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ExoPC And Panama Team Up To Bring 'Tablet Desks' To Students (PICTURES, VIDEO)

Posted: 04/23/2012 12:33 pm Updated: 04/23/2012 12:49 pm

Exodesk Classroom

Kids, don't stick your gum on these desks.

ExoPC, the French-Canadian startup that manufactures a tabletop multitouch surface with a 32-inch LCD display called the EXOdesk, has signed a deal with the government of Panama to furnish a physics classroom with its advanced touchscreen desks. This gives us a glimpse at what a classroom of the future might be.

The pilot classroom, which was authorized and will be overseen by Panama's minister of science, technology and innovation, will feature 20 touchscreen EXOdesks for grade school students, a larger EXOdesk for the teacher, and at the front of the room, a huge interactive multitouch "blackboard." This is just a giant touchscreen surface hanging on the wall. All of the books, notebooks, writing utensils and other school supplies will be stored within the desk's memory and be accessible at home at any time via the cloud.

(That's right: School desks have computer memory now and are available in the cloud. Back when I was a schoolboy, in order to get to the cloud, we had to walk barefoot, in the snow, uphill, both ways.)

Anyway, the desk itself contains an Intel i5 processor and runs a version of Windows 7, with an HTML5 interface specifically designed by ExoPC to suit the curriculum of the physics classroom. All of the desks and the blackboard will be connected via Wi-Fi so that students and the teacher can wirelessly share work and collaborate with one another. This will make it especially easy for one student to help another with a tricky problem.

Here's a mockup of what the classroom should look like when it's ready. The first day of school is in three months, and if I were a student at this particular Panamanian public school, I'd be pretty darn excited for summer to be over. (Okay, maybe not, but this is still pretty cool.)

As you can see from the rendering, much of the EXO classroom is designed so that the students will always be able to look at the content intended for them: What appears on the blackboard also appears on every desk. You'd almost have to stare at the ceiling to miss the lesson.

Now, I know what you're thinking: These kids won't be paying attention to their physics teacher; with huge tablets in front of them, they'll all be surfing pornography and Reddit.

Not so! With their EXOdesks, students can not only access books and course materials but also their virtual notebooks, with an onscreen keyboard and "digital ink" for handwritten notes. And to cut down on, uh, extracurricular activity, the teacher can view from his or her EXOdesk everything happening at students' desks and also control what content appears before them.

That means, when the teacher says, "Class, open your books to page 131," he or she can manually open for them all students' books to page 131 and highlight where they should be looking -- with a couple of clicks.

(By the way, if you need a refresher about how the EXOdesk works, check out the video below, which we made at January's Consumer Electronics Show: Imagine the desk shown without the additional vertical computer monitor and you have a sense what the students in Panama will use.)


ExoPC CEO and founder Jean-Baptise Martinoli told me in an email that the students in Panama will also have physical copies of the books to use at home. Some students, he noted, don't have home Internet access. The goal of the pilot program, he emphasized, was to explore to what degree a basic course could be modeled and taught using almost nothing but tablets and software.

That vision is shared by several other major tech players seeking to digitally overhaul education. Apple recently held a rare event in New York City focused on reinventing the textbook for use on its iPads. For many years startups like Inkling and Kno have been attempting to modernize the textbook experience and transport it to tablets and laptops. And while ExoPC's classroom experiment will indeed digitize textbooks, it also does the same for the pedagogy and all lessons as well. Martinoli and ExoPC hope that this will also lead to higher engagement and a deeper immersion in the classroom subject.

Whether the "tablet everywhere" strategy envisioned by ExoPC and the Panamanian government accomplishes that will be determined by this very intriguing trial run.

And when might our own bright young lovelies gain a chance to start learning with tablet furniture? Martinoli told me that he is in active conversations with education boards in America and that an EXOdesk-filled classroom just might be soon on its way to the States. American educators that he has spoken with have indicated an interest in putting the desks in a half circle, rather than the traditional all-facing-forward arrangement, to broaden participation, Martinoli said.

Cross your fingers, kids. And save your gum wrappers.

Below, check out a few more views of the ExoPC classroom, which will be making its debut in Panama in August. Dig in and let us know what you think of the idea in comments:

The EXO Classroom: Overhead View
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In the EXO classroom, each desk shares cables with another one to reduce power consumption.

(Image courtesy of ExoPC)

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Kids, don't stick your gum on these desks. ExoPC, the French-Canadian startup that manufactures a tabletop multitouch surface with a 32-inch LCD display called the EXOdesk, has signed a deal with t...
Kids, don't stick your gum on these desks. ExoPC, the French-Canadian startup that manufactures a tabletop multitouch surface with a 32-inch LCD display called the EXOdesk, has signed a deal with t...
 
