Open Source Schools is here to share information about open source software in schools. Our aim is to help you decide whether open source software might offer benefits for learning, teaching, engaging pupils and parents, managing information and resources, or school administration.

The website provides information and articles about open source software, advice on getting started, case studies of its adoption in schools, a directory for exploring what is available, and a glossary. All registered members are welcome to create content for the site.

We are building a community of people who have experience of open source software in schools, and those who are just getting started. There are a number of forums for you to share ideas and experiences and contribute to the debate about the use of open source software in schools.

jamesmichie's picture

TeachMeet Moodle

James Michie captures the atmosphere of Saturday's TeachMeet Moodle in his blog post, orginally published at http://jamesmichie.blogspot.com/2010/07/teachmeet-moodle.html under a CC by-nc-sa licence.

Today I gave a presentation to fellow Moodlers at the first ever TeachMeet Moodle which was organised by Dan Humpherson (@MoodleDan) and was hosted at Heythrop College in Kensington, London. The Meet kicked off at 11:00 with speed "dating" networking followed by a series of excellent and varied presentations.

The Twitter hash tag for the event is: #TMMoodle.and you can see a complete archive of the tweets here. All the details about the Meet can be found here, including a list of attendees, presentation titles and discussion topics. 

Below is the recording of my presentation: Blended Learning: How Moodle changes the learning inside and outside of my classroom. Thanks to Leon Cych (@eyebeams) for recording all of the presentations.

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A vision for ICT in Education

Open Source Schools was pleased to be a co-signatory to the recent open letter to the Secretary of State setting out a shared vision for ICT in education:

22 June 2010

Dear Mr Gove,

Joint statement: A vision for ICT in education

At a meeting on 4 June 2010 Naace, the ICT Association, brought together leaders from key organisations from across the education system to discuss the future of Information Communication Technology in Education.

Agreement was reached on a joint vision statement. We now circulate this to you and other interested parties. We seek assurances from you that the new government recognises the importance of ICT to learning, to learners, to management, and to the overall success of the whole education system.

The freedoms promised to schools, colleges and beyond by the coalition government provide new opportunities for teachers, lecturers and learners to make the best possible use of ICT to support, enrich and extend learning across and beyond the curriculum, thereby improving achievement, enabling personalisation and ensuring employability.

Responsibility for leadership in this field must be shared between schools, colleges, providers of adult learning, local authorities, industry, and government. If we work together, through membership organisations, subject associations and looser networks and communities of educationalists, technologists and policy makers, we can provide the mutual support and challenge that will be needed if the learners in our charge are to continue to benefit.

When used well and managed wisely, ICT is a powerful tool to ensure that:

  • curriculum and pedagogy stay relevant to an increasingly digital world and economy;
  • all learners are included, protected, and empowered;
  • teachers and lecturers have efficient, effective and economic access to digital resources, together with the tools to create and deploy these resources themselves.

The education system is ripe for the development of new models that:

  • maximise the return in learner achievement from investment in ICT;
  • support effective pedagogy;
  • provide an evidence-base to inform decision-making;
  • enable efficient procurement of software, hardware, infrastructure, and services through improved market competition and collaborative purchasing;
  • assure the quality and independence from commercial or ideological bias of support available for those in leadership roles.

The success of the country depends on the long term strength of the economy and for this, fluency in ICT matters as much as does competence in English and Mathematics. In short, a digitally literate and digitally creative workforce is of vital importance to every citizen, and achieving this demands an entitlement to the best possible use of ICT in education – by learners, by schools, colleges and institutions, and by educational leaders.

We look forward to confirmation that the newly elected government shares our vision for ICT in education, and we look forward to working with government on putting the vision into practice.

Using Scratch in class to teach programming.

By Amanda Wilson

Amanda is soon to graduate as an honours student in Computing at Glasgow Caledonian University.  Here, she describes work with primary school children to enable them to understand a bit more about computing using the open source Scratch programming language and environment.

For one hour a week over eight weeks I taught Scratch to two classes of primary 4/key stage 2(average age 8 years) children. The purpose of these lessons was mainly to show that Scratch could be used to introduce children to programming as part of their school curriculum.  The lessons given were devised by myself and were constructed around the new curriculum for excellence guidelines(being introduced in Scotland this year) as well as some basic programming concepts.  The main aim of these lessons was to see if the children would learn from using Scratch as well as seeing how enjoyable the lessons were for the children and to see how the teachers rated the lessons.

