When leaders of Ector County Independent School District learned in March that 39 percent of their students lacked reliable broadband access at home, they went to work on finding a solution. It was crucial that students be able to connect to remote instruction.
The district secured funding from philanthropies. It developed business partnerships to get low-income families in Odessa, a large city that’s the county seat, free broadband access through June 2021. It bought mobile hotspots and installed cellphone towers on school buildings.
But even those efforts fell short of addressing the Wi-Fi access needs of students whose families live in the county’s most remote areas, Superintendent Scott Muri says. Then the Permian Strategic Partnership, one of ECISD’s local partners, helped with a more celestial solution.
ECISD will be the first school district in the nation to use Starlink, the broadband service from Elon Musk’s SpaceX. Starlink uses low Earth orbit (LEO) satellite technology to provide internet access in faraway areas.
The district’s digital divide “was a crisis for us,” Muri says. “We couldn’t educate kids in a healthy manner if they didn’t have broadband in their home, because they weren’t coming to school every day.”
The pencil and paper packet of work those students would receive was not the same as the experiences of students who “had access to their teachers in a virtual world,” he says.
MORE ON EDTECH: Learn how administrators are address issues of equity during online learning at edtechmag.com/k12/EquityOnline.
LEO Satellites Ensure Every Student Has Reliable Internet Access
Getting broadband from space is not new, but SpaceX and other companies are taking a new approach to providing that service. Starlink uses LEO satellites, which transmit data in less time than satellites that are farther out, according to Bloomberg. “And because signals can travel more rapidly through the vacuum of space than through fiber-optic cables, LEO satellites have the potential to rival or possibly exceed the fastest ground-based networks,” the news outlet reported.
It won’t take long for some Ector County families to get internet access through Starlink. ECISD is piloting its Starlink partnership in January, starting with 45 families who live within a 10-square-mile radius of each other and have no form of home internet access, Muri says. If all goes well, 135 families will have internet access with Starlink technology by the end of the pilot in January 2022, he says.