The tablet, lauded by many as the next wave in education technology, is having difficulty being accepted at George Washington University and Princeton University because of network stability issues. Cornell University also says it is seeing connectivity problems with the device and is concerned about bandwidth overload.
All three school are working to solve the connectivity issues.
[Snip]
Is free always free. (-;
To be sure, many school networks are accepting iPads without problem. And some universities are even embracing the device. Seton Hill University in Greensburg, Pa., has promised free iPads and MacBooks to all incoming freshmen next fall, and Newberg, Ore.-based George Fox University will give students a choice between the two.
But even those schools acknowledge the device has its drawbacks. Most of Seton Hill's 2,145 students will have to pay up to $800 a year in additional technology fees for an expanded wireless network and support system.
And Seton Hill says students may still need to buy textbooks. "We believe the iPad will make e-textbooks more viable to assign and use," said Kary Coleman, media relations director for the school, in an emailed statement. Seventy faculty members are in training to learn how to incorporate the computer and tablet into the classroom, she said, but "some faculty may choose to continue to use physical textbooks for their courses."
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