Managing director

Author Bio ▼

Since 1998 Frank has held senior-level positions in the security and CCTV market. After several years growing CCTV equipment manufacturer Charles Grant Limited as managing director there and sealing OEM supply agreements with the likes of Axis, Panasonic and Vicon, he co-founded IP video specialist NW Systems Group in 2004. As managing director there he has led the creation and consistent growth of the UK’s leading online IP camera store NetworkWebcams; cloud-based remote video monitoring service RemoteManager; and live video streaming service Streamdays for the tourism and leisure markets. He also leads NW’s successful systems integration business with enterprise clients in a wide range of sectors including transport, ports, manufacturing and education. NW Systems now employs more than 20 people and is headquartered in Wirral.
November 14, 2013

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Will Schools Take Advantage of Their Early Adoption of IP Video?

The GB pound 55 billion Building Schools for the Future (BSF) investment programme led to the construction of more than 70 new schools and the extension and rebuilding of many more in the years of the Blair-led government.

CCTV in schools

BSF also triggered a colossal investment in ICT equipment across UK state schools. Spending on ICT equipment was supported by an annual grant, which in 2007-8 alone was GB pound 113,000 per secondary school and GB pound 34,000 per primary school.

One fantastic biproduct of all this investment was that UK schools became early adopters of IP camera technology. You only have to look at many of the earlier installations of Axis network camera systems and Milestone Video Management Software back in 2007 to see how new schools, colleges, and academies were embracing the next generation of IP-based surveillance ahead of most other sectors.

At that point the primary focus of systems was to reduce vandalism and bullying as well as safeguarding pupils. It was also deployed to prevent theft and help investigate damage to school buildings and incidents on school grounds. The new cameras were used to identify suspects as well as saving time and manpower following the reporting of an incident. Initially, cameras were confined to entrances, corridors, stairwells, ICT rooms, outdoor play areas, and school perimeters.

Student and staff protection in abuse cases

In our experience we began to see cameras being fitted into classrooms and interview rooms only in the last few years to protect teachers from pupil accusations of abuse. In these incidents it is often the pupil’s word against the teacher’s, and sadly, all too often, teachers have been suspended (pending investigation) unnecessarily.

The government’s own figures, based on a census survey and qualitative study by Local Authority Designated Officers (LADOs) in 2011, found that 25 percent of reported cases of abuse were found to be “unsubstantiated,” and 19 percent were proved “unfounded.” A total of 2,827 abuse claims were reported to LADO that year.

The question is how many more claims would be proved unfounded, within minutes of the claims being made, if appropriate video infrastructure had been in place and could be called upon by head teachers. Indeed, how many of these claims would never reach a local authority, thereby saving valuable public resources?

Teacher training

There are other, more positive reasons to bring cameras into the classroom and interview rooms. Classroom-based video systems are increasingly being used as a teacher training tool, enabling teachers to review themselves and receive constructive guidance from teacher trainers. They can spot areas for improvement during review sessions and identify specific children that show signs of struggling to cope with a lesson or subject.

Video used for distance learning and student doctors

More recently still we have seen a fresh wave of investment in schools and college as video cameras begin to be seen as the enabling device for a new breed of more interactive distance learning courses for those fitting their learning around a full- or part-time job or for those unable to make it into school for some other reason.

E-learning, as it is now called, is booming globally so that, according to Global Industry Analysts, the market will be worth GB pound 67.5 billion by 2015. E-learning is even extending onto smartphones and tablets. We firmly believe that the following factors are at work, which will see the e-learning boom continue long into the future:

  • As people’s lives have become increasingly busy, the flexibility offered by e-learning courses often becomes the only option for people to find the time to do a course or continue further studies.
  • Employer training budget constraints will continue, which leads to natural use of e-learning to plug the face-to-face training gaps.
  • Increasing focus on life-long learning as people navigate many more types of jobs over elongated careers today
  • Quality, availability, and favourable pricing of the enabling technologies — broadband, PCs, mobile devices, video infrastructures

New opportunities for early adaptors

So, will UK schools, colleges, and universities, many of which were early adopters of IP video technology, start to review their use of video in view of the massive potential that it now offers them?

The change will take time and needs to be well thought out. But the case for using network-based video systems to support teacher training, e-learning, and CMS upgrades (and more applications besides) is finally now on department heads’ and head teachers’ agendas. The UK education sector is now in a great position to take advantage of its early adoption of IP video systems to support future operational improvements and growth plans.

