I started to answer this last night but didn't send it. My answer was similar to George's. Here is what I run into:
"This is not what the kids will see in college or the work place."
"My software (Accelerated Reader, Inspiration, etc) won't run on this."
"Why change something that works?"
"Macs are simply better and I can show you Total Cost of Ownership studies to back that up." (Of course, could these TCO studies have been done by Apple?)
"There isn't a textbook for Open Office."
Of course the "real" issues are:
"I don't have time to learn something new." (Meaning, of course, "I really don't want to learn something new.")
"I have never seen this before, so it must be bad."
And the truly real issue: "Change is BAD."
Of course, once our budget situation reached the stage where we started laying off teachers (last month), it will be easier to make these kind of changes.
george kocke wrote:
On Wed, 2004-03-31 at 17:38, Terrell Prude', Jr. wrote:
I just don't understand the resistance to that kind of business case, especially when we're in a $40+ million budget shortfall. Anyone?
Fear of the unknown, risk avoidance, laziness and the focus on training
for future employment rather than education.
_______________________________________________ K12OSN mailing list K12OSN redhat com https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/k12osn For more info see <http://www.k12os.org>