A customer service program that supports sustainability and leadership
In addition to keeping students and teachers productive, the Chrome Squad helps Royse City ISD boost sustainability.
“We tend to keep devices in circulation with students and teachers for about four years,” Holt says. “At the end of that time, the Chromebooks will become loaners or testing devices. We’ll even use them to salvage parts for repairs.”
When outdated Chrome devices are salvaged in this manner, nothing ends up in a landfill, Holt explains. “We can sell old devices to parts resellers, or just work out an agreement with another district that’s short on machines,” he says. “With the process of taking the device out of circulation, putting it into secondary use like a loaner, and then re-selling or recycling it, we’re able to keep them for as long as six to eight years.”
The district’s 1:1 Chromebook program is playing a part in keeping devices running for longer periods of time, and also, reducing repairs. Students feel a greater sense of responsibility for their take-home devices, Holt explains. It’s easier to hold students accountable because there is a single user of each device.
“Also, it takes fewer devices to run a 1:1 model versus a shared model,” Holt says. “In our case, it takes 20% fewer computers. Fewer computers means a smaller number of repairs.”
As students learn how to make the most of the district’s Chromebooks, they’re also learning valuable lessons in leadership and entrepreneurship.
“We show students what it’s like to be a leader, and tell them that they can become leaders too,” Holt says. “We sometimes think, ‘kids can’t do that,’ but then we give them the opportunities—and we see that they really can lead and be creative.”