The Willow Glen ResidentDigital High initiative is well-worth its high costBy Geoff Patnoe Calling it "driver's ed for life on the information superhighway," Gov. Pete Wilson and the Legislature created the Digital High School Initiative as part of the 1997-98 state budget. Though the budget was almost two months late, this innovative, four-year program will help prepare tomorrow's leaders and workforce with the tools necessary to compete in the future. The Digital High School Initiative is a four-year program crafted by Wilson. Its goal is to provide Internet technology to every one of California's high schools. The budget includes $100 million in first-year funding for the program, an expensive but extremely necessary investment for the state. The initiative will eventually cost $1 billion to implement, but the state is planning to foot half the bill, with corporate and private donations matching the state's contribution. There is one computer for every 14 students in California classrooms, according to a 1996 California Education Task Force report. As a result, California, the high-tech leader of the world, ranks 45th out of 50 states in students per computers in our public schools. That ratio needs to be reduced. Living in Silicon Valley, it is likley that many of our children are skilled in using a computer. However, most of California's students are not so fortunate. Legions of high school graduates are leaving school without learning how to operate a computer. This problem puts many students at a disadvantage when they enter college, the military or the workforce. Without computer skills, today's students will be at a disadvantage when facing the challenges of the 21st century. Companies throughout California have had to take time to train computer-illiterate employees to use the technology found in their factories and stores. This is a costly process for the employers. Thus, among those who actively encouraged the Legislature to pass the initiative was a group comprised of the principal officers of major California corporations. In the past year, our leaders in Sacramento have been doing good things for children in California. Along with the Digital High School Initiative, the 1997-98 budget includes a record $22 billion in education funding, $1.5 billion of which will be used to extend the successful class-size reduction effort from three grades to four. It has been said that if you give someone a fish, you can feed them for a day, but if you teach them how to fish, then you feed them for a lifetime. I was pleased to see leaders in Sacramento create a program like the Digital High School Initiative. It is a program that will help enable and teach our children to become computer-literate before they leave high school. California is leading the way in information technology, and now we are making an investment for the future by giving tomorrow's leaders the tools they will need to compete.
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This article appeared in the Willow Glen Resident, October 8, 1997. | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||