Information Security is an issue for the school leadership team!

April 20, 2010

In recent conversations with Local Authorities it is clear that they are concerned about Information Security – they are worried about the new, punitive, powers of the Information Commissioner’s Office – fines of up to £500,000 can now be issued to organisations that lose or misuse sensitive personal information.  These fines apply to schools too!  The previous maximum fine had been £5,000.

In my previous role I worked with Becta on their Information Security guidelines and you can find them here.  It’s also worth reading Ray Fleming’s blog.  Ray writes an excellent Microsoft centric blog for UK schools and it’s worth signing up to his RSS feed.

If you’re preparing to implement a parental reporting environment or allowing remote access to your school’s management information system you need to be safe and not sorry – read the Becta guidelines, do your risk assessment.

A rare commercial message from me – we have, within OPENHIVE, a number of solutions to the technical issues – so take some time to browse through the product set and contact us if you want further information.

So are you secure?  Information Security should be part of everyone’s regular risk assessment. It’s not just a technical issue, the cultural and behavioural issues need addressing too and these belong firmly with the school leadership team and the Governing Body.  The financial and reputational risks are too great to ignore.

Patrick Kirk

Filed under: Blog, Uncategorized — Tags: , , , — Patrick Kirk @ 11:24 am

ICT fares well in BSF review

ICT fares well in BSF review – but not transformation.

This was the title of an article by Bob Harrison on Merlin John’s website.  It’s a review of PriceWaterhouseCoopers’ report “Evaluation of Building Schools for the Future (BSF): 3rd Annual Report”.

The review and report are worth a read and indicative of work very much ‘in progress’.  So although PWC’s evaluation is that there’s still much to do their overall conclusion is largely positive.

Patrick Kirk

Filed under: Blog, Uncategorized — Tags: , , — Patrick Kirk @ 10:43 am

Education and the Election 2010 – news roundup

April 19, 2010

A few sources of information as the campaigns develop:

Patrick Kirk

Filed under: Blog, Uncategorized — Tags: , , — Patrick Kirk @ 9:46 am

Education and the Election 2010

April 15, 2010

Following on from my earlier posts about The Spectator Conference and the Learning & Technology World Forum we’ve been watching the political debate around education and how the parties are positioning education issues within their manifestos.  The profile of education is rising during the campaign and in my searches I came across SecEd – ‘The only website for secondary education news and jobs’.  On the site is a page entitled: ‘Taking your questions to Parliament – 15 Apr 2010’ where a number of teachers and school leaders have posed questions to the three main parties.   SecEd has written responses to the questions from Messrs Ed Balls, Michael Gove, and David Laws which have been summarised by the site editor. From the article:

On parents choosing schools rather than the other way around – the consensus appears to be that if all schools are good schools then everyone would get the school of their choice – of course, the approaches to achieving this are somewhat different!

On the gap between the funding that is spent on education and the funding received by schools – Messrs Law and Gove are both saying that there should be less money spent on ‘quangos’ and bureaucracy.  Ed Balls has already reduced the budget for Becta by £40 million so perhaps he agrees – he states that with the increased settlement and further efficiency savings (within schools), schools should be able to meet the cost pressures they face.  It’s interesting to note that part of the efficiency savings are to be met through smarter procurement – key aspects of the work of two organisations (quangos), Partnership for Schools and Becta – so let’s hope that the cuts within these organisations don’t make this goal unachievable.

On change, about having time to embed success before moving on to the next big idea – I’m not sure about their responses.  Gove: we’re going to give schools more freedom – yet he’s already made pronouncements about curriculum reform. Balls: we’ve had a lot of successes since we came into office and we’re going to build on these successes. Laws: there’s been too much meddling by politicians – we’ll pass an Education Freedom Act to ban this meddling.

On how to keep politically driven agendas out of education – there’s a level of agreement here – greater freedom for schools with increased accountability – again though, how to achieve this varies considerably.

On Diplomas – the responses varied from Laws: they’re a flop, to Gove: they need some changes to Balls: they’re a success story but we need further work on some areas (functional skills in particular – have a look at Guroo for functional skills for useful resources). So no consensus there then!

On SATS, league tables and testing – Gove: we need some changes but without them the work of some of our brilliant schools would have gone unnoticed. Balls: we need a smarter and fairer accountability system. Laws: they don’t work and are in need of reform.

On fair funding – Balls: we’ve reviewed funding mechanisms and are proposing changes but there should be local investment where it’s most needed. Laws: unfair funding is a real problem and we’re proposing changes.  Gove: funding mechanisms are too complicated and obscure and so we’re proposing changes. There’s a theme running through this response!

On OFSTED and head teacher recruitment– Messrs Gove and Laws: we need OFSTED and we need changes in the framework. Balls: there have been problems with the recent changes in the inspection framework; we need to clear up some of the myths.  Head teacher vacancy rates have been less than 1% for the last 10 years; we need to ensure that we reward those leading underperforming and challenging schools.

