EP. 027 – Education Thought Leader Q&A: Sue Macgregor, Director of Education and Product Development, Alps

Our next fireside chat this year is with education thought leader, Sue Macgregor of Alps Education.

Sue brings a wealth of sector experience to our chat, having had a long and varied career in teaching and leadership, before moving to Alps Education to lead the Education and Product Development teams.

At Alps Education, their focus is on providing the right analytical tools to schools so they have the power to help every student achieve their full potential. Their platforms provide KS4 and KS5 performance insights that help teachers and leaders to celebrate strengthsaction any gaps and drive-up student achievement 

It’s a great fireside chat, and Sue provides loads of insight into:

  • Her background in education, the trials and tribulations of Ofsted (and the pride in obtaining ‘Outstanding’ rating), her move into the world of edtech, and why she works at Alps Education
  • Her role at Alps Education leading teams including many other former education leaders, and the context and experience that brings
  • How tech has to work for the people who use it – not everyone loves data so it must fit in with what they need. Data can’t solve your problems but it can flag potential issues.
  • The value and importance of asking the question “So what?”
  • The ways assessment policy has changed, and how schools can work without baseline data (as a result of covid lockdowns)
  • Given what we’ve all learned through the pandemic and homeschooling, how assessment policy might look in the future; it’s a wasted opportunity to simply return to what we’ve been doing for the last 50 years.
  • How Alps methodology is different, and their mantra of “what’s next?” and allowing students to move forward
  • What edtech companies should be thinking of when developing new solutions for educators and leaders, both now and in the future.
  • The importance of being transparent, and empowering school leaders, teachers and staff
  • Future plans for Alps Education, and developments and innovations the education community can expect to see in the coming months and years.

 

We’ve split the interview into three shorter parts for you to watch and listen to – enjoy!

 

 

 

 

 

Is signing into a multi-year contract for your MIS a good thing?

Is signing into a multi-year contract for your MIS a good thing?

If it’s something you’ve actively chosen to do as a school, academy or trust then, yes, it’s a great idea. It means you’ve had the chance to look at the options out there, and you’ve asked your suppliers for three-, four- or five-year pricing to guarantee a bit of budget certainty for the future.

If a multi-year contract is something you’ve had sprung on you in the small print – leaving you a very short window to either agree or cancel – well, it’s unlikely to be very popular. No one appreciates feeling like they’re being backed into a corner ☹

An unforeseen change in contract terms like this poses all sorts of questions for everyone involved in MIS:

❓ How does this affect the relationships schools have with the local support teams out there whom they’ve worked with and accessed their MIS licence through for years? It leaves Support Teams having to manage a difficult message from the MIS provider.

❓ How does this affect how Support Teams work with suppliers? More and more Support Teams have moved to be a multi-MIS support team, choosing to support their schools irrespective of the systems they use as opposed to only offering one option. All of the ‘big 5’ MIS have established Support Partner programmes (some useful links are below), as well as many of the newer entrants to the sector.

❓ How does this affect everyone (both schools and LAs) in terms of meeting procurement rules? Does everyone now need to get quotes and go through a tender process to even just stay with the MIS they already use?

❓ As academisation continues, what happens when a Local Authority maintained school is tied into a multi-year contract that converts to an academy?

Lots to think about which will hopefully become clearer soon.

 

If you’re a school, academy or trust and you’re affected by this and are wondering what to do, I’ve seen lots of posts on this already but it seems like the best advice is:

  • Remember, YOU are the customer, so don’t be afraid of looking at alternatives and moving as it can all happen a lot quicker and easier than you think. Everyone is well-versed in migrating data from your system and it’s possible to be up and running very quickly.

 

  • If there’s too much time pressure to look into things right now, don’t feel you have to lock in for a further three years, but do definitely contact your supplier to negotiate an alternative term length. They may be open to shorter contracts in the face of schools cancelling altogether, and this will give you time to plan for 2022.

 

  • Talk to people! Get in touch with your local MIS support team if you use one, or with any of the MIS companies directly. They are all friendly and knowledgeable and will walk you through everything you need to know (or send a message to me or Nick as we’re more than happy to introduce you).

 

‘Big 5’ Support Partner programme links:

RM Integris https://www.rm.com/products/rm-integris/partner

Bromcom https://www.bromcom.com/LA-partners

Arbor https://arbor-education.com/become-a-partner/

Scholarpack https://scholarpack.com/who-we-help/support-partners/

ESS SIMS https://www.ess-sims.co.uk/products-and-services/sims-support-units

 

 

 

Join us and other educational innovators at GESS Dubai this month

This weekend, we’re looking forward to meeting up with edtech and educational innovators at #GESSDubai, a leading education conference & exhibition in the Middle East region.

We are strong advocates of using existing technology to drive better outcomes for children in all of our care. At the same time, we believe that new technologies that are only just around the corner can deliver against challenges in education that can’t be solved by existing technology. We invite everyone to get together and understand what is the art of the possible so that children are not left behind and will be the vehicles of change in our futures.

The exhibition provides educators access to the products and solutions that meet the needs of the modern classroom and transform the way students learn. Alongside the exhibition runs an extensive conference programme, and I’m pleased to be presenting a session at 14:40 on Sunday 14th November 2021 on the subject ‘Are you and your Edtech partners ready for the next generation of technology?’

 

We’re always keen to chat with like-minded people, so please do meet us at the Education in Action stage on Sunday afternoon or drop me an email at nick@finnemoreconsulting.com

Ep. 026 – Education & Business Leader Q&A: Keren Wild, Service Manager at Schools ICT

Our next fireside chat is with Schools ICT Service Manager and all-round MIS expert, Keren Wild.

Schools ICT is a fully traded service of NYCC working through North Yorkshire Education Services (NYES), which means they work with all types of organisations and education settings across the UK, not just in North Yorkshire.

We’ve known Keren for many years, and it’s great to speak with colleagues from MIS support teams as it gives such a unique and insightful view of the landscape. In this Q&A, we chat about a wide range of topics including:

  • The North Yorks framework and how this has given choice to the schools
  • The value that Support Teams offer to Edtech companies; how support teams protect their schools and take away the pain of IT
  • How technology has encouraged primary schools to make different choices, especially with the added pressure of Covid closures
  • How Support Teams will evolve in the future to include wider services, multi-MIS, more competition, and becoming being a partner to MATs
  • Academisation and its role in moving Primary schools to cloud-based solutions
  • The role of Senior leaders in the decision change MIS, and how this can be a challenge
  • How well schools’ understand data and what an MIS can do for them
  • Anytime, anywhere access to MIS and how this has become even more important since Covid
  • How secondary schools feel about cloud MIS options
  • Usability and change, and what challenger MIS could do to make their solutions slicker
  • The difference between ‘one-stop shop’ and ‘best of breed’ solutions
  • The opportunities for Edtech to partner with support providers as they have insights and connections which will give Edtech companies insights to the customer
We’ve split it into four parts to make it easier to digest. Enjoy!