Take a look at www.k12ltsp.org.  If it's not exactly what you're looking
for, it might be a good starting point.

Jeff

P.S. I seem to be unable to get there right now.  Here's a google cache of
their home page with some basic information about their project:

http://www.google.com/search?q=cache:26xXlYXQjbM:www.k12ltsp.org/+k12ltsp&hl=en&lr=lang_en


On Wed, 19 Sep 2001, Ben Stallings wrote:

> When folks on this list first started talking about building our own Linux 
> distribution, I wondered why the world would need yet another distribution... 
> but now I've found a reason.
> 
> Last week I sat in on a coworker's presentation in a class 
> at Washburn High School.  The teacher of that class has had to personally get 
> donated PCs from a prison work program, personally install (pirated) software 
> on them, personally install keyboard trays on the tables, and then personally 
> provide tech support, because the school won't do any of it for her.  
> 
> The reason she has computers in the classroom in the first place is that she 
> finds her students learn more and better when asked to do reports as 
> PowerPoint presentations than when asked to do essays.
> 
> Naturally, in the course of the day the computers' configurations get messed 
> up.  I suggested that Linux would prevent them from doing any real damage, 
> and she was intrigued, but realistically there's no way she could get over 
> the learning curve in the few minutes a day she has available.
> 
> So anyway, this is my long-winded way of suggesting that we could make a 
> distribution for schoolteachers, providing basic functionality for a 
> classroom environment. --Ben
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