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Unity Partnership Rolls Out ActiveRoles Server from Quest Software

Unity Partnership is rolling out ActiveRoles Server from Quest Software to manage Microsoft Active Directory across 115 schools in Oldham. The project forms part of the Government's aims to improve IT in education on a national scale.

Oldham Council recently took part in a pilot of the government's Home Access programme, and on the back of this have now set up a project to improve access to learning resources in the region.

Part of the local project was to provide greater access to learning resources for 40,000 students and 2,000 teachers across the borough. The project involved the migration of an externally hosted Virtual Learning Environment (VLE) into Unity's Data Centre, and the creation of a borough-wide domain to facilitate single sign on for all students, teachers and, in time, parents.

Active Directory was required to manage the computers and allow restrictions to be set. Unity, along with its IT partner Agilisys and Oldham Council's Children, People and Society ICT Strategy Service, worked with Quest Software to install Quest ActiveRoles Server as the Active Directory management solution for all of Oldham's schools.

Each school has been given responsibility for running its own Active Directory environment. The solution from Quest allows the on-site technician or teacher / administrator to re-set passwords, create groups and provide teachers with appropriate management rights. The solution is highly time efficient, allowing teachers to spend time teaching pupils and not time liaising with a centralised IT helpdesk.

ActiveRoles Server also facilitates compliance with the Council's requirements for secure domain administration. The solution enables all on-site technicians to securely manage their own organisational units, allowing them to create accounts in accordance with the Council's policy. Delegating Active Directory rights in this way without the Quest Software solution would make the environment prone to human error and open to abuse and therefore a risk to security; a significant consideration in the educational environment. In addition, if a technician attempts an unauthorised action an alert is issued, which can be acted upon as necessary.

By 2010, Oldham plans to extend Active Directory to at least another 40,000 users to allow access to pupils' parents for monitoring pupils' attendance, behaviour and achievements.



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