Introduction
In his April 8, 1999, WashingtonPost
column, George Will criticized a proposal to put advertising on
thesleeves of baseball player’s uniforms. Will reasoned that such
advertisingcrossed a line between advertising strategically placed so
that large numbersof people are likely to see it and "advertising so
unavoidable it isassaultive." He concluded that ‘… within the cheerful
swirl of commerce ata ballpark, there is a baseball game – dignified
competition in a zone of itsown, within the white lines."1 If "advertising sounavoidable it is assaultive" is unacceptable in baseball it is even moreoffensive in a school setting.
A
child’s presence in school,unlike attendance at a baseball game, is
coerced. Over the past two decadesadvertisers have increasingly
exploited this fact. Today, in schools all overAmerica students are
routinely required to view advertising in order tocomplete class
assignments or are denied access to learning technologies unlessthey
provide marketers information about themselves and their families.
Thesepractices seem certain to increase as the current emphasis on
computertechnology and utilization of the world wide web encourages the
formation ofmore "public-private partnerships" to provide computers,
software,and web access. Today, the price of a computer lab, or a
school web site, isvery often the willingness to provide advertisers
access to students and toinformation about students and their families.
The current focus on electronictechnologies as a key element in school
reform and improvement thus makesissues such as how to define a
school’s "zone of its own" and wherethe "white lines" that define it
should be drawn more important thanever.
The
focus of this paper is how, byreinforcing and exploiting the emphasis
on electronic technologies in schoolreform, marketers are more fully
integrating school children into America’sadvertising and marketing
system. ZapMe! Corporation, which provides computerlabs and internet
access to K-12 schools in return for advertising orpromotional access
to students and their families, is used to illustrate howtechnology and
commercialism are being linked in American school reform.
Linking Technology andMarketing: ZapMe! Corporation
ZapMe!
Corporation, founded in1996, defines its business model as "Bringing
Together TechnologyProviders, Sponsors, and Schools."2 The
company describesitself as "a satellite delivery-based computer network
system providingsafe, high-speed, Internet access and aggregated
educational content to K-12schools across the United States."3
Its "Netspace"program for K-12 schools was launched during the 1998-99
school year. As ofApril 1999 ZapMe! claimed to be fully operational in
90 schools and to have signedup 5,000 more.4
Participating
schools get between5 and 15 desktop computers with 17" monitors, a
network server, a laserprinter, and a satellite dish. All the equipment
is installed and maintained byZapMe!. The company also provides
training and technical support for teachersand students.5
According to an October 21, 1998, press release,ZapMe! hardware and
software is provided by corporations such as CompaqComputer Corporation
(computers), GE Americom (satellite service), MicrosoftCorporation
(software), and Philips Consumer Electronics (monitors).6These
corporations provide their products and services in order to"showcase"
their brands. The ZapMe! promotional material explains,"Corporations
WANT to support education. Corporations are looking for waysto support
Education. ZapMe! Corporation has established a uniquebusiness/school
partnership that is a win-win arrangement for all."7
ZapMe!
computers are equipped withword processing, spreadsheet, and
presentation software. No software other thanthat provided by the
corporation can be installed. ZapMe! "Netspace"offers e-mail, chat
rooms, and access to pre-selected web sites (approximately10,000,
according to the company).8 In addition, schools may, ifthey choose, provide unrestricted Internet access using the ZapMe! system.9Corporations
pay ZapMe to provide access to curriculum materials they havedeveloped.
General Electric, for example, has purchased advertising space onthe
ZapMe! browser and paid a fee to have web content about space that
itdeveloped placed on the ZapMe! "Netspace."10
ZapMe!
provides hardware,software, and content without direct cost to
participating schools. Schools do,however, incur obligations beyond
providing the necessary space, telephoneconnection, electrical service,
and supplies such as paper for the laserprinter when they sign a
contract with ZapMe!. The ZapMe! contract, forexample, requires that
each computer in the ZapMe! computer lab be in use anaverage of four
hours a day; that schools provide ZapMe! corporate partnerswith access
to the system after hours; that schools participating in ZapMe!"take
home" programs; and that school staff will provide feedback tothe
company about its services and features.11 As a reward forspending time on the ZapMe! system students can earn "ZapMe! Points"good for prizes such as software.12
Policy Issues Raised ByZapMe!
On
the surface the ZapMe! programhas a lot of appeal. It appears to foster
broadly supported educational goalssuch as promoting computer literacy
and providing students with access to the"information superhighway." It
also purports to address the lack ofresources available to design and
implement school technology programs byharnessing the good will and
self-interest of corporate America. As an addedplus it seems to address
the equity concerns of many school reformers. ZapMe!is available to
rich and poor schools alike. Despite its surface appeal, ZapMe!poses
serious challenges to policy makers.
The
ZapMe! program is a for-profitventure that proposes to derive its
profits from activities that link theacademic activities of schools and
the marketing activities of corporations ina seamless web. This
necessarily raises ethical and public policy issues. Sevenproblematic
aspects of the ZapMe! program are described below.
1)
Hardware suppliers (e.g.,Compaq) and software suppliers (e.g.,
Microsoft) provide their products for thepurpose of brand exposure and
building future market share. The logic is thatstudents trained using
their products are more likely to continue to use thoseproducts. Also,
the more students trained in particular software applicationsthe
greater the incentive for employers to purchase those applications.
Policy issue
2) Corporations pay ZapMe! to puteducational programs that they have developed onto the ZapMe!"Netspace."
Policy issue
3)
Corporations pay to placeadvertising ("brand imaging") on the ZapMe!
