Blue skies ahead?

March 3, 2011

On Monday I spent time visiting Microsoft in London along with others in the education supplier community. The afternoon started with a keynote from Vanessa Pittard.  Vanessa was one of the directors at Becta and now is responsible for Technology Policy at the DfE.  The Technology Policy Unit is firmly located within the Schools Standards Group within the DfE.  Vanessa is convinced that this is the best place to be.  She says that the evidence supporting the use of technology in schools is compelling – it does make a difference and it does improve learner outcomes.  Her task (challenge?) will be to produce a coherent policy for Technology in Schools that supports the Government’s White Paper.  Vanessa highlighted the fact that excellent use of data is a common feature of excellent schools and this will be an important issue for her work going forward.  I asked Vanessa about the role of games based learning (currently DCMS are taking a positive, leading role in this area along with organizations such as NESTA) – the response was that there is a recognition of potential, that we should expect to see more interest shown by the Department in the future, that there is a key issue – how do we realise value?

Vanessa Pittard

Vanessa provided some detail for the transfer of some of the functions of Becta to the Department.  Procurement and e-Safety will transfer, along with the contracts that underpin these activities. The Department will be consulting BSI regarding the future of the ISP accreditation over the coming months.  Becta’s responsibilities for providing support to Academies and Free Schools transfers to PFS and their activities around technology standards transfer to the CIO group within the DfE.  In this context it was interesting to note that work around SIF hasn’t transferred – apparently there’s enough energy and momentum within the community without the Department’s involvement.  This fits with Ministers’ aim for autonomy not intervention.

The recently awarded contracts for ICT Services Framework One will be promoted by the DfE and discussions are ongoing regarding the options for taking Framework Two forward – the latter framework had intended to include learning platforms and management information systems.

Responsibility for the SRF transfers to the DfE – they’ll be actively promoting it, it’s viewed positively by Ministers and schools, there will need to be discussions post April as it is important that the SRF is kept up-to-date and not allowed to stagnate or become irrelevant.  Over 18,000 schools registered an interest and currently over 4,000 schools are progressing through the framework.

So – working towards a policy?  There will be discussions with key stakeholders up to the end of April, identification of key priorities by the end of May enabling ministers to make decisions so that from June the agreed priorities can be taken forwards.  Will there be a direct replacement for Harnessing Technology?  Perhaps, but it will have to fit with the policy of autonomy and not intervention!

Blue sky and clouds

The rest of the afternoon had a more technology based focus – Microsoft Azure was in the forefront – hence the title of this piece! We had an interesting update but as ever the most exciting input came from those who’d been there and done that – organisations that had implemented Azure and achieved real efficiency and cost benefits.  Education was never far away and a collection of free and paid for tools that make up the Learning Suite was mentioned along with changes to licensing and Office 365 for Education.  Expect to see more about this in the near future.  We were also pointed towards an online journal ‘ICT for Education’ – and the February issue is a good read and has much useful information.

It’s been a busy week, this post should have been uploaded a few days ago – you can keep up-to-date by following OPENHIVE_net on Twitter!  Now on to the next task – preparing for the NAACE Annual Conference where myself and Sarah Shepherd will be presenting.  I’m looking forward to the event – the programme the NAACE team have put together should provide a stimulating few days.

Patrick Kirk

Filed under: Blog, Uncategorized — Tags: , , , , , , — Patrick Kirk @ 4:12 pm

OPENHIVE Leadership Forum Q & A

June 24, 2010

At our Leadership Forums we didn’t have time to answer all of the questions that were raised throughout the day, so as promised we’ve published our responses to you online. 

Presentations from the two days are now available online for you to view and enjoy. 

So where were we?  :-)

1) Do you offer a variety of learner interfaces suitable to age/KS/ability/SEN?  On top of that, can schools get their own look and feel into the system, if so, to what level?
OPENHIVE has a variety of Primary themes and Secondary themes for different age groups and key stages.  Each school has the flexibility to choose which theme they wish to deploy across their whole site.  Individual users can also personalise their own MySite with a different theme to that of the school.  On top of this, OPENHIVElearning allows users (teachers and learners) to change their own background themes, imagery and colours from a wide selection available within the site library. 

