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Innovative Technology to Support Transformation of Learning and Teaching in Leicester

Managed Services
03-Feb-2008 - [Managed Services]

Leicester is set to become a world class online learning city, creating an environment of learning anytime, anywhere as part of its ongoing city-wide regeneration. Working with Northgate Education, Leicester City Council will see a massive £27 million invested in Information and Communications Technology (ICT) bringing Leicester secondary schools to the forefront of education.

Under the Building Schools for the Future programme (BSF) Leicester City secondary schools will benefit from over £235 million investment making them some of the most advanced schools in the country. Leicester is among the first UK authorities to be part of the Government’s BSF programme which is a new approach to investing in schools to create the best possible setting for young people to learn in and meet their educational needs.

The project will see all 16 secondary schools in Leicester rebuilt or re-modelled and upgraded to provide flexible and attractive learning environments that better support learning. As part of the Building Schools for the Future scheme, each secondary aged child in Leicester will be educated in a 21st Century environment. As just one part of the project, each school will be equipped with the very latest innovative learning and teaching tools, such as an online learning environment to make learning more engaging and exciting.

Leicester will be ahead of other authorities by providing each child with a Managed Learning Environment (MLE) called N-able from ICT specialist Northgate Education. A Managed Learning Environment provides students with their own personalised learning area with the support and assistance they need to maximise their independent learning and to progress in line with their own individual learning plan. Implementation of N-able will be tailored to the requirements of each individual school and will incorporate the Fronter Virtual Learning Environment and resources currently used in the city primary schools. Accessible via the internet from any location, N-able will give each learner their own personal online space to work on assignments, store their work and access emails enabling them to communicate with teachers and fellow students.

The first schools to benefit from N-able will be Beaumont Leys Secondary School, Fullhurst Community College, Judgemeadow Community College and Evington and Soar Valley College. Each of the schools will be fully equipped with high speed broadband giving learners access to a variety of engaging online learning resources to help support their education. To help control paper wastage, each school will have a centrally managed printing solution which reduces the amount of printers and paper used by the schools to help maintain a more ‘green’ school environment. Teachers will be supplied with a digital tool to enable them to continually assess learners work and offer as much or as little guidance as students might need. N-able will also allow schools to incorporate administration systems such as registration, student assessment and cashless catering to reduce administration and reporting time and allow teachers to once again focus on teaching.

Combining academic information and school administration systems, over the course of the project N-able can provide parents with secure access to information about their child such as their attendance, their homework assignments and their assessments. Leicester parents will be able to keep up to date with their child’s achievements online and really get involved in their child’s education improving communication between parents, school and students.

Cllr Vi Dempster, Cabinet Member for Child and Young People’s Services  commented: “By creating stronger links between home and school, the managed learning platform encourages young learners to view their education as more than just what goes on in a classroom. N-able allows children to really take ownership and control of their own learning and promotes lifelong learning which is at the heart of what we are trying to achieve.”

The implementation of a managed learning environment will enable learners and teachers to share and store work and resources that can be securely accessed anywhere and anytime. N-able is part of a wider ICT managed service provided for the schools by Northgate Education. Once completed schools will have access to helpdesk and a school based technician to ensure any computer problems are fixed swiftly to minimise disruption to education. The schools will also benefit from Smart Card technology. Used by students to register for their morning and afternoon classes, Smart Cards allow the school to monitor pupil’s attendance and reduce truancy. Smart Card technology will also be implemented to provide cashless catering with the facility for parents to top up the cards on-line – which means children no longer have to bring money to school as well as school library access.

David Hyland, Building Schools for the Future Director, Northgate Education, commented: “We are extremely proud to be involved in Leicester’s Building Schools for the Future project to transform learning and teaching across the city’s schools. By installing innovative technology Leicester secondary schools are going way beyond Government requirements to ensure that students have the best possible education resources available. It’s fantastic to work with a forward thinking authority such as Leicester to create schools at the forefront of learning. We are delighted to be involved in this project and feel the benefits to young learners will make Leicester a best practice model for BSF projects in other areas.”

The BSF project will ensure that Leicester schools will have high quality facilities and integrated information and communication technology way ahead of other areas to help deliver personalised learning tailored to the needs, interests and aptitudes of every secondary aged child in the city.
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Date: 01.04.08                                                                                              Ref:NG010

For press enquiries please contact Judith Castle at Livewire Public Relations, tel: +44 (0)20 8339 7440 or e-mail judith.castle@livewirepr.com.

Notes to editors:

About Northgate Information Solutions (www.northgate-is.com/education)
Northgate Information Solutions is a market leader in providing specialist software, outsourcing and information technology (IT) services to the global human resources and UK local government, education and public safety markets.

Northgate employs over 6,000 staff and operates in 46 countries across 5 continents.

Northgate has approximately 4,500 large/medium customers and approximately 10,500 small to medium enterprise (SME) customers worldwide. Northgate delivers Human Resources solutions to many of the world’s largest organisations, as well as working with 90% of the UK local authorities and all of the UK’s regional police forces.

Northgate Education, Northgate’s specialist Education division, is a leading provider of managed services and solutions in the UK. It provides technology services to over 1,200 schools, with more than 350,000 teachers and learners successfully supported by the company. Northgate provides services to every school in Northern Ireland through C2k, the largest and most comprehensive e-learning initiative ever implemented in the UK. It also provides Information and Communication Technology (ICT) managed services to Bristol City Council and Leicester City Council as part of the government's Building Schools for the Future Programme (BSF) and to over 150 education sites in Hartlepool, from primary schools through to further education. In January 2007, Northgate was awarded an ISO 20000-1 accreditation by the British Standards Institution, for provision of IT service management activities.

About BSF (www.bsf.gov.uk)
Building Schools for the Future (BSF) is a DCSF (Department for Children Schools and Families) programme to raise educational attainment by rebuilding or renewing every secondary school in England over the next 15 years. Subject to future spending reviews, the Government has allocated £2.2 billion capital expenditure each year to the BSF programme.