The EDM, tabled on 21st November 2006, questions policy that promotes the exclusive use of expensive, proprietary software in schools.
MPs supporting the EDM have stressed their concern that limiting suppliers to a select group of vendors excludes most UK-based SMEs that have traditionally supplied local schools.
John Pugh MP, said: 'In my experience a school is a key part of the community and as such has a role to play in the economy of that community. By supporting SMEs the local high-technology industry will be encouraged which will benefit everyone.'
DfES policy favours the procurement of proprietary technologies from global brands despite extensive research by the government's education ICT agency, BECTA, showing that schools could save millions by switching to Open Source software.
Sue McGuire, School Governor and member of the Open Schools Alliance commented "As a school governor I am concerned with the actual economics of the DfeS argument – someone must be able to explain why software that is supplied free of charge is supposed to cost more than similar software from the wealthiest company in the world.'
The Open Schools Alliance is an umbrella organisation bringing together companies, organisations and individuals concerned about ICT in UK education. These include the Open Source Consortium (representing OSS-focused IT companies), SchoolForge-UK (representing educationalists), FFII UK (central to the recent campaign against software patents) and UKUUG (representing over a thousand IT experts across the country).
The Open Schools Alliance exists to promote the greater use of Free and Open Source Software and open standards in UK education.
Open source is a process which enables SMEs and large organisations to contribute to reusable high quality, reusable software, by deploying this software with open, often internationally approved standards, companies can cooperate on technology and compete on service, Users benefit because they can choose where to obtain this software free or with support, and with open standards they retain control of their data. The process prevents lock-in, so users never have to pay to upgrade, merely because the producers have released a new version of a product with different formats.
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SOFTWARE IN SCHOOLS 21.11.2006 Pugh, John That this House congratulates the Open University and other schools, colleges and universities for utilising free and open source software to deliver cost-effective educational benefit not just for their own institutions but also the wider community; and expresses concern that Becta and the Department for Education and Skills, through the use of outdated purchasing frameworks, are effectively denying schools the option of benefiting from both free and open source software and the value and experience small and medium ICT companies could bring to the schools market.
Related links to this article:
Open Schools Alliance
www.opensource.org
www.gnu.org
89 finalists in 11 categories in the e-Government National Awards 2006 have been announced. The Awards recognise and praise the best strategies, achievements, teams and individuals in UK e-Government. Judging takes place shortly and finalists will be announced the first week of November. The Awards will be presented at a prestigious dinner at the Savoy in London on 17th January 2007. For details of booking seats at the dinner and conference please see this link.
The Awards are supported by the Cabinet Office e-Government Unit, the Office of Government Commerce, the Society of Information Technology Management (Socitm), and SOLACE (Society of Local Authority Chief Executives and Senior Managers). Platinum sponsor is KPMG, and also a sponsor are SunGard and O2.
"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
Complete and enter our draw to win a free seat at the e-Government Awards. The public sector is already perceived to be lacking in innovation, but is that a fair assessment, and what role could it play in helping the government meet efficiency targets? What do people working on the frontline of ICT in public sector organisations think? Take part and share your views
Source: Gartner