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Dear FCC: What is Wi-Fi Without Greater Capacity?

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In the months leading up to President Obama鈥檚 announcement of the ConnectED Initiative (), Federal Communications Commissioner Jessica Rosenworcel spoke about reforming the E-rate program at the Washington Education Technology Policy Summit and said for schools and libraries. She declared that 鈥渂efore the end of the decade, every school should have access to 1 Gigabit per 1000 students.鈥

This big connectivity goal underscored that in order to really support digital learning students don鈥檛 just need Internet access, they need high-speed Internet access. But that was then.

Last week, FCC Chairman Tom Wheeler released his , and we鈥檙e now seeing a shift in priorities鈥攚hat started as a commitment to high speed connectivity has shifted to a promise of wireless connection. Splitting up that $2 billion down payment on connectivity he announced earlier this year over 2015 and 2016, the Chairman has committed to supporting Wi-Fi to connect 10 million students (or 1 in 8 school-aged students in the U.S.).

While closing the Wi-Fi gap is a laudable goal given many schools , it鈥檚 important to note that the question of capacity and the language around speed goals and targets has taken a backseat. What Commissioner Rosenworcel identified as critical to program reform, Chairman Wheeler has now put aside for Wi-Fi.

To recap, the Chairman鈥檚 draft order highlights :

  1. Closing the Wi-Fi gap for schools and libraries, while phasing down support for non-broadband services
  2. Making current funds go further by cutting back the matching fund ratio, as well as increasing transparency on how funds are currently spent
  3. Update program administration processes to make the program faster, simpler, and more efficient

The reactions to this proposal so far , and one of the biggest flashpoints is the failure to permanently increase funding to what is already an oversubscribed program. As Ed Week reported on Friday, Brian Lewis, CEO of the International Society for Technology in Education, characterized the noting that 鈥渋nstead of placing this invaluable but cash-strapped program on sound financial footing for the next decade, this draft order rests its laudable proposals … on very shaky ground.” (The funding cap for the E-rate Program has not been increased鈥攐nly adjusted for inflation鈥攕ince the program was introduced back in 1996.)

While Lewis and others are right to point out that this draft order rests its proposals on very shaky ground, the weakness is due to more than budget uncertainty鈥攊t also rests upon schools and libraries鈥 shaky broadband infrastructure.

Wi-Fi generally refers to the delivery of Internet service through the airwaves, as opposed to a cable plugged into your device. What you have to understand about Wi-Fi, however, is that while your device may be wireless, in order to access the Internet your router still has to be plugged into a high-speed wired connection. More routers means more devices can get online at the same time, but it does not mean the service will be any faster unless you also upgrade the underlying connectivity. Thus, a school replete with Wi-Fi connectivity but will not be leveraging up-to-date educational technology any time soon.

This is why Commissioner Rosenworcel, President Obama, and countless other organizations have pointed toward more ambitious reforms to meaningfully modernize the E-rate program. At 麻豆果冻传媒, our Education Policy Program and Open Technology Institute have , and further lent our that would enable schools and libraries to update their broadband infrastructure. Specifically, we have argued that it鈥檚 critical to , given that it is the technology best capable of delivering sufficient high-speed access.

The three objectives laid out by Chairman Wheeler are necessary, but hardly sufficient for program modernization. If integrated into a broader set of necessary reforms, E-rate will enable students to connect to the future of learning. As is, the draft order may just be providing students with wireless access to the same substandard Internet service.

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Lindsey Tepe
Dear FCC: What is Wi-Fi Without Greater Capacity?