Fall 2018 Chromebook Buyers Guide

As the years have progressed there has been an ever increasing interest from parents to purchase Chromebooks for home use. Awesome!

I think it’s an excellent idea and a great investment, we use them every day at school and I have three at my home.

Before I get into some device specifics I want to touch on a few common points of interest from parents…

  • Yes, Chromebooks are fully functional and very robust computing devices
  • Yes, they do require a wifi connection to work (although they do have some offline capabilities) but in 2018 I have two things to say to that
    • a 2-5th grader is most likely using this device at home, or another location, where there is wifi
    • if they are in a place without wifi it is probably best to go outside and enjoy the lack of wifi
  • Why are they so cheap? Well, relatively inexpensive is a better description…
    • You can spend $1,000 on a Chromebook, but you can also spend $150 on one; as with any machine the cost differential is due to items like screen quality, physical weight, touch vs non touch screens, etc.
    • The biggest price difference between a Chromebook and a Mac or Windows machine is the operating system license. A Chromebook runs on Chrome, which doesn’t cost anything. Microsoft charges laptop makers a license fee for installing windows on their hardware, and that fee gets passed on to the consumer.
  • How long do they last? Officially? 3 years. Realistically? 6-7.
    • When Chromebooks were first released you could only purchase them from Google and Google had them on a 3-year life cycle, meaning after 3 years Google wouldn’t service or support them and expected you to get a new one. That has changed dramatically over the years. Now that many vendors make Chromebooks the quality has gone up, immensely. I bought my mother-in-law a Chromebook 8 years ago. She’s still using it. It is her only computer and she uses it daily. A Chromebook in the hands of a elementary age student should last 3 years at the minimum and closer to 5 on the high end.
  • Touch screen? Detachable screen? Flip screen? For the most part, no.
    • In my opinion the tool and app availability for Chromebooks, to take full advantage of touch and tablet features, just isn’t there yet. In Scarsdale we look at those features every year when we evaluate the 3rd grade Chromebook purchase. We have yet to go that route not because the devices aren’t solid but rather there is a lack of apps and tools that require, or take advantage of, those features. Maybe next year…
    • However, for the home user, there are a few very solid options that are flip but also less than $300. The Lenovo Flex 11, for instance, is a situation where the device is solid, and economical, enough without the flip, so the flip is just a bonus.
  • Don’t spend a lot on a Chromebook for an elementary-age student.
    • Yes, you can go $1,000, but why? My feeling is $300-500 is a range with a lot of very solid devices that will last a few years.
    • In fact, there are a lot of very solid options in the $279 range.
    • Spending less than $400 or $500 eases any potential upgrading in a few years, or adding something like an iPad to the mix (my personal feeling is an iPad and a Chromebook is the best power-computing combination for $1,000).

 

At school

In Scarsdale we use Dell Chromebooks. Right now Dell has discounted their 3180 model (last Christmas they discounted models up to 65% so if it’s not urgent, check the Dell site in December).

  • The 3rd grade uses the 5190 (non-touch)
  • The 4th and 5th grade use the 3180
  • I am using a 5190 2-in-1 touch-screen model as a test machine
    • initial thoughts are:
      • it’s heavy
      • awkward as a tablet
      • touch is nice when in laptop mode
      • I wouldn’t consider it an iPad replacement, not at all close

At home I have two Dell Chromebook 11 3180 and one Toshiba Chromebook 2. The Dell I bought, for my children, is the same model our 4th and 5th graders currently use.

References

Here are some sources I always use for reference in my own research

 

If I were buying for my children right now I’d decide between

If I were buying for myself I’d decide between

Final thoughts

  • Chromebooks are awesome
  • Don’t spend more than $300 for a student device
  • Touch is fine but not required – a touch Chromebook is not an iPad

 

I hope this post guides your purchasing decision.

 

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