Back to the drawing board for school ICT

Channel players have reacted positively to the scrapping of the school ICT curriculum and are unconcerned about any potential effect on revenues

Industry onlookers have welcomed the announcement that the government is to scrap an outdated and uninspiring ICT curriculum as good news for the UK tech sphere.

Education secretary Michael Gove earlier this month revealed plans to shelve the compulsory teaching of ICT in schools from September. The plan has met with almost universal approval from figures across the tech industry.

Part of the idea is to involve private enterprise in the development of IT skills and training, and heavyweights including Microsoft and Google are already set to get involved. Dan May, operations director at VAR Ramsac, welcomed the fact that the ICT industry will be granted input into how its skills are taught.

"We have long championed a more realistic and relevant approach to ICT in education, having found from our own recruitment needs that many potential school leavers lack a breadth of understanding of the IT industry," added May.

John McGlinchey, European vice president of trade body CompTIA, was another to welcome the potential involvement of the industry in setting the educational agenda.

"I am hoping that this will go on to include the IT industry as a whole and that they will consult on a wider basis on what it requires," he said. "Students who are currently coming from schools into colleges understand IT to be about Word, Excel and PowerPoint. They are so bored. We are failing to inspire kids that a career in IT is the right thing. This will change things at a grass-roots level and we will see the benefits in years to come."

Kate Craig-Wood (pictured), managing director of hosting firm Memset, agreed that the current curriculum is "bad to the point of actively putting kids off careers in ICT."

"It had become about teaching children how to use applications, not exposing them to the fun and creative aspects of ICT," she added. "Aged 11, I was being taught how to program BBC computers in school and that helped give me my passion for computing. I welcome this reform - it is long overdue."

Dave Stevinson, director of distributor VIP Computers, accepted that Gove's plans are "a step in the right direction" but stressed his opposition to ICT being a dedicated subject at school. Literacy, numeracy and science skills are still the most essential ones, believes the VIP man.

"Schools should concentrate on the core subjects, using IT as a tool to learn," he said.

Liz Wilkins, senior marketing manager at Adobe Education UK, agreed that separating out ICT is not the right approach.

"Traditional ICT classes, often run in isolation to the rest of the syllabus, no longer meet the expectations of today's employers, as they do not equip young people with skills they need when they enter the workplace," she said.

VARs unconcerned by ICT axe impact

Although the government has clearly signalled its intention to spend less on big-ticket hardware deals, most channel players have brushed off the suggestion that scrapping the ICT curriculum could hit resellers in the pocket.

Steljes specialises in supplying audiovisual tech to the education sector, but sales and marketing director Martine Dodwell-Bennett was unconcerned by Michael Gove's announcement.

"This does not mean that schools will be cutting back on spending on hardware - quite the reverse," she said. "Complex subject matters are best explained to the whole class on an interactive whiteboard, before splitting up into smaller groups."

Howard Hall, managing director of public sector-focused VAR DTP Group, claimed that his company generally steers clear of the schools market.

"It takes so much selling into a school - they need a lot of TLC. And the business will typically be transactional," he explained.

Hall pointed out that a number of big schools ICT players are still hurting from the collapse of the Building Schools for the Future scheme.

"But I am not sure whether [this announcement] will affect them dramatically; there is still a need for IT [in schools] in terms of getting people ready for industry," he added.

Robert Rutherford, technical director of hosted desktop specialist QuoStar, maintains that resellers who "predominantly focus on pumping equipment into the education sector" will feel the pinch.

"There will still be spending, although more long-term back-end and infrastructure," he added. "But the education channel is heading for some turbulent water; it is the last bastion of the old way of making money in IT: selling hardware alone."

But Dave Stevinson, director of components and hardware distributor VIP, is confident that "the larger contracts will still exist as the classrooms still need the hardware and software for the children to learn".

Students and unis lose interest in ICT

A major report from the Royal Society released 10 days ago has also called for the teaching of computer science in UK schools to be overhauled.

The report, called Shut Down or Restart?, opens with the assertion that "the current delivery of computing education in many UK schools is highly unsatisfactory." Its second main tenet is that there is a basic lack of appreciation "of the nature and scope of computing", and advises that all school children should be exposed to computer science "as a rigorous academic discipline".

The report concludes that schools are not currently providing badly needed "qualifications in aspects of computing that are accessible at school level". Current pupil assessment methods are also outdated, it says.

Another key finding of the Royal Society is that "there is a need for augmentation and co-ordination of current enhancement and enrichment activities to support the study of computing".

The number of GCSE and A-level students for ICT-related subjects rose steadily during the first half of the noughties. Student numbers peaked in 2006, when 330,000 studied ICT or computing at GCSE or A-level. Last year, this number stood at just 80,000.

The report opines that "uptake of computing A-level is hindered by lack of demand from higher education institutions".