On pensions, pay and conditions – Gove: we’ve no plans to reform teachers’ pensions; we want to give schools more flexibility on pay and conditions. Balls: we’ve no plans to reform teachers’ pensions; and we believe that the pay and conditions agreements are a universal right – organisations can supplement them but not dilute them. Laws: we need to examine pensions across the public sector and we need to reform the rigid and bureaucratic pay and conditions rules.

On whether their education philosophy is substantiated by research – Laws: we took evidence from many involved in education. Gove: I’ve visited schools and spoken to teachers, I think good things are happening in Singapore, Finland, Sweden, and the USA.  Balls: I’ve visited many schools and had dialogues with those involved including students.  Most of the best ideas come from schools not from Whitehall.  I’m not sure that any of them answered the question!

On funding for attendence, behaviour and attainment initiatives, post-16 participation, PE, school clubs and sports – Gove: we’ll devolve budget responsibilities to schools – it’s up to them what they prioritise.  Balls: school funding will continue to increase we’ll build on the progress we’ve made. Laws: we’ll invest extra funding in schools but they’ll have to decide where their priorities lie.

So – the debate is getting under way – there’s even consensus in some areas – if you want to read more then try the following links to the education manifestos: Conservatives, Labour and Liberal Democrats.

Patrick Kirk

Filed under: Blog, Uncategorized — Tags: , , — Patrick Kirk @ 1:05 pm

TAWkies 2010. When technology and creativity combine

March 26, 2010

As sponsors of the TAWkies 2010 Telford and Wrekin Digital Creativity Awards, we were pretty excited about attending this event for the first time yesterday. In its fourth year, TAWkies is a council wide competition where schools submit digital work produced by their pupils to be judged and hopefully short-listed for these awards.

Held at the Oakengates Theatre in Telford, TAWkies 2010 attracted over 600 children, teachers, parents and local authority representatives; an impressive turnout by any standards.   

Across 9 digital award categories, children as young as 4 to 11 produced some amazing pieces of work in drawn images, photography, picture stories, animated movies, music and sound videos and computer games. Take a look at the TAWkies website where all of the digital work is being showcased – I promise you’ll be impressed!

Jay Neale, our Commercial Director had the honour of presenting the awards for photography. I think we were all quite blown away by seeing what’s possible when you combine technology and creativity, at any age.

I wanted to share a small selection of children’s digital work for you to enjoy.  

Photography Upper Key Stage 2: Morning Dew   

Morning Dew in Coalbrookdale

Manipulated Images Key Stage 1: Woodlands Primary – The Iron BridgeThe Iron Bridge by Woodlands Primary

Drawn Images, Foundation Stage: Newdale Primary School – GiraffeDrawn Images, Giraffe, Newdale Primary School

The awards evening had a special touch that made the evening all the more enjoyable. The Rockettes from Shortwood Primary entertained us with a fantastic musical interlude inbetween award categories.

Congratulations to the TAWkies team and to all of the schools that participated; Newdale Primary School, William Reynolds Infant School, William Reynolds Junior School, Captain Webb Primary School, John Randall Primary School, Woodlands Primary School, Holmer Lake Primary School, Aqueduct Primary School, Windmill Primary School, Priorslee Primary School, Madeley Infant School, Randlay Primary, Coalbrookdale & Ironbridge Primary, St Peter’s Edgmond, Newdale Primary School, Short Wood Primary School, Queenswood Primary School, Wrekin View Primary School, Newport Junior School, St Luke’s Primary School, St Lawrence Primary and St Patrick’s Primary.

To the TAWkies team thanks for inviting us, we look forward to supporting you next year.

NAACE 2010 – Michael Furdyk

March 22, 2010

Michael Furdyk

Michael is the Co-founder and Director of Technology for TakingITGlobal.org, a global online community for young people, providing a platform for millions of youth across more than 200 countries to engage with social issues. Along with managing the technology team at TakingITGlobal, Michael was involved in developing the TIGed education program, and has spoken to over 50,000 educators about the importance of engaging students and integrating technology and global perspectives into the classroom. In 2008, he was named by Contribute Magazine as one of 10 Tech Revolutionaries Redefining the Power and Face of Philanthropy.

Michael’s profile is impressive, as is the work in which he’s now involved.  His message ‘inspire, inform, involve’ permeates everything he does.  It’s been a day for quotes and his was from Thomas Edison – “I haven’t failed, I’ve found 6000 ways that don’t work.”  He said that it’s important that we recognise what happens out of school and give credit for it.  He suggested that ‘Growing up Digital’ and ‘Grown up Digital’ by Don Tapscott should be on our reading list.

As a closer – following on from the fact that Michael, like many young people of today, doesn’t wear a watch – he suggests that we have a go at the test at http://howadultareyou.com/  and have a look at ‘TEEN 2.0 | Saving Our Children and Families from the Torment of Adolescence’.

