apple's general counsel claiming that Apple and Pearson had failed to deliver on the promise of "a state-of-the-art technological solution for [the district's Instructional Technology Initiative] implementation" and noted that the district is "extremely dissatisfied" with the solution in its present form. Further, SCPR reported, the district "is seeking a multi-million-dollar refund" from Apple and could take the company to court, should an agreement not be reached.

Following a number of serious issues, LAUSD's massive 650,000-student 1-to-1 iPad deployment was put on hold last summer, by which time some 120,000 iPads had already been purchased. Capping off the troubles for the program, this fall the FBI stepped in to begin an investigation into the process by which Pearson and Apple were selected as vendors for the initiative.

Pearson spokesperson Stacy Skelly told THE Journal: "Pearson is proud of our long history working with LAUSD and our significant investment in this groundbreaking initiative to transform instructional practices and raise expectations for all students. This was a large-scale implementation of new technologies and there have been challenges with the initial adoption, but we stand by the quality of our performance."

Apple did not respond to requests for comment by press time.

About the Author

David Nagel is the former editorial director of 1105 Media's Education Group and editor-in-chief of THE Journal, STEAM Universe, and Spaces4Learning. A 30-year publishing veteran, Nagel has led or contributed to dozens of technology, art, marketing, media, and business publications.

He can be reached at [email protected]. You can also connect with him on LinkedIn at https://www.linkedin.com/in/davidrnagel/ .


Featured

  • glowing crystal ball with network connections

    Call for Opinions: 2026 Predictions for Education IT

    How will the technology landscape in education change in the coming year? We're inviting our readership to weigh in with their predictions, wishes, or worries for 2026.

  • interconnected blocks of data

    Rubrik Announces Immutable Backup for Okta Environments

    Rubrik has introduced Okta Recovery, extending its identity resilience platform to Okta with immutable backups and in-place recovery, while separately detailing its integration with Okta Identity Threat Protection for automated remediation.

  • open laptop with various educational materials like charts, quizzes, and documents emerging from the screen

    Pear Deck Learning Debuts New AI Features

    GoGuardian recently introduced new artificial intelligence features within its Pear Deck Learning curriculum and instruction platform, designed to aid educators throughout their teaching journey — from lesson planning to assessment.

  • mathematical formulas

    McGraw Hill Launches AI-Powered ALEKS for Calculus

    McGraw Hill has added ALEKS for Calculus to its lineup of ALEKS digital learning products, bringing AI-powered personalized learning support to the calculus classroom.