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JonathanL
JonathanL
November 14, 2013 3:09 pm

It is my opinion that they should take advantage of the early adoption of IP Video just because this is the type of enviroment where it could really pay off.  Here in the states it seems like every other day you are hearing about some type of school violence and systems like these could serve as both witnesses and deterents to help keep our kids safe.

holmesd
holmesd
November 15, 2013 6:09 am
Reply to  JonathanL

It would also be good to see CCTV used to manage vehicles around school areas. At start/ finish times the roads around schools can be hazardous with distracted parents dropping kids off within inches of the school gates (apologies for not hiding my feelings here). CCTV can be used to increase safety in these areas, or at least help schools observe the risks and give them ammunition to get additional support.  

saulsherry
saulsherry
November 15, 2013 6:41 am
Reply to  JonathanL

– absolutely, anything that can act as a deterrent where there are kids involved has to be seen as priceless. Although it is more interesting/overall positive as stories go, the whole teacher training angle will have to come second when it comes to development implementation.

safeNsane
safeNsane
November 15, 2013 8:12 am
Reply to  saulsherry

It would go a long way to ending the he said/she said incidents as well.  Every now and then we see incidents caught on a cell phone camera that shows exactly how a confrontation escalated but we rarely see the events that lead up to it.  Having cameras on all the time would add to the story and be very helpful. I just hope they size the recording servers correctly because adding up all the classrooms in a building and recording 6-8 hours a day is going to be data heavy to say the least.  Then factor in after school programs and you’ve got a lot of… Read more »

ITs_Hazel
ITs_Hazel
November 18, 2013 1:08 am
Reply to  holmesd

I agree with you, Holmesd. The usage of CCTV is not limited to surveillance to ensure against theft, etc. It can also be used as a safety precaution of sorts, and I definitely think schools will benefit from using these systems. Especially in the case you’ve mentioned.

ITs_Hazel
ITs_Hazel
November 18, 2013 1:09 am
Reply to  safeNsane

That’s true, Safensane. I’ve heard of many similar incidents that have simply escalated from mere accusations, and there’s often no way to verify the statements made if you only have people’s word to go with.

holmesd
holmesd
November 18, 2013 3:29 am
Reply to  safeNsane

I think these incidents because they involve kids get so emotional. CCTV will remove some of this emotion and as safeNsane has said, show what actually occurs. It would also be nice to think playground bullies would be too frightened to pick on kids as it will be detected.

Rob Ratcliff
Rob Ratcliff
November 18, 2013 7:12 am
Reply to  holmesd

Hm it’s possible. It would help at least to stop it happening repeatedly, right? Once you’ve been caught once, you’d hope kids would learn a lesson.

safeNsane
safeNsane
November 18, 2013 7:16 am
Reply to  holmesd

It does make me wonder if it will do more than remove the emotion when dealing with problems started by students though.  When you have a problem student and it’s a teacher’s word against a group of students it’s hard to decide where to draw the line.  I think this will make it easier to identify the agressor but I wonder if just having students know that the cameras are running will prevent some of them from acting out or will it just make them turn to verbal attacks that aren’t so obvious on camera.

JonathanL
JonathanL
November 18, 2013 11:19 am
Reply to  safeNsane

Oh absolutely, several of those cell phone camera incidents only start off at the point that the situation has escalated out of control and you dont see the contributing factors to determine what really went wrong.  These systems could help with these situations as long as they can capture the entire event as it happens.

JonathanL
JonathanL
November 18, 2013 11:22 am
Reply to  safeNsane

I replied to your first post before I saw the second one, but the second one gave me another thought.  Students who are made aware of the camera system but still desire to cause trouble could learn to attempt to avoid being in the cameras line of sight much like happens with inmates at prison.  Once again I think the presence of a system and over lapping coverage are the answers here.

safeNsane
safeNsane
November 19, 2013 7:30 am
Reply to  JonathanL

I think at first some might see the cameras and think twice but having school aged children and nephews around the same age I can say that some of them become guardian blind and will do dumb things even with an authority figure right there.  My oldest came home telling me that a girl hit their principal and nothing was done about it.  I’m sure it was played off as a matter where the school couldn’t prove that it happened and it was one of the least serious things the girl had done so they let it go.  With kids… Read more »

rockoff
rockoff
November 19, 2013 10:45 am

The thesis of the opinion is that transmitting a television signal as an Ethernet packet stream, instead of as a televion signal, from camera to monitoring/recording room “confers fantastic advantages.”  It is telling that this article incipiated a vigorous discussion regarding surveillance strategies for schools that does not appear to have anything to do with LAN video transport. The public care about performance and cost. They might not care so much whether Phillips head screws or hex head screws mount the cameras to the walls. Nor do they care how video gets from point A to point B within the secured… Read more »