2) Can you import taxonomies or external schemes of work?
Yes we can. OPENHIVE supports external schemes of work and taxonomies.

3)  If the portal is provisioned across an authority or campus, does that mean that students will be able to see and add friends from across the authority and not just her tutor group or school? Who has control of this?
This level is flexibility is available within OPENHIVE.  This will be on a site permission basis.  If you wish to allow students to see/add friends from other schools within the authority, your site administrator could set this up.

4) How does OPENHIVEinsight cope with parent access/OLR in these scenarios:

- A child is in care & requires access by 5 adult carers
OPENHIVEiD, our identity management service, would support this scenario.  OPENHIVE can enable and manage access for multiple adults per child, but the carers/guardians must reside in the MIS system as approved carers/adults.

- A parent has 4 children at one school and 2 at another – both use OPENHIVE
OPENHIVEiD supports multiple children across multiple schools through one login, so long as the schools are federated or part of the same Local Authority.

- A child’s parents are divorced.  One parent is not allowed access
OPENHIVEiD takes the MIS information as the authoritative source of data.  This information should reside in the MIS and will therefore affect the access rights within OPENHIVE.  Even if the parent tried to register to access OPENHIVE they would not be able to.

- A teacher is also a parent of a child in the same school. Do they get access to reporting for all children they teach or just their own child?
As a teacher you would have a different interface/area to access information about all of the children you teach to specific parental information about your own child.

5) We currently have a SharePoint 2007 platform with a lot of content in it, how do you accommodate this if we move to OPENHIVE in terms of data migration?
For each new customer we undertake a provisioning consultancy process to identify and agree a migration plan for all of the content you wish to migrate to OPENHIVE.  We have significant expertise in helping customers transition and migrate between SharePoint platforms.

6)
Will England win the world cup? 
It is unlikely, but we can hope :-)

7) What information from your VLE and courses is available to Senior Leadership Teams?
OPENHIIVElearning, our VLE provides comprehensive reports and information for Senior Leadership Teams.  Reports are available on the following:
- Attendance
- Subject attainment
- Course attainment
- Targets
- Student attainment
- Student achievement

8 ) Is there a choice of font – in particular Century Gothic?  
Yes, you can have a choice of font.  Like with most websites, so long as you have the fonts installed on your machine you can use them.  If you want to specify Century Gothic as your font in SharePoint, you can.  Our Silverlight applications make use of Trebuchet or Myriad Pro which is embedded in the Silverlight application itself.  

9) Is your VLE based on SLK or is it entirely designed in-house?
SLK sits underneath OPENHIVElearning, although we have added in some bespoke customisation to tailor it for an educational context.

10) Social Networking – How much control does the user have over the provision e.g. Not appearing in friends of friends lists or not being able to be emailed etc?   
Currently no control exists over a user being able to deny or accept friend requests. This is an area we are looking to develop in future releases of OPENHIVE.

11) Ad Hoc Groups – you mentioned you could flexibility allocate permissions for ad hoc groups. Do these groups/could they have team sites created to allow information and resources to be delivered?
Yes, this is currently in development.

12) Can students add resources to the VLE resources library?  Can students create their own courses and share them with each other?
Currently no, students cannot create their own courses or add resources to courses.  We are however exploring possibilities with this in the next release of OPENHIVElearning, which is currently in development.

13) Assigned Courses – Can students join courses that have not been assigned to them, or request to join them?
Currently no, however, we are exploring possibilities with this in the next release of OPENHIVElearning that is currently in development.  

14) Just a consideration – there has been a lot of mentions of the iPad etc, isn’t Silverlight support required for this?
Currently Silverlight is not supported on the iPhone or the iPad.

15) What limitations does OPENHIVE present that a standard MSSP install doesn’t if any? Also can the school add web parts or is this restricted?
The only limitations on the portal are the themes. It is a standard MSSP install.  Schools can add their own web parts, change and customise the layout or add whatever content they wish.

