Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:In general, the best schools have the best resources and wifi is obviously very important:
https://colleges.niche.com/rankings/best-technology/
I wonder what "elite" school has inadequate internet service?
I've taught at a couple elite universities and at both we have had internal conversations about how top community colleges often have better technology resources than top universities. Very frustrating to teach in a classroom with intermittent internet access and an LCD projector from 2001 where it's 98 degrees on the first warm day of spring and 55 degrees on the first cold day of fall.
Anonymous wrote:In general, the best schools have the best resources and wifi is obviously very important:
https://colleges.niche.com/rankings/best-technology/
I wonder what "elite" school has inadequate internet service?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'd worry about this only if DC was majoring in STEM. If bad WiFi means DC spends less time on Instagram, that's fine with me. How many kids are using WiFi for major research papers as opposed to snapchat?
I don't think you appreciate how important internet access is on most campuses. Student portals and systems like BLACKBOARD on the heart of the process.
Anonymous wrote:I'd worry about this only if DC was majoring in STEM. If bad WiFi means DC spends less time on Instagram, that's fine with me. How many kids are using WiFi for major research papers as opposed to snapchat?
Anonymous wrote:Queston: Were you trying to get on the netowrk or was it your DD AFTER she looged on to the school's Wi-Fi network.
Not being snarky, but I had the same issue when I was trying to connect to the free public network using an iPad in the student center lobby. However when DD logged on to the campus-wide student network using her credentials, the connectivity was off the charts. What has DD reported since then?
Anonymous wrote:In this day and age, internet connectivity is nearly as important as water.