Helping Glasgow’s special needs schools reach out to every
child
Glasgow City Council provides a high quality learning experience
to pupils attending over 300 teaching establishments - ranging from
small Pre-5 establishments through to large Comprehensive Secondary
schools. Within this structure the Council makes provision for
all young people of varying abilities. Its aim is to maximise the
learning potential of children in Glasgow, prepare them effectively
for the world of work and ensure that time spent at any of its
schools is a positive and enjoyable experience. It does this
through ‘Education Services’, a department dedicated to delivering
the highest quality teaching standards, encouraging lifelong
learning and raising the achievement and attainment levels of all
young learners.
Meeting the learning needs of every child
Glasgow’s Education Services is responsible for meeting the
learning needs of all its young people, whilst promoting a policy
of inclusion for every student - whatever their ability or
educational needs. Above all, the department’s overriding aim is to
make learning relevant, fun, exciting and accessible to everyone.
To achieve this it provides both mainstream schools and a variety
of highly specialist schools, units and in-class support systems
for children with learning or physical disabilities.
With such wide-ranging needs to cater for, Education Services
aims to meet them all by delivering the curriculum through a number
of tailored approaches. For children attending special education
centres these include ‘support for learning’ and ‘individualised
educational plans.’ But these can differ greatly from child to
child, and place a high-level of dependency on teachers and
classroom helpers to deliver intensely personalised learning.
As a result, classroom ICT resources (such as PCs, smart boards
and digital projectors) play a significant role in addressing
individual learning needs and styles by enabling teachers to select
resources that help with specific difficulties. For example, a
keyboard and screen might make writing easier for one child, while
others may draw on a talking CD-ROM book to support and encourage
their reading. Using ICT to facilitate learning in this way
requires a robust and reliable technology infrastructure - one
which won’t let the teachers or pupils down; is able to cope with
the ever-changing demands placed upon it; and requires no on-site
maintenance at the expense of valuable teaching time.
Using technology to best advantage
To facilitate ICT-assisted learning, and voice and data
communications, Education Services had in place a number of leased
ISDN lines. Whilst these lines were providing internet and data
connectivity across 34 special needs sites, they weren’t able to
support the department’s growing communications needs.
In particular, the organisation’s ISDN lines were unable to
offer the scalable bandwidth necessary to meet local eGovernment
objectives - which aim to improve services with the increased use
of technology. For Glasgow City Council this has meant being able
to offer teachers and pupils an unfailingly high-speed internet
connection; easier and faster information sharing and storage
between special needs sites and the wider school community; and the
future capability to make media-rich and high-volume curricular
content available online.
Archie Walker, Information Communications & Technology (ICT)
Manager in Glasgow City Council’s Education Services department,
explained, “The mainstream primary and secondary schools were
already operating with a managed ICT service, and it was important
for us to bring our special needs schools up to the same level.
However, we needed a truly scalable solution to accommodate their
needs - particularly in terms of supporting ICT-assisted learning
programmes in such a specialised teaching environment.”
He continued, “We also needed the chosen solution to deliver
true reliability, and have it managed on our behalf. We need our
staff to be able to concentrate on using technology to help the
pupils learn in the classroom, not be bogged down by technical
issues. Furthermore, being able to easily communicate with our
neighbouring schools would enhance the development of teaching
methods and sharing of best practice - something that benefits
teachers and pupils alike. So our aim was quite clear - we needed
to replace our existing ISDN lines with a modern, managed,
high-speed data service that could offer reliability, resilience
and robustness.”
Delivering reliability, flexibility and
scalability
To find the right supplier and solution, Glasgow City Council
carried out a best value exercise across all the major
telecommunications providers. Having compared each tender’s
technical solution against value for money, ntl Business was
awarded the contract to design and implement a bespoke network to
fit the requirements of Glasgow’s special needs schools. Due to its
reliability and deep understanding of public sector requirements -
and a logical and flexible approach to the design brief - ntl was
able to offer the education provider a cost costeffective, scalable
and efficient solution that would provide a more productive
learning and teaching environment.
Archie Walker said, “The combination of ntl’s experience in
education, and their ability to devise such a fitting and
cost-effective solution for our needs, was a winning formula. They
planned a logical, joined-up community network that was innovative,
well-thought through and gave us confidence that this was the right
move.”
Connecting Glasgow’s special needs
schools
The project, which took just four months from design to
roll-out, combines ntl Ethernet VPN (Virtual Private Network) - a
multi-site platform that uses switched Ethernet technology and
extends the existing Local Area Network environment - with ntl
Dedicated Internet Access and ntl Broadband Power. ntl Ethernet VPN
provides IP connectivity for 27 of the 34 special needs
schools in the region, and offers access to high-speed bandwidth
capability of up to 1Gigabyte. ntl is also maintaining the network
and hardware that links each local site, and delivers a
fully-managed service to ensure uninterrupted connectivity.
“The initial design concept ntl produced really helped with the
actual implementation. We were extremely pleased with the smooth
installation and were impressed with their engineering expertise,
flexibility to accommodate our needs and rigorous project
management. As a result, we now have the technology in place to
deliver real-time collaboration between staff and pupils, and fast
transmission of even the largest files,” added Archie Walker.
Making data instantly accessible – in any
format
Although, the Council’s main internet connection could manage a
considerable quota of content for download, onward distribution of
any graphical and feature-rich content to its special needs schools
was hampered by a 2Mb limitation - which affected the efficiency
and speed at which data could be shared between sites.
To rectify this, ntl Ethernet VPN is now delivering enhanced
network connectivity to 17 of Glasgow’s specialist schools at 10
Megabytes per second (Mb/s) - with the flexibility to scale up to
100Mb/s whenever required. It provides Ethernet connections between
the special needs sites, allowing Local Area Networks (LANs) to be
interconnected and facilitating limitless data sharing between
them.
Archie Walker said, “The scalability the solution provides will
be of great benefit to Education. And, to increase our bandwidth
won’t require us to invest in new equipment. This functionality
also enables us to plan for our future when more content will be
made accessible online.”
He continued, “For instance, disseminating information to a
special needs audience might be better achieved in a video or audio
format rather than text-heavy documents. In the future, distant
sites with this level of high speed connectivity will be able to
transfer media-rich files of data, video or voice traffic quickly
and easily.” The ntl solution also provides the scope to extend the
same IP connectivity to more special needs schools or learning
units in the future, by using the common switched Ethernet
infrastructure, which enables flexible traffic engineering and
low-cost standard charges for additional links.
Enabling IT to stand on its own two feet
For Glasgow City Council’s Education Services department, ntl
Ethernet VPN connectivity is enabling users, including teachers and
pupils, to experience enhanced network performance speed between
locations. It is enabling people, information and learning
tools to be quickly and easily accessible, wherever they are based.
Furthermore, it is allowing greater communication and collaboration
across the wider school community.
Archie Walker concluded, “Having a resilient system that
delivers steadfast connectivity takes away any maintenance worries
that might hinder our teaching performance. The ntl solution is
enabling our teachers to have confidence that the communications
technology they need is ready and waiting for them at the flick of
a switch, and that it won’t let them down.”