All 171 Baltimore County Public Schools
Go Wireless With Networks From Meru
One of the Nation's 25 Largest School Systems Uses WLAN To
Support Pervasive Video Learning Along With User Mobility
SUNNYVALE, Calif., June 30, 2008 – Baltimore County
Public Schools (BCPS) has deployed a wireless LAN (WLAN) from
Meru Networks to support video learning, Internet access and
other applications for nearly 105,000 students as well as
faculty and staff in 171 schools with more than 15 million
square feet of total space.
The WLAN will enable one of the nation's 25 largest school
systems to take full advantage of increasingly popular video
learning tools such as Safari Montage while giving users of
those tools the option of mobility.
BCPS began its deployment last summer with a pilot wireless
network in each school, and since then has installed
approximately 2,000 Meru wireless access points. Plans call for
full wireless coverage in all schools by the start of the fall
2008 term. Selected areas of the BCPS system – including some
administration buildings and a newly-built elementary school –
have high-performance wireless access based on the new IEEE
802.11n standard, which offers access speeds up to five times
faster than those of the earlier 802.11a/b/g standards.
Michael Goodhues, chief information officer for BCPS, said the
need for pervasive wireless networking in the BCPS system was
driven by the growing number of laptop computers in the schools
and the increasing use of digital media-based instructional
tools, along with the high costs associated with cabling and
installation of wired networks.
"The Blueprint for Progress, our school system's foundational
document, recognizes the strategic role of technology in the
classroom and sets a goal of providing all our teachers and a
growing proportion of students with their own computers,"
Goodhues said. "Increasingly, these computers are
wireless-enabled laptops. With the WLAN, users can carry their
laptops around school campuses and have the same access
experience virtually anyplace. And as schools expand or shift
resources between locations, we won't be facing massive rewiring
costs."
In early 2007, Fusion Network Systems, a Columbia, Md., network
and infrastructure solutions provider, helped BCPS conduct a
comprehensive evaluation of wireless solutions.
Bob Henley, Fusion's CEO, said, "Video is a key application for
BCPS, but most of the wireless solutions we tested wouldn't
allow more than three or four simultaneous users on the network
without dropping connections. In the schools' extremely
high-density user environment, that wasn't acceptable. With Meru,
we had 30 desktop computers and 20 laptops in a single lab
running video with just one access point. Meru's 'airtime
fairness' capability lets data, voice and video applications all
get their fair share of bandwidth, so everyone contending for
access gets a smooth, concurrent connection.
"Meru's Air Traffic Control technology also gave us switch-like
performance with no co-channel interference, even when we
installed additional APs to fill coverage gaps," Henley added.
"And because with their single-channel approach there's no need
for channel planning, it's easy for the BCPS technical staff to
manage."
The investment in newer Meru 802.11n access points for some BCPS
locations isn't just about high-speed access, Henley explained.
Because the 11n APs have high-speed interfaces, and the schools'
wired network switches offer gigabit interfaces, there is a
substantial increase in throughput that allows the WLAN to
handle many more users at once. "This means we can get by with
fewer access points, so it's cost-effective to install 11a/b/g/n
equipment even if we don't initially activate the 11n radios,"
he said.
Meru access points used in the BCPS WLAN deployment are the
AP150, with one 802.11a radio and one 802.11b/g radio; and the
AP311, with one 802.11a/b/g/n radio and one 802.11a/b/g radio
(software-upgradeable to 11n). Each building also has a Meru
MC1015 controller, which supports up to 30 access points and
provides the WLAN with centralized intelligent RF management,
advanced quality of service and security.
Meru's single-channel approach to wireless coverage minimizes
co-channel interference by automatically selecting one channel
for use enterprise-wide and layering additional channels when
more capacity is required. With all access points occupying the
same channel, the Meru system creates a "virtual cell" that
boosts the reliability of wireless connections independent of
client type and minimizes dropped connections by eliminating the
need for "handoffs" when mobile users move between access
points. In contrast, most legacy WLANs use a "micro cell"
approach, which assigns different channels to adjacent network
cells, requiring careful and time-consuming channel selection
and power-level planning and limiting future network expansion.
About Baltimore County Public Schools
As one of the nation's 25 largest school districts, Baltimore
County Public Schools educates nearly 105,000 students each
year. Over the past several years, BCPS has increased academic
rigor, creating a culture of higher expectation and broader
opportunity for all. As a result, BCPS has consistently raised
student achievement. Supporting this success is the Blueprint
for Progress, a foundational document created by Superintendent
Dr. Joe A. Hairston that unites staff and stakeholders with
common beliefs, priorities and goals. In addition, BCPS
continues to garner national and international recognition for
its use of technology to support and enhance teaching and
learning and for the excellence of its high schools and fine
arts instruction. For additional information on Baltimore County
Public Schools, visit www.bcps.org.
About Meru Networks
Meru Networks develops and markets wireless infrastructure
solutions that enable the All-Wireless Enterprise. Its
industry-leading innovations deliver pervasive, wireless service
fidelity for business-critical applications to major Fortune 500
enterprises, universities, healthcare organizations and local,
state and federal government agencies. Meru's award-winning Air
Traffic Control technology brings the benefits of the cellular
world to the wireless LAN environment, and its WLAN System is
the only solution on the market that delivers predictable
bandwidth and over-the-air quality of service with the
reliability, scalability and security necessary to deliver
converged voice and data services over a single WLAN
infrastructure. Founded in 2002, Meru is based in Sunnyvale,
Calif. For more information, visit www.merunetworks.com or call
(408) 215-5300.