16) Friends in 14-19 – with students studying at multiple schools can friends be extended over trusted sites? Similarly for federated schools?
Currently no, however we are exploring these possibilities in future releases of OPENHIVE.

 17) OPENHIVE Training & CPD – What training do you provide to customers and how is this related to CPD? To what extent is the online help related to:
- the features  and ‘ how to’ in OPENHIVE?
- the features of and ‘how to’ in SharePoint?
- related to the ‘why to’ of school life and learning?  
OPENHIVE modules are supplied as standard with initial ‘getting started’ training. Synetrix offers additional training modules and resources to further develop and embed the learning platform.  The online help service and information within OPENHIVE is more ‘how to’ driven to help our users get started quickly.

Microsoft SharePoint and Microsoft Exchange email are delivered with specific help files that reference OPENHIVE customisations/adaptations.   Where generic information is required for Microsoft product enquiries, we have augmented our help with useful links to Microsoft help resources.   OPENHIVElearning is specific to the features of OPENHIVElearning.  Throughout our help materials, we have tried to set the ‘how to’ information in context to the ‘why’ for school life and learning.  

28) Beyond individual schools, can you comment on deployment to a Local Authority or a chain of free schools and how inter establishment collaboration can take place?
 
Response to follow…  

29) Does your next / planned VLE leverage ULURU functionality?   
Response to follow…  

Filed under: Blog, Uncategorized — Tags: , , — Ceri.McCall @ 3:12 pm

Join us at our OPENHIVE Leadership Forum

May 26, 2010

Taking time out to think differently and explore new possibilities is something that many of us enjoy. Since we launched OPENHIVE at BETT2010, we’ve been engaging with Local Authorities and Schools across the UK working with them to support their future teaching and learning strategies. We’ve had some fascinating conversations and been posed some challenging questions and we hope to build on these interactions by hosting two events.

Next month we will be hosting two Leadership Forums at Microsoft’s Headquarters in Reading on the 11th and 15th June. The first set of OPENHIVE events, these forums will bring together an interesting mix of speakers with expertise of Education and the application of Technology. Focused on transforming the user experience and delivering 21st Century services, we hope our forums will inspire, initiate debate and spark new ideas amongst leaders in the community.

Interested and want to learn more? We want you to be part of this.

Friday June 11th
Investments Built to Last, Built for Success

Overview: By proactively addressing the challenges of the economic crisis while maintaining our investments in the future, together we can make investments that are built to last and built to succeed. Download Conference Programme.

Benedict AroraEnjoy keynote presentations from Benedict Arora (Programme Director for Education, NESTA), Synetrix and Capita SIMS as we present our shared vision for the future. With over 30 ICT Consultants, Education Consultants and BSF Advisers registered to date, attendees will gain a unique insight into educational technologies of the future.

Audience: This Forum brings together the strategic community that informs and leads investment decisions for BSF, RBC’s, Local Education Partners and Local Authorities.

Tuesday 15th JuneIntelligent Services that Grow with your UsersA leader in educational technologies, Synetrix delivers extraordinary services that transform teaching and learning online. Focusing on intelligent services for the next generation, join us to take a step into the future and engage with your peers to shape your ICT strategy. Download Conference Programme.

Dr_Paul_KelleyOverview: Enjoy keynote presentations from Microsoft’s Steve Beswick (UK Education Director), Ray Fleming (Marketing Manager), Dr Paul Kelley (Headteacher, Monkseaton High School), Synetrix and Capita as we present our shared vision for the future. We now have senior representatives from over 25 Local Authorities registered to attend. We’d be delighted if you could join us too.

Audience: Directors of ICT, Curriculum Advisers, Head Teachers and Deputy Heads.

If you are interesting in exploring the future of learning platforms and MLE’s, we welcome you to join us at what promises to be a great event for all. Email openhive@synetrix.co.uk and secure your free place.

See you there!