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Alan Bell's picture

Ubuntu in Business

Date: 
13/07/2010

I am one of the organisers of an event hosted by the Ubuntu UK community and Canonical, the commercial sponsors of Ubuntu. It is mainly aimed at the business sector but we would be delighted if people working in school ICT departments could come along. In fact if there is demand for it I could add some more school focussed demonstrations, perhaps Edubuntu or Elgg, or whatever you are interested in seeing. Either way it will be a fun and educational event and I would love to see you there.

Registration is at http://ubuntuinbusiness.eventbrite.com

mberry's picture

On Becta's Closure

[Declaration of interest: the Open Source Schools project, for which I have the honour to act as community manager, is funded by Becta, although I've written the following in a purely personal capacity]

The Treasury announced this morning that Becta is to close as part of a package of some £670M education savings.

I, for one, would like to record my gratitude for all Becta have done to lead the adoption of technology in education over the last few years. Their interest in, and support for, open source software pre-dates my own: I have fond memories of attending an excellent 'expert technology seminar' chaired by Dr Malcolm Herbert, then one of the Becta team, now at RedHat, back in 2000 when I was head of maths and IT at a school in Oxford, just starting to experiment with Linux and setting up a Samba server. Despite others' comments on Twitter and in response to Rory Cellan-Jones' article, Becta have done much to encourage schools to explore open source, albeit in a way which maintained the level playing field that was part of Cabinet Office guidance, and subsequently the Conservative manifesto and the Coalition's Programme for Government.

Transfer Summit

Date: 
24/06/2010 - 25/06/2010

 Ross Gardler of OSS Watch writes:

With nearly all global organisations using Open Source software today, the industry faces a challenge of properly understanding the development, contribution, and communities instrumental to creating an enterprise-grade Open Source policy and ensuring its successful adoption.

TeachMeet Moodle

Date: 
03/07/2010

Dan Humpherson (@moodledan) writes:

After attending this years MoodleMoot I couldnt help but think that as the Moodle community grows so does the diversity of the user base who attend. The natural progression of a piece of software with global appeal and a global user base.

There were many presentations to choose from and a generous handfull of keynote speeches across the two day event, most of which I found both informative and inspiring.

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Marvellous Moodle Moot

ULCC's Frank Steiner has passed on their press release about last week's Moodle Moot. The next UK Moodle event, which will have a clear focus on practical Moodling in schools, will be TeachMeet Moodle - sign up on the wiki to present or lurk.

Prof. Sugata MitraMoodleMoot UK 2010 (#mootuk10) hosted by ULCC, welcomed over 250 delegates from across the world to spend two days packed with riveting keynotes and over 60 workshops at University of London’s impressive Senate House, as a delegate from the States remarked on Twitter: “excellent venue, decent coffee, early arrival, waiting to get started. Prof Sugata Mitra starts off with today's keynote #mootuk10; one of 2000 tweets to be posted during the duration of the conference.

On choosing a VLE

Some thoughts on choosing a VLE from Paul Haigh, originally posted on his blog, and reproduced here with permission.

Whether you are procuring your own learning platform, assessing the one you have or judging one provided for you the following check list will help form your judgement.

Open Source or commercial product

Most products on the market are commercial tools you buy a license for, sometimes called ‘proprietary software’ and these should bring the product quality and service reliability a service contract should bring (alas quality and reliability aren’t always there). Conversely there are a small number of Open Source Learning Platforms. Open Source software essentially means anyone can see and edit the coding behind the product, this renders them commercially impotent as the code can be shared and adapted by anyone. These tools are free to download from the internet. This might make them sound like Heath-Robinson esoteric tools for fanatics, far from it- the most commonly used VLE in the world; Moodle, is just this. 

Open Source software might be free to download, it’s not free to use, you might need technical staff to run the system, you might have to pay for training you will have other technical costs (see below) but its massive uptake can be put down to a few key issues.

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Peter Kemp's picture

Further thoughts on moving forward with open source.

Another contribution to the debate, this time from Peter Kemp of TeachFirst and the Open Education Disc.

Moodle has several major universities using it with massive budgets to throw behind the development and customisation of such a thing. Projects such as OpenOffice have Sun and IBM supporting them; universities have adopted/developed other projects such as Kent and Greenfoot. However, when it comes to the ‘minor’ projects such as Audacity, Freemind, infrarecorder, tuxtyping etc, major support is just not there and development can be sporadic or ill focused. Such projects have to rely on volunteers or the occasional philanthropic outpouring such as the Google Summer of Code. It is as if Eric Raymond’s Bazaar (The Cathedral and the Bazaar) has split into the multinational supermarkets which are hugely popular and successful and the niche butchers and bakers which are unresponsive; where you’re not even sure what products they will have on sale next week.

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