

According to LA Times:
The Los Angeles
schools superintendent has suspended a contract with Apple Inc to
provide an iPad to each of its students as the $1 billion initiative
faces problems and growing scrutiny, the Los Angeles Times newspaper
reported.
Monday's
suspension is the latest setback for the Los Angeles Unified School
District's proposed technology rollout, the largest of its kind for any
U.S. public education system.
Under a contract approved a little more than a year ago, Apple's tablet
computer was to be coupled with a digital curriculum from Pearson. The
program was to expand greatly over the next year.
"Moving forward, we will no longer utilize our current contract with
Apple Inc," Superintendent John Deasy told the district's Board of
Education on Monday in a memo posted on the newspaper's website.
"Not only will this decision enable us to take advantage of an
ever-changing marketplace and technology advances, it will also give us
time to take into account concerns raised surrounding the [project],"
Deasy wrote.
Deasy has
described the rollout as a civil rights initiative designed to give
students, mostly from low-income families, access to a 21st-century tool
common in middle-class households.
The landmark project ran into problems at the start of the 2013-2014
school year when about 300 high school students among an initial 25,000
pupils to get an iPad bypassed its security protocols to access social
networking and other websites blocked to them.
Last week, a draft report of the district's technology committee,
obtained by the newspaper, was critical of the bidding process.
The district and Apple did not immediately answer requests for comment.
(Reporting by Eric M. Johnson; Editing by Lisa Von Ahn)
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