Becta to close

Monday had been a day of rest and relaxation on the Yorkshire coast, and then as I came back into range of a phone mast my iPhone started pinging.  All of my incoming emails and tweets were ‘Have you heard about Becta? What do you think will happen next?’  Yesterday was spent working with new colleagues from Ramesys (it was good to get together – I think we’ll have a fruitful relationship) so I’ve just managed to catch up with the news, blogs and tweets.

I started with a read of the Becta website which gave an understandably negative view of the closure.  I can’t help but feel sad – I’ve worked very closely with a number of the people at Becta over the years and, on the whole, have enjoyed the relationships I’ve had with them.  They were committed, dedicated, and responsible and understood the needs of both the education community and the suppliers that support it.  Because of the thrust of my work over the years, most of my contact has been with the safeguarding and technical teams.  These teams have been unstinting in their advice and support.  OK – so we’ve not always been in total agreement but the relationship wouldn’t have been as productive if we had been.  

The Guardian had a well balanced article with more of a hint that the savings may not be real unless some of its functions are picked up elsewhere – for example, the savings accrued by organisations utilising Becta’s contracts exceeded the cost of the organisation, according to Graham Badman, Chairman and Stephen Crowne, Chief Executive of Becta and echoed on the thinq website.

Looking at the tweets (and the responses to the BBC article Becta: Does it deserve to die?) there appear to be many who think that Becta was doing a good job.  In a number of cases, those that thought killing off Becta is a good thing disagreed with the advice that Becta gave – typically suggesting that Becta has not supported Open Source and seeming to have missed just how pro-active they have been on this front.  On balance I thought that there were more who will miss Becta than there were celebrators of its demise.

There are many of the functions that Becta provides that should be found alternative homes and I’ve only listed a few .  Will the re-christened Department for Education pick up the safeguarding responsibility? Will the ISP accreditation move to the British Standards Institute as it’s already well aligned with PAS:74 2008?  Will the procurement responsibilities pass to the Office of Government Commerce (OGC) alongside other procurement frameworks or will they go to PfS?  Where will their curriculum advice and guidance go at a time when other natural homes also appear to be under threat? What will happen to their Emerging Technologies and TechNews service?  The FITS (Framework for ICT Technical Support) initiative may have a life of its own but will need a home – perhaps with ITIL? The ICT Mark started life with NAACE – perhaps it reverts? What will happen to the many opportunities Becta has created for celebrating the brilliant work of schools, teachers and students? These and many other questions will need to be answered over the coming months otherwise we run the risk of chaos filling the vacuum created by the loss of Becta.

What’s your view, good, bad or unsure?

Which functions do we need to continue?

For further comment:

Naace, thinq, OpenSourceSchools, Steve Wheeler, computing: for and against closure.

Patrick Kirk

Filed under: Blog, Uncategorized — Tags: — Patrick Kirk @ 2:10 pm

Learning platform: steps to adoption grants

May 17, 2010

Reading the NAACE newsletter this weekend I came across the following:

Learning platform: steps to adoption grants

Colleagues will be aware that Becta is planning to support the increased adoption of learning platforms in schools through grant funding to groups of schools working together. This will be targeted towards the primary sector at schools that have not started or are just beginning to use a learning platform. The award will be through a competitive grants process; notification of the Grant Notice is expected following the formation of a new government. To ensure fairness for those local authorities who were unable to attend the recent regional forums the following information was given:

  • Grants will be awarded to groups of primary schools working together;
  • Consortia of schools may be based around a hub school and will be supported / coordinated by local authority, RBC or similar public sector body;
  • Consortia will be expected to demonstrate they are using advice and guidance based on a recognised adoption model and materials;
  • An external impact evaluation will be undertaken to inform future plans

Watch this space, we’ll keep our antennas tuned for the alert from Becta.

A plug for NAACE – Synetrix became a sponsor of NAACE earlier this year.  NAACE describes itself as: “Naace is the professional association for those concerned with advancing education through the appropriate use of information and communications technology (ICT). Naace was established in 1984 and has become the key membership organisation for those working in ICT in education.”

So if you fit the members’ description and you haven’t joined, why not?

