ZDNet UK


Skip to Main Content

ZDNet.co.uk - Winner of Best Business Website 2007
  1. Home
  2. News
  3. Blogs
  4. Reviews
  5. Prices
  6. Resources
  7. Community
  8. My ZDNet

 

ZDNet UK RSS Feeds


IT Jobs

Office applications Toolkit

Government: technology can revolutionise education

Andrew Donoghue ZDNet.co.uk

Published: 11 Jan 2006 17:45 GMT

  • Email
  • Trackback
  • Clip Link
  • Print friendly
  • Post Comment

Education Secretary Ruth Kelly has claimed that online applications will allow parents to become more fully involved with their child's education and help improve teaching standards.

Speaking at the British Education and Training (BETT) Show in London on Wednesday, Kelly praised the role that technology can play in speeding up the government's education reforms. In particular, she said the Internet would allow parents to "influence learning" to a much greater degree than has ever been previously possible.

"ICT can open up our education system and make it much more accessible to parents," Kelly said.

To illustrate her point, Kelly cited new school profiles available online that allow parents to "see what is on offer and how well a school is doing".

The education secretary's comments are particularly pertinent following the publication on Wednesday of a National Audit Office report on failing schools. The report identified more than 1,500 schools as having weaknesses, with 242 schools judged by inspectors as "failing".

One of the factors cited in the report as contributing to the failure of certain schools is a "lack of parental engagement" and "limited support for the school and low aspiration of pupils and parents".

In a wide-ranging speech, Kelly claimed that technology has a large part to play in the government's education reforms. "Technology is vital to our process of reform because it allows us to move forward much more quickly," she said.

Kelly also claimed that the government was working towards ensuring that all schools in the UK have broadband access, up from the current 85 percent.

Although there may be broad agreement that ensuring better use of technology in schools would be a positive move, there has been some disagreement over who should be providing it.

On Tuesday Becta, the agency which oversees use of IT in education, said it will review the 'value for money' provided by Microsoft's educational licensing programmes in the UK, including the range, scope and cost of academic licensing models available, and whether they meet the needs of UK schools and colleges.

BETT is running till 14 January with around 550 exhibitors from across the education and technology sectors. Topics covered in the accompanying seminar programme include the role of 3D computer games in learning, use of interactive whiteboards and use of technology for personalise learning.

silicon.com's Steve Ranger contributed to this report.

  • Email
  • Trackback
  • Clip Link
  • Print friendly Print with Dell

Did you find this article useful?
110 out of 187 people found this useful


Full Talkback thread

0 comments


Company/Topic Alerts

Create a new alert from the list below:



Related Jobs

Systems Support Officers

The EUCLID Project is about delivering this objective through the implementation of a new student system and a wide-ranging programme of change. This ...

Front End Developer XHTML, CSS, Javascript, W3C

You will be a key part of the team and expected to take the initiative in ensuring the business needs of our client are fully understood and met by ...

Operations Manager (Technical pre-sales team)/ IT Manager- Abingdon, Oxfordshire

Based at the Oxfordshire HQ and reporting directly to the Head of BSF (Building Schools for the Future) within our Services Division, youll lead a ...

Featured Talkback

Why do so many (virtually all) software packages think that they are so important that they have to be started automatically every time the computer boots? What is the largest number of "speed access", "update check", "camera download" and whatever other background programs you have ever seen running? Of those, how many did you really need?

By: J.A. Watson

Read full story:
Annoying software: a rogues' gallery

Discussions

dogStar dogStar

Shake those Monkeys!

Friday 25 July 2008, 9:51 AM

1 comment
Freddyoky Freddyoky

Police And The Internet

Friday 25 July 2008, 8:32 AM

4 comments

Vista Upgrade Blog

Microsoft's pre-modern message puts a...

Over at ZDNet.com, Ed Bott reports a first sighting of Microsoft's eagerly awaited $300 million ad campaign. Already the cause of much speculation, the consensus is that this will be... More

7 comments

A $40 CONSUMER-class router has create...

Believe it or not I don't work in IT, haven't for 7 years. Yes I work with Microsoft's Windows XP Embedded and as a result I have to know a lot about the OS, the kernal, Win API calls... More

Post a comment

Sick Puppy Redo

I generally follow a dispassionate investigative process when trying to discern what happened when a project goes bad. Although its a low priority item, it gets done simply because... More

Post a comment