DSU, Apple hands out iPads to freshmen as institution moves to scrap textbooks

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Delaware State University photo.
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Delaware State University   partnered with Apple in supplying  each its 2018 fall freshmen as well as each faculty member with an iPad Pro.

Members of Delaware State University’s Class of 2022 and faculty members began receiving their iPad Pros this week.

Thanks to a  partnership with Apple, the University has launched the initiative , which is the start of a move to make all instruction digital by 2020.

“This is an equity issue,” said University President Dr. Wilma Mishoe. “We are committing to the idea that it no longer matters what kind of technology that the parents of our students can afford. The uiversity will be providing leading-edge instructional technology to everyone.”

As freshmen lined up in the William C. Jason Library to receive their iPads,  Don Becker, chair of the Department of Mass Communications, Visual, and Performing Arts,  noted  that students in his department will also be receiving MacBook Pros capable of running advanced imaging software.

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“Our majors have to be able to use the full version of Adobe Suite to complete their assignments,” Dr. Becker said. “Until now, if they didn’t have a laptop capable of running that software, they could only work on projects in our computer lab, which has both limited numbers of devices and limited hours. We are essentially setting them free to work whenever and wherever.”

During the first two weeks of classes, university staff distributed and set up over 1,000 iPads and nearly 150 MacBook Pros, while also issuing devices to the professors who will be using them to restructure the way that courses are taught.

“This is not about Apple and their devices,” said Provost and Executive Vice President Tony Allen. “It’s about focusing our efforts on how our students learn, and preparing them for the future NOW. The days of paper textbooks and handwritten exams are from a time gone by.  We should leave them there. Over the next 18 months, the university intends to offer all our students an integrated digital learning environment across the campus. This is just the beginning.”

Apple will be bringing in content-area experts to help Delaware State University jump-start this classroom transition, while the institution’s own Office of Distance Education will be conducting  training on the learning management system known as “Blackboard,” which allows teachers to accept assignments, conduct tests, take attendance, maintain grades, and even develop course content in a digital format.

Allen noted that the combination of the four-year Inspire Scholarship for Delaware high school graduates and Apple technology “make an awesome case for coming to Delaware State University. There is no better value in higher education in our region.”

 

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