 
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FronzelNeekburm
Ah, research. The enemy of too many.
07:37 AM on 04/26/2012
We need to integrate technology into classroom. That's a fact. Anyone around for the start of the 2000's and saw what happened with the pushback to downloadable music (I mean the record company's early dismissal of it. Stealing v. not stealing is a whole other debate, we don't have to get into here.)

Teachers need to be trained to use this. Students, at home, have to be trained to respect it. And we need baby steps of integrating all of this into the classroom. We shouldn't dismiss the idea, we should gently accept it. Kids are going to always be the early adopters of technology (any bad 90's comedian will tell you that. "so, I had to have my KID boot up the computer.)
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mlaiuppa
Pres. Sarcasm Society. Like we need your approval.
06:31 PM on 04/25/2012
20 desks?

Sorry.

Our primary grades average 24 and our upper grades are 35. Higher class sizes in secondary school level.

Just having 20 students in a class would be a dream class of the future.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
dudervision
New Tech Maven
06:57 AM on 04/25/2012
I'm a strong advocate for the use of technology in education but an important question is missed all too often when schools implement systems likes this, HAVE THE TEACHERS BEEN TRAINED IN THEIR USE AND HOW TO INTEGRATE THEM INTO THEIR TEACHING? I remember Netday back in the 90's. Tremendous program that used High Tech Industry volunteers to wire hundreds of schools with high speed Internet. Sadly, once the wiring was done, they techs went home and nobody bothered to show the teachers what to do with this wonderful tool. The result was that the kids rapidly learned how to surf the web and abuse this access. In the end, many teachers just unplugged it as it was more trouble than it was worth. TEACHER TRAINING IS KEY! Without it, all these cool tools become little more than a distraction.
04:30 AM on 04/25/2012
This is useless. Kids need books and pens, not computers. No wonder we are #36 or so in school rankings.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
June25
11:48 PM on 04/24/2012
This looks great but we are still waiting for a good 100 dollar computer for third world countries.But for advanced students this would be great.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
DanInLA
09:09 PM on 04/24/2012
gimmicky. Junk like this is the reason kids aren't learning.
04:09 PM on 04/24/2012
Now I can turn my desk into facebook!
02:28 PM on 04/24/2012
hahaha Perhaps in the year 3000. It sounds great and all but have you been to a Los Angeles County school?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
greggrwag
When in doubt. Bug them.
01:19 PM on 04/24/2012
LOL hope they have the money to replace them after the kids are through with them.
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maceandemma
Judge a man's mind by the shadow it casts
12:46 PM on 04/24/2012
They do not give us a budget to maintain or replace simple technology let alone something like this. Give me good books, plenty of time and a classroom that is not crowded and let me teach.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Daniel LPhillips
I read everything, I participate in Huffpost as of
12:26 PM on 04/24/2012
How bout a virtual teacher, who can't harm or have body contact with students?.. What a joke.. Did anyone ever attend public school? what happens? Students stand and jump on these things, Drop stuff on them and gook things all up.. Inside of a few months they're obsolete and to make matters worse somewhere --some low end school board starts screaming It's unfair.. Case in point.. I attended Kindergarten in 1959.. Our school had a fighter jet converted into a really neat sliding board contraption..( Kingshighway School). You would climb up a set of steps into a real cockpit. View the instrument display, sit in the seat with the still-- intact control wheel.. Walk down a safety walkway inside the fuselage, slide out the tail on a sliding board.. Gosh every school in our community had a conniption fit. It was there for maybe three years and they riped the thing out. So much for student education and progress. All this is because some" Corporation" wants to sell something and have our working class citizens foot the bill.. Why not land in Baja California?
11:47 AM on 04/24/2012
Take a look at what Corning has to offer too. http://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PL363989F7BCF53A36&feature=plcp This concept it not at all improbable.
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wizardneedsbeer
looksgood wegone thankyou
11:27 AM on 04/24/2012
lets try teaching with
bright color and flashy things
( Ya think it will help )
11:25 AM on 04/24/2012
And when these kids graduate, their employers all better have a desk that looks and operates just like these...or they will be hopelessly frustrated.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Votenoneoftheabove
11:16 AM on 04/24/2012
I like where they're going, but this looks like an ergonomic nightmare.
04:32 AM on 04/25/2012
Orthopedic doctors need to make money too.