"Netspace"browser. The Associated Press reports that, in a
demonstration of advertisingon ZapMe!, when corporate President Frank
Vigil clicked on a Schick Razorbanner it brought up a full-motion
commercial featuring "an attractiveblonde confidently marching through
the streets as people rushed to protect herfreshly shaved legs."
According to a ZapMe! spokesperson, clicking on abanner might equally
well mean being transported to a corporate web site or "prettymuch
whatever they [the corporation] want" to get the message across.14
Policy issue:
4)
ZapMe! provides aggregated dataon students to its advertisers. The
company monitors which of its web sites aremost frequently visited and
collects information on each student’s age, gender,grade level, and zip
code. This information can then be used to targetadvertising campaigns.15
Policy issue:
5)
ZapMe! requires thatparticipating schools provide use of its equipment
on school property duringafter school hours for "community education,
corporate training and/ortesting purposes." ZapMe! recently announced
that it had entered astrategic partnership with Sylvan Learning
Systems. Sylvan will use ZapMe!’saccess to participating schools to
launch internet-based educational andtesting services offered primarily
during after school hours.16
Policy issue
6)
ZapMe! requires that schoolsparticipate in what it terms "take home
programs." These aremarketing materials will be designed by ZapMe!
sponsors for students to takehome with them. They may promote contests
and other activities that supplementa sponsor’s "on-line message."17
Policy issue:
7) The ZapMe! Points Programoffers students prizes as a reward for spending time on the ZapMe! system.
Policy issue
Conclusion
The
issues of whether suchtechnologies represent an opportunity to
positively transform the processes ofteaching and learning and what the
relative emphasis given electronictechnologies in school reform should
be are far from settled. Nevertheless,throughout America, politicians,
educators, policy makers, corporateexecutives, and community leaders
have already become vocal advocates ofcomputer/internet technology in
the schools. Software and hardware companiesclaim only to be responding
to the market’s demands for their products, but infact they have had
and continue to have a guiding hand in developing thismarket and
creating the policy environment in which it can flourish. In
thisenvironment, commercialized programs, which promise free hardware
and/orsoftware and/or Internet access appeal to many schools. The
question that hasyet to be seriously considered is whether and under
what circumstancescommercialized programs are likely to do more harm
than good.
NOTES
1. George F. Will, "Leave theSleeves Alone," Washington Post, 8 April 1999, p. A31.
2. ZapMe!Corporation, "ZapMe!Press Kit: Corporate Backgrounder," no date.
3. ZapMe! Corporation,"ZapMe! Press Kit: Fact Sheet," no date.
4. 13 April 1999 telephoneconversation between Steven Manning and Randi Polanich, ZapMe! spokeswoman.
5.
ZapMe! Corporation corporatewebsite, "The Package" page
(www.zapme.com/corp/schools/s_pack.html),and "Benefits" page
(www.zapme.com/corp/schools/s_ben.html), cited on15 April 1999.
6.
ZapMe! Corporation,"ZapMe! Netspace Assembles Leading Technology
Companies to Bring FreeComputer Labs to Schools," 21 October 1998 press
release.
7. ZapMe! Corporation,"ZapMe! Press Kit: Corporate Sponsors," 22 October 1998.
8.
Andrew Hagelshaw, Center forCommercial-Free Public Education, "Notes
and Impressions After Receiving aDemonstration of Zap Me," 17 December
1998.
9. ZapMe! Corporation,"ZapMe! Press Kit: Corporate Backgrounder," no date.
10. "ZapMe! Offers FreeIntranet Computers in Exchange for Ads Aimed at Kids," eSchool News,10 August 1998.
11. ZapMe! Corporation corporatewebsite, "Conditions" page (www.zapme.com/corp/schools/s_cond.html),cited on 15 April 1999.
12.
Andrew Hagelshaw, Center forCommercial-Free Public Education, "Notes
and Impressions After Receiving aDemonstration of Zap Me," 17 December
1998.
13. See Captive Kids:Commercial Pressures on Kids at School (Yonkers, N.Y.: Consumers UnionEducation Services, 1995); and Alex Molnar, Giving Kids the Business: TheCommercialization of America’s Schools (Boulder, Colo.: Westview Press,1996), ch. 2.
14. Chris Allbritton, "FreeComputers Blur Line Between Student and Shopper, Critics Say," AssociatedPress, 30 November 1998.
15. Chris Allbritton, "FreeComputers Blur Line Between Student and Shopper, Critics Say," AssociatedPress, 30 November 1998.
16.
ZapMe! Corporation,"Sylvan Learning Systems to Launch Internet-Based
Education and TrainingPrograms Utilizing ZapMe! Network," 31 March 1999
press release.
17. DD Marketing, "ZapMe!Frequently Asked Questions," information packet, no date.
18.
Andrew Hagelshaw, Center forCommercial-Free Public Education, "Notes
and Impressions After Receiving aDemonstration of Zap Me," 17 December
1998.
19.
The work of Douglas D. Nobleis informative on this subject. See "A Bill
of Goods: The Early Marketingof Computer-Based Education and Its
Implications for the Present Moment,"in Bruce J. Biddle, Thomas L.
Good, and Ivor F. Goodson, eds., InternationalHandbook of Teachers and Teaching (Dordrecht, Netherlands: Kluwer AcademicPublishers, 1997); and Douglas D. Noble, Classroom Arsenal: MilitaryResearch, Information Technology, and Public Education (London: FalmerPress, 1991).
This paper was posted on theCACE website on 19 April 1999 and was last updated on 19 April 1999.