Children using laptop
Open source software has won Becta's approval

Schools set to go open source

Tender seeks suppliers for an £80m framework deal

Written by Janie Davies

Officially sanctioned open source and free-to-use software could be in use across the UK education system within months after government education agency Becta issued a tender for a four-year framework agreement.

Becta is looking for up to 10 software suppliers to participate in the £80m framework that will launch in October. This will replace its software licensing framework, in place since April 2005.

The contract notice says: “We are particularly seeking suppliers which can provide a comprehensive choice of software solutions including appropriate open source and free-to-use alternatives and advise users on best-value licensing.”

Solutions should be cost-effective, but provide freedom of choice, said a Becta spokeswoman.

“We’re providing guidance on the educational elements and looking for suppliers that can provide comprehensive choice,” she said.

Ian Lynch, a member of the Open Schools Alliance, said: “Canonical with Ubuntu, perhaps Mandriva, Sun Microsystems or Novell/Suse might bid, as all have integrated open source software solutions that could satisfy the framework requirements.

“Too many people are listening to ‘experts’ with a vested interest in a particular commercial software model. It’s not just the operating system, it’s OpenOffice and all the supporting applications. All you pay for is genuine support and even a lot of that is free through the community groups. The emperor has no clothes, it’s as simple as that and Becta now realises it.”

Sean Doherty, a consultant and school governor, said: “If they’re looking at open source, how are they going to guarantee upgrades? That’s been their argument against it in the past,” he said.

Framework bidders should offer commercial off-the-shelf software and licences, and not aim to supply software such as national curriculum content or learning environments that are specifically designed to deliver the curriculum in education.

Microsoft, which last week extended its licensing deal with Becta, declined to comment.

reader comments

related articles

Pupil at computerGovernment

Becta renews Microsoft deal despite continuing licensing spat

Education IT agency Becta has renewed its contract with Microsoft for another three years 16 May 2008

 

Becta appears before EU's Microsoft investigation

Evidence will detail how competitors are being excluded, negatively impacting children's education 14 May 2008

Schools urged to speed up IT refreshes

Technology renewal is not keeping up with progress, warns Becta 11 May 2006

Microsoft to face licence value test

Open source threat to Microsoft’s educational dominance 11 Jan 2006

Government to question Microsoft education role

Becta to review educational licensing programmes 06 Jan 2006

Centralised education IT procurement starts

Government begins hunt for suppliers for national infrastructure framework 30 Nov 2005

Mixed reactions to open source plan for schools

Open source community questions the potential impact of freeware sanctioning 14 Aug 2008

Becta opens up to open source

Open source outfit Sirius one of 12 suppliers included in Becta’s new schools software framework 22 Sep 2008

Sirius secures place on Becta list

Sirius makes school supply list but rivals warn that very few schools have considered open source as an option 25 Sep 2008

related whitepapers

today's top stories

Case study: Clifford Chance

Law firm implements Sun platform and reduces datacentres to gain efficiency and cost synergies 03 Dec 2008

Should CRM be more sociable?

As vendors rush to add more social networking bells and whistles to their CRM products, some experts warn that users must tread carefully when venturing into online communities 03 Dec 2008

Solid as a rock - business continuity in a global manufacturer

From power supply problems in Nigeria to email availability in Stockport, PZ Cussons is prepared for anything 02 Dec 2008

Technology and privacy

Watch the final video in a two-part Computing roundtable debate on the importance of putting data privacy issues at the heart of your IT plans 02 Dec 2008

IT staff desperate to keep their jobs

Most would work longer hours for less pay 02 Dec 2008

Advertisement

Newsletter signup

Sign up for our range of FREE newsletters:

Existing User

Newsletter user login:

Advertisement

Jobs

Related jobs

Job of the week

Job alerts

Sign up here

Find your next job

IT Salary Checker

Check salary here

Advertisement

White papers

Search white papers

Top categories

VPN, Extranet and Intranet Solutions

WAN/ LAN Solutions

Network Security

Interoperability-Connectivity

Grid/ Utility Computing

Latest poll

Will the terrorist attacks in Mumbai affect your offshoring plans?

Will the terrorist attacks in Mumbai affect your offshoring plans?

Is India becoming a risky destination?

Previous poll results

Latest audio and video articles

Padlocked CDVideo

Technology and privacy

Watch the final video in a two-part Computing roundtable debate on the importance of putting data privacy issues at the heart of your IT plans 02 Dec 2008

Podcast imageAudio

Computing podcast - Standard Life's offshoring plans; and the prospects for government IT

The insurance giant outlines its new outsourcing strategy; and we ask if the government's economic bailout will affect its IT plans 28 Nov 2008

Latest in-depth articles

Sun serversAnalysis

Case study: Clifford Chance

Law firm implements Sun platform and reduces datacentres to gain efficiency and cost synergies 03 Dec 2008

Parcel being packedFeatures

Case study: eSpares and business continuity

Online electricals business has managed to decrease its downtime 02 Dec 2008

Advertisement

Primary Navigation