Computers in Schools project rollout continues to fall short
- 12 October, 2010 15:57
- Comments
The Federal Government has claimed it is on track to fully deliver a total of 696,000 PCs under its Computers in Schools program, however, current rollout rates suggest a shortfall of some 203,143 computers by the initiative’s December 2011 deadline.
According to the Australian Government Department of Education, Employment and Workplace Relations (DEEWR), 345,000 units have been rolled out to date since November 2007 — just 44 per cent of the total 696,000 computers funded — at an average rollout rate of 9,857 PCs per month across government and independent schools.
That rate has increased since June, when Prime Minister Julia Gillard was forced to defend the program as on track. However, with 15 months remaining, the department must deliver 351,000 PCs at a rollout rate of 23,400 per month — two and a half times the current rate — in order to meet set targets. Based on the current rate of 9857 PCs per month, the Government would under-deliver by 203,143 units by the 2011 deadline.
The cost of the Digital Education Revolution program has also increased from the $1.2 billion originally promised in 2007 election, to $2.4 billion, recent injections of up to $300 million provided by government to see the rollout's continuation for up to seven years in total.
According to the DEEWR, current delays with the rollout could be attributed to the program's reliance on partnerships with state and territory government and non-government education authorities to implement the National Secondary School Computer Fund.
“Education authorities have primary responsibility for decisions about design, purchase, distribution and the use of educational hardware and software to meet the specific needs of their schools,” a department spokesperson told Computerworld Australia.
“All education authorities have developed detailed Implementation Plans outlining their approach to achieving the 1:1 ratio by the end of 2011.”
The program is also inclusive of upgrades to school networks and the creation of a $70 million Vocational Education Network that will see TAFE and higher education institutions connected by fibre for internal communication.
In June, parents of NSW school children were advised that they could be liable for damage to their child’s laptop computers issued under the Federal Government’s Digital Education Revolution program, despite evidence that the protective cases issued with the laptops do not close properly.
Join the CIO Australia group on LinkedIn. The group is open to CIOs, IT Directors, COOs, CTOs and senior IT managers.
- Bookmark this page
- Share this article
- Got more on this story? Email CIO
- Follow CIO on twitter
-
NBN build gaining momentum daily: Quigley
-
Face Time - Interview with John Brennan and Robert DiStefano
-
Monday Grok: Will Siri crack the walls of GOOG?
-
Face Time - Interview with John Brennan and Robert DiStefano
-
Face Time - Interview with John Brennan and Robert DiStefano
-
Disciplined Agile Delivery: An Introduction
This evaluation guide is designed to help you choose the best tool to support your current Agile projects, while protecting your investment as your team, needs and agile maturity grow. -
Seven Tips for Securing Mobile Workers
Seven Tips for Securing Mobile Workers is intended to offer practical guidance on dealing with one of the fastest growing threats to the security of sensitive and confidential information. -
Protecting Generation Web
From data privacy to personal safety issues, cyber-bullying, inappropriate content and malware, schools are facing an increasingly difficult task when it comes to allowing young people to spread their online wings without compromising their safety and personal development. The reality that most schools are catering to the needs of mixed age groups and abilities, and it’s easy to understand why a simple stop and block approach won’t work. Learning environments are, by nature, flexible. It stands to reason that the IT resources used in them should be flexible too. Read on.

















Comments
Post new comment