45% of respondents felt interoperability was the most important factor, 37% chose reporting and just 18% deciding upon administration. The survey polled 100 teaching and school staff on hot topics surrounding technology.
Interoperability within education grew from initial developments made in the USA by Edustructures and has become standardised in the UK through the Schools Interoperability Framework (SIF). Championed by BECTA, SIF will become mandated as the defacto certification standard for interoperability by 2010, ensuring that integration between education systems will become much more straight forward.
Not only will interoperability serve to save time and money during the implementation and integration phase of any new technology rollout within schools or local authorities, but the efficiencies gained on an ongoing basis will further reduce unnecessary levels of manual information exchange, particularly in lengthy and time critical processes such as statutory reporting.
A further two-thirds of respondents to the Pearson Phoenix survey agreed or strongly agreed that the ability to share information between systems and, at a higher level, departments or agencies, will be important moving forward, thus demonstrating a willingness to embrace new opportunities and a demand for interoperable systems.
'Creating a network of systems that can talk to each other without manual intervention has been a goal within education for a number of years and SIF is certainly a good start to achieving this – the private sector has seen great success in similar initiatives such as SOA and education should be no different,' said Roger Plant, Education Systems Director, Pearson Phoenix. 'As an MIS provider, we have worked hard to maintain open standards within e¹ and as a web-based application it is far easier to accomplish than many proprietary, on-site solutions. Many schools and local authorities are already well underway with running interoperable systems with e¹, not only alongside our sister company learning platform, Fronter, but also with systems such as cashless catering and biometric registration.'
"In an attempt to do the famous 'Charm Thing' with a certain Bill Gates, Tony Blair “got all [his] terminology mixed up”. Whichever Oxbridge-educated candidate ends up heading [fill in appropriate temporal adjective] Labour come the end of September, let's hope they'll be worrying less about the right nomenclature for enterprise computing platforms and more about policies that might get some more wealth-creating industry back in the country.”
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Neal Perry, Country Manager UK, Ireland & Middle East, at EPiServer talks about how some of the UK's European partners are implementing social media to strengthen citizen engagement.
"Across the World, governments created groups to explore the problems and the potential for strengthening citizen participation in local government. They then reunited the ‘champions of participation’ from countries in every continent to identify lessons and how sharing this experience might inform and shape policy and practice. Social media is one tool where organisations can embrace such initiatives and is an especially effective one when it comes to engaging the younger public." Read more
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Source: Gartner