Patrick Kirk

Filed under: Blog, Uncategorized — Tags: , , — Patrick Kirk @ 9:21 am

All Party Education Debate at NAHT Annual Conference – HIghlights

May 10, 2010

Whilst the negotiation continues…… click here to watch the conference video of the three would be education ministers.

Patrick Kirk

Filed under: Blog, Uncategorized — Tags: , — Patrick Kirk @ 8:28 am

Higher priority needed for ICT and learning – OECD

May 6, 2010

Whilst at the NAHT conference at the weekend I noticed that an OECD paper “Educational Research and Innovation: Are the New Millennium Learners Making the Grade?: Technology Use and Educational Performance in PISA 2006” had recently been reviewed on Merlin Johns’ website.

From Merlin’s site:

Governments around the world should highlight the importance of computers and technology for education if schools are to help students bridge a second, emerging digital divide that “separates those with the competences and skills to benefit from computer use from those who do not”.

Given the correlation of these skills to economic, social and cultural success, says a new OECD report, governments should “do their best to engage teachers and schools in raising the frequency of computer use to a relevant level“. As well as bridging a digital divide that is much more than just access to technology, would improve pupil attainment and demonstrate that schools and teachers are serious about their roles in developing learners fit for a technology-rich world.

Let’s hope that tomorrow’s policy makers have read the report!

Patrick Kirk

Filed under: Blog, Uncategorized — Tags: , , , , — Patrick Kirk @ 8:58 am

Ed Balls, Michael Gove and David Laws on the platform at the NAHT Annual Conference 2010 – 1st May 2010

May 4, 2010

With less than a week to go until the election, Balls, Gove and Laws took time out of their hectic schedules to visit the NAHT Annual Conference in Liverpool.  The session started with an introductory speech from each of the visitors.

Ed Balls:  Ed commended the conference delegates on their passion for helping every child to succeed.  Later in the session Michael Gove passed on the same compliment to Ed!  Balls was clear about the need for a new accountability system – the Report Card needs to reflect the progress made by every child.  He went on to reinforce Government spending on education – a doubling in real terms – and confirmed the Labour Party’s commitment to continue the increase in educational investment over the coming years.  Later he challenged Michael Gove to ‘come clean’ on the Conservatives’ plans – a challenge to which Gove chose not to respond.  Balls reinforced the desire and need for every school to be a ‘good’ school, that this would be key to parental choice, and that ‘every child matters’.

Michael Gove: His theme was that Government must listen to and trust education professionals.  That Head Teachers must have the ‘freedom to flourish’ (suitably aligned with the conference theme)  and that OFSTED must be transformed.  He proposed that inspections must be driven by observation and not data – claiming that inspectors arrive at schools with pre-determined views based on data.   Gove believes that the profession must be free from fear, free from interference and free to inspire.  He recognised the need for benchmarks and said that we need to learn from other countries.  Gove advocated that  with freedom and trust comes accountability – so there’s no escape from being measured but there was no clarity as to how!

David Laws: ‘Freedom to Flourish’ was announced as a Liberal Democrat theme, something that we should expect to see loud and clear when they are in power.   Laws commended Ed Balls and our current Government – they’ve redressed many of the issues they inherited from the previous incumbents – they’ve improved standards (we now have many high performing , inspiring schools), they’ve made a step change in investment.  Laws claimed that if we have a change in administration, we need to ensure we don’t undo the good things that have been achieved to date; we must not return to the previous Conservative regime where education isn’t prioritised.  However, Laws acknowledged many challenges that still exist – too many children still leave our education system with inadequate qualifications, there are excessive levels of political interference, excessive legislation is part of the problem – not part of the solution.  For the Liberal Democrats they’re proposing  1. To pass an Education Freedom Act to end political micromanagement and interference – it’s counterproductive and stifles innovation. 2. To bring additional funding, education is their number one spending commitment and they’ll give head teachers the freedom to set their priorities without ring fencing funds.  3. Schools need a clear system of accountability that is reflective of performance not catchment areas.

