John Naughton makes an interesting comment in The Observer about school’s “restrictive broadband networks designed by clueless local authorities”. He clearly has inside information though the piece goes on a touch about the Tony Blair government being in on the act.
School networks ARE kind of yuk – most networks are. Maybe you can't put files on your machine or access Google images on yours. School networks are worse than many. But here's a real history to the restrictive network and it pre-dates Blair and even Thatcher. The history goes back to the dawn of civilization.
This is what happened. At the beginning there were people who studied and learned to understand the heavens. These people were the high priests, they were yesterday’s scientists. They could predict events. Knowledge was power. They knew cool stuff and pretty soon they gained an unholy amount of power.
This happened in schools too.
Fast forward to just yesterday when power in schools went through a comfortable era. Schools were run by the knowledgeable – basically the head of maths, head of English and head of science. Oh and the head.
But one day along came the computer. And someone in school learned to work it. Pretty soon their knowledge put them in power. They had found a fast career track. They got promoted to deputy heads in charge of ICT and i/c regional networks.
So I can't blame any bit of government policy for what's going on. Sure the government could fix it and I half think the Observer comment is helping. The cause of duff networks is that they don’t meet the needs of the users. The people in charge can’t find a way to change this even when they want them to.
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