Carroll County Public Schools reports 19,312 student devices, frames laptops as instructional tools not solutions
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At a board work session, Carroll County Public Schools officials said the district now assigns 19,312 student devices, operates 1-to-1 for grades 3—12 (shared in PK—2), and relies on the Schoology LMS and adaptive apps to support targeted interventions while stressing technology is a tool paired with teacher instruction.
Carroll County Public Schools officials told the school board that the district now assigns 19,312 student devices and uses a mix of one-to-one and shared-device models to support instruction.
The presentation Tuesday was intended to give board members a snapshot of how devices are used across grade levels and why district leaders call technology a tool rather than a replacement for classroom teaching. "The total number of student assigned devices is 19,312," Gary Davis, the district—s chief information officer, said during the work session.
Why it matters: Board members have asked whether devices are being used to improve outcomes or simply because they are available. District staff said that technology, when matched with teacher-led instruction and professional development, supports adaptive interventions and timely formative feedback that teachers can act on.
What officials presented: The district runs Schoology as its learning management system; higher grades rely on the LMS and digital materials for assignments, grading and communication. Dr. Christy Farver, director of elementary schools, said younger children remain in print-rich environments and use technology for guided, supplemental literacy and assessment work such as MAP Growth and the kindergarten readiness assessment (KRA).
At the middle-school level, the district reported laptops are typically used about three times per week and often for summative or formative assessments that inform small-group instruction. "It gives us great feedback that we are able to then differentiate and pull into small groups and work with students," a middle-school director said.
High schools and career-technical programs show the greatest variability: core classes may use laptops for the majority of a period because assignments and submissions run through Schoology, while CTE classes use higher-end lab equipment and software that exceed standard laptop capabilities.
Data caveats and measurement: District staff said their usage figures came from a one-week snapshot (early October) capturing distinct users who logged in on district-assigned devices; the snapshot does not capture students using personal devices or instances where assigned devices were in repair. The CIO noted login rates for assigned devices were generally above 90% in that snapshot, but emphasized the number reflects logins, not the amount or quality of instructional use.
What—s next: Staff recommended continuing professional development for teachers so they can interpret and act on the real-time data the tools provide, and the board asked staff to provide further evidence tying technology investment to student achievement measures in future reports.
Closing note: No formal action was taken; the session closed with board members urging balanced technology use and better parent outreach about district tools.