Patrick Kirk

Filed under: Blog, Uncategorized — Tags: , , , — Patrick Kirk @ 11:44 am

NAACE 2010 – Lord David Puttnam

Lord David Puttnam

An entertaining and challenging session from Lord Puttnam – he opened with a few minutes from his film  ‘We are the people we’ve been waiting for’.  See the trailer here and the movie’s web site here – you may have seen it already (The Guardian gave the movie away as a freebie) – it’s well worth a watch for his take on the challenges we face. 

Some of his messages:

  • Getting the education building blocks right – ICT is one of the building blocks and making it fit for purpose is a key challenge.
  • There’s a war between our largely failed present and a more imaginative future.
  • BSF is funding development at an unprecedented rate – but don’t forget the teachers.
  • Thirty pupils in one room is an anachronism.
  • The use of technology does not equate to the burning of books.

In January 2010 Lord Puttnam was appointed as chair of a new task force – tasked with building the presence of UK educational ICT suppliers in international markets. Its terms of reference are: “Building on the success of UK companies in Education Technologies the Taskforce should consider how we can build on the UK’s standing in the educational technology market to support the development of further opportunities for UK businesses overseas.” The full details are in the DCSF press release.

Unfortunately Lord Puttnam’s involvement in the Digital Economy Bill has meant that the task force has made little progress to date however he does expect to be able to devote more time In the near future.

Filed under: Blog, Uncategorized — Tags: , , — Patrick Kirk @ 11:17 am

NAACE 2010 – Keri Facer

 

Keri’s theme was very much ‘what next?’ If we’re predicting what happens next based on our knowledge of the present and how we got here how accurate will we be?  After watching the ‘Shift Happens’ video can you extrapolate and predict what happens next?  Keri talked about Beyond Current Horizons which:  “explores the future for education, beyond 2025. The aim is to help our education system prepare for and develop an ongoing and sustainable response to the challenges it faces as society and technology rapidly evolve.”  The programme is run through futurelab with DCSF support. 

One of the myths Keri discussed is as follows:  1) Over the coming years there will massive increase in computer processing speed. 2) There will be an explosion of the volume and wealth of digital information. 3) There will be a massive increase in population in India and China.  Therefore ‘We’ll need a hugely flexible workforce in order to be able to compete.’  Keri’s thesis is that these facts don’t lead to this conclusion.  She introduced the concept of GDH – Gross Domestic happiness – a new measure of our success? To find out more visit: Beyond Current Horizons.

Some other snippets from her talk worth a thought:

Emotional Cartography is a collection of essays from artists, designers, psychogeographers, cultural researchers, futurologists and neuroscientists, brought together by Christian Nold, to explore the political, social and cultural implications of visualising intimate biometric data and emotional experiences using technology.

It’s cheaper to remember than it is to forget – plummeting costs of data storage mean that it’s literally cheaper to remember everything than to spend time weeding/pruning.  There’s huge impact coming up for organisations when they get that dreaded FOI request and nothing’s been deleted prior to the request. Ever.

Type a letter, print it out; design an object, print it out. Virtual design suggests a situation in which, as the writer Bruce Sterling argues, “The virtual model is not a model anymore” but the meta-object. “The object itself is merely hard copy; the physical object itself has become industrial output.” Products will take on the form of digital code—they won’t be actualized until a consumer orders one up. These products will be more than products: they will be intelligent agents equipped with wireless RFID tags, GPS nodes, and searchable terms—a whole “internet of things,” as Sterling says—acquiring a data trail as they move through life and telling us stories along the way.

So, in thinking about the future it’s back to her challenge from the start of the session: “I haven’t got time, I’m too busy thinking about today.” It’s certain that thinking about the future is exactly what she’s doing and tracking her thoughts and writings will be worthwhile.

Patrick Kirk

Filed under: Blog, Uncategorized — Tags: , , , , — Patrick Kirk @ 10:45 am

More about the Martha Lane Fox session

Martha mentioned the Race Online 2012 website, the online focus for her activities:  ”Our mission is to create life enhancing opportunities for socially excluded adults who have never been online. Race Online 2012 is a national challenge to give 4 million new people the opportunity to access the digital world by the London Olympics.”  In conjunction with Race Online 2012, the primary Make IT Happy 2010 competition will be awarding prizes to schools that show how they have helped their community learn about the exciting possibilities of the internet.

Martha also talked about the Pass It On initiative – organised through the UK Online centres the goal is to encourage those with IT skills to ‘pass them on’.

So – if you are involved with a primary school, know an organisation that can be a sponsor, or want to give your support visit either the Make IT Happy 2010 or Race Online 2012 websites and join in.

Patrick Kirk

Filed under: Blog, Uncategorized — Tags: , , , , — Patrick Kirk @ 9:46 am

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