 There followed a number of questions from the floor to which each of the speakers were  asked to respond.

 If we have a ‘balanced’ government which of them should hold the Education portfolio?

Balls: providing a rising budget is key – something the Conservatives won’t commit to.  Gove: would want to work beyond the boundaries of the Conservative party.

Laws: the keystones are Funding, Freedom and Accountability.  Freedom to innovate should be for all and not just for the few.  This was a dig at the Conservative policy where the ‘new free’ schools and academies would exclusively enjoy freedom – he added ‘don’t vote Conservative’.

But did they answer the question – I think not!

They were invited to comment on the new Primary Curriculum that was dropped from the Education Bill that was rushed through the House in the final days of the session.

Gove: It wasn’t fit for purpose.

Laws: It didn’t go far enough.

Balls: The Rose review was well received by the profession; it’s a shame that there wasn’t time to see it through.

What are their views on free nursery education?

Laws: we’ll continue it, we must start early to combat disadvantage.

Balls: per pupil funding will increase, we’ll keep SureStart and increase nursery provision without introducing top-up fees.

Gove: he’ll ensure that they safeguard the free entitlement.

What are their views on SEN and Inclusion?

Gove: we’ll change the process for assessing the level of need. We need to build centres of excellence.

Balls: parents should be able to choose between special schools and mainstream schools – selecting the most appropriate provision for the needs of their children.  He added that the Conservative sums just don’t add up.

Laws: there should be real choice and where there is inclusion there should be the funding to support it.

What are their views on Diplomas?

Laws: keen to make more vocational training and qualifications available.  There should be a ‘’General Diploma’ which builds on and includes existing qualifications.

Gove: the entitlement is undeliverable. The credibility of Diplomas is variable and they need to be validated by professional bodies and trade associations.

Balls: the development of Diplomas has involved more consultation and engagement than ever before.  They’re new and growing.  The statements by Gove have not been constructive and have done those following the courses a disservice.

What about CPD?

Balls: it is the most important issue; we now have a better qualified and skilled profession than we’ve ever had. We have inspirational leaders.

Gove: we need to raise the prestige and esteem of the profession.

Laws: the quality of teachers is key.  When we look at other countries we must learn the lesson and eliminate political interference.

What about our pensions?

Gove: we will review public sector pensions; those with a pension of over £50k per annum will feel the impact. (So teachers will be safe!)

Laws: we’ll not abolish final salary pensions; we will review how they are funded because they’re currently too expensive.

Balls: we’ll keep our pension promises.

What about the concept of ‘freedom’?

Laws: if you vote Conservative there will only be freedom for the few – we think it should be freedom for all.

Balls: we have the best professionals we’ve ever had; we’ll trust them. But beware of the Conservatives’ budget cuts.

Gove: there will be freedom for all.

So how did they do?  Gove gave a very polished opening speech – it felt as though his researcher had attended the conference.  He fared less well during the question and answer sessions, looking nervous at times, and consistently ignored challenges from the other two concerning both funding and prioritisation of education.  Balls was confident and at times bullish, defending current achievements as well as setting out his stall for the future.  He certainly attacked Conservative policies; repeatedly asking Gove to talk about funding.  Laws was very assured, making clear statements which were well received by the delegates, praising some of the Labour administration achievements, repeatedly saying that the electorate shouldn’t turn back the clock and vote Conservative.  There are definite signs of a burgeoning alignment between Messrs Balls and Laws.

In the news on the BBC website:

Comment on the conference – Head teachers should not be treated like football managers and face the sack if they have a bad year.

Comment on education policies: Three largest parties clash over education priorities.

Patrick Kirk

Filed under: Blog, Uncategorized — Tags: , — Patrick Kirk @ 10:29 am

NAHT – It’s time for freedom to flourish

May 2, 2010

The keynote speach had the theme: Active trust & supportive responsibility and was delivered by Andy Hargreaves who is the Thomas More Brennan Chair at Boston College http://www2.bc.edu/~hargrean/

Andy started with where we are today – he referred to our current situation as “The great unravelling” and that our biggest loss is trust – trust in banks, in politicians, in those around us – at all levels of society.  We need to rebuild trust and that it takes three forms: competence, contract and communication trust.

  •  Competence Trust – People aren’t doing their jobs properly we need to enforce and proscribe.
  • Contract Trust – Do we do what we say we will do? Do we work hard and pull our weight?
  • Communication Trust – Trust of understanding, working together in relationships of mutual understanding

Failures in the first two are often a result of failure of the last.

As a leader, you can’t make demands without a relationship.  Fear doesn’t last long as a means of getting things done.

Andy then used some slides from The Spirit Level: Why Equality is Better for Everyone http://www.equalitytrust.org.uk/resources/slides

A few interesting slides from the presentation:

spirit level 11

spirit level 12

spirit level 26

The UK doesn’t come out very well on any of these.  Have a look at the rest for yourself.

Andy then asked the audience what they thought of the concept of chains of schools and emulating the TV programme he asked: “Snog, marry or avoid?” Unsurprisingly the vote was overwhelmingly AVOID!

He suggested that the real ‘Holy Grail’ would be to get schools to work together – within a ‘corporate profit driven entity’ loyalty is to the chain not to the community or other schools outside the chain.  This, he felt, was destructive from the community’s point of view. He felt that schools should be collectively accountable to encourage working together for the good of the community.

He made some observations about Finland and Alberta – politically poles apart yet both successful.  His hypothesis was that it’s stability that brings success, along with freedom from political interference and school lead innovation.

The then talked about three ‘paths’:

  • Path of autocracy – top down “we will be world class” – whatever that means!
  • Path of technocracy – looking at the data with the focus on tracking
  • Path of effervescence –like bubbles in a glass of champagne – no stability, nothing lasting.

He talked about being in your element – doing things in such a way that you are totally absorbed and engaged.  Schools must put people in their element!  Hence the curriculum should be engineered to fit the child and the way he/she learns.

On testing: A topical subject for this conference – he suggested that a sample should be tested, not everyone – test by sample not by census.

On inspection: Don’t just strip out all of the ‘failing’ leaders/teachers or close the school. In industry most quick turn rounds don’t work.  When failing don’t inspect – provide a culture for growth and have a testing amnesty.  Something here about not pulling up the plant repeatedly to check that the roots are growing?

In conclusion we need the fourth way – active trust – working together side by side. 

Patrick Kirk

Filed under: Blog, Uncategorized — Tags: — Patrick Kirk @ 8:38 am

Make IT Happy Competition: Enter by 30 July 2010

April 21, 2010

 

Make it happy

In one of my blog posts from the NAACE conference I mentioned the ‘Make IT Happy’ competition.  This is an annual competition for primary schools.  I was reminded of the event when visiting the Teachernet website:

Ten million people in the UK have never used the internet. Today’s children have grown up with technology and see it as part of their everyday lives. This makes them the perfect ambassadors and teachers of the internet to the digitally excluded in their communities.

Many primary schools in the UK are doing excellent and inspirational work to promote and teach children and their families about using the internet, and some have begun to extend this to benefit the wider community. This competition identifies and celebrates the best of this work. It is looking for examples of primary schools from across the UK getting their communities online.

To enter, schools need to show how they are already been helping the local community to use the internet. Alternatively, they could start a new project now. The presentation of entries should be pupil-led and show creative and innovative use of technology. This could involve:

  • podcast
  • video
  • animation
  • radio show
  • website
  • radio ad.

Make IT Happy is organised by the Parliamentary Information Technology Committee (PITCOM) in partnership with e-skills UK (the sector skills council for Business and Information Technology) and supported by the Institute of Engineering and Technology (IET) and the Nominet Trust. Winners will be invited to an awards ceremony at the Houses of Parliament.

So get involved, visit the ‘Make IT Happy’ website and register your interest.  The closing date is 30th July 2010.

Patrick Kirk

Filed under: Blog, Uncategorized — Tags: , — Patrick Kirk @ 9:22 am

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