School Festival Mac OS

Chancery Software, publisher of student management solutions, has added Mac OS X support in the new version of Mac School, a component of Chancery’s student management solutions.

The Macintosh (mainly Mac since 1998) is a family of personal computers designed, manufactured, and sold by Apple Inc. Since January 1984. The original Macintosh is the first successful mass-market personal computer to have featured a graphical user interface, built-in screen, and mouse. Apple sold the Macintosh alongside its popular Apple II, Apple III, and Apple Lisa families of computers. Mac OS, operating system (OS) developed by the American computer company Apple Inc. The OS was introduced in 1984 to run the company’s Macintosh line of personal computers (PCs). The Macintosh heralded the era of graphical user interface (GUI) systems, and it inspired Microsoft Corporation to develop its own GUI, the Windows OS. School Check IN Version 2.0 Mac OS Installation Instructions The School Check In Installation is a three-step process involving Downloading, Installing and finally starting Version 2.

Mac School is designed to automate the repetitive tasks performed by administrators on a day-to-day basis, such as entering attendance, recording discipline, enrolling new students, generating report cards and transcripts, and creating master and student timetables. Designed in a modular format, Mac School allows schools to purchase the features they currently need and “plug-in” new modules in the future if needed. There’s no importing and exporting involved nor data conversion as all Mac School modules share the same unified database.

Chancery has spent the past year fine-tuning its software to effectively operate within both classic and native environments of Mac OS X, according to Rick Moignard, Chancery’s president and CEO. The Mac School updates will be available during the 2001-2002 school year.

“We are committed to supporting several thousand Mac School sites by continuing to enhance our solutions for the Mac platform,” Moignard said in a statement. “Chancery is the trusted solution that delivers technical innovation and superior customer support. As the school market evolves and our customers’ needs change, Chancery will continue bringing the best relationship-based student information solution to our customers.”

Mac School is available in single or multi-user versions. Contact Chancery about bundle options, pricing, and payment options.

The Sedgwick Public School in Sedgwick, KS have put together a “SWAT Team” of students that help other students and teachers with technology related issues in the school district. The SWAT team’s role has expanded from school related issues to helping businesses in the community and will continue to expand in the future.

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“In addition to helping with computer problems, they complete ‘work requests’ for the community,” Darren Crumrine, a technology resource teacher at Sedgwick Public School, told MacCentral. “iMovie is one of several software applications we have used to meet the requests and we are planning to develop web pages for businesses in the community later in the year.”

Anecdotal evidence in places like Maine and Henrico County suggest technology programs have helped students on many different levels. Crumrine says that with technology and the SWAT Team, his own role as a teacher has changed from a provider of knowledge to a facilitator.

“As long as students are making progress towards the goals of a given project, I usually do not set a hard and fast deadline,” said Crumrine. “This has been beneficial in that it students feel they can be more creative because they are not under the pressure of a deadline. The result has been a great working relationship in the classroom.”

Sedgwick Public Schools have 85 students with their own iBooks and three iMac labs with 25 computers in each.

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Teachers make the switch

The Grossmont Union High School District in La Mesa, California has been working with their teachers to switch over to Mac OS X. Out of the 1,200 laptops being used in the district by teachers, 1,000 of them are using Mac OS X on their iBooks, with the remaining 200 teachers use Dell laptops.

“OS X is more reliable than previous versions,” said Warren Williams, Assistant Superintendent Information and Technology Services, Grossmont Union High School District. “We have fewer support calls to fix operating system errors and it fits nicely with our migration to Unix based platforms and industry standards. Ultimately it will save our teachers computing time so they can devote more effort towards incorporating technology as a tool to deliver instruction rather than wasting time managing software.”

As with the Sedgwick school system, Williams points to Apple’s iApps like iMovie, iPhoto and iTunes as tools teachers are using in the classroom. But it’s not just Apple’s free suite of applications that are being utilized in the district; Final Cut Pro, Adobe Photoshop, Cinema 4D and Maya are also being used on student machines, which are all in the process of being moved to Mac OS X.

“It [Mac OS X] permits easier collaboration between teachers and students,” said Williams. “Some are already using apps like iChat to enhance communication. Every student and teacher has been provided an eBackpack, an online storage and collaboration tool that runs on OS X. By providing every teacher with a laptop loaded with OSX and other multimedia applications we have made way for our teachers to take attendance online, incorporate video into instruction and use them to prepare our students with 21st Century skills.”

The backend servers in the district are running Mac OS X Server to power the student information system, a QuickTime Streaming Server and Web page delivery.

Putting Jaguar in teacher’s hands

The program launched by Apple last week, dubbed ” X for Teachers,” will put a copy of Jaguar in the hands of any K-12 teacher in the U.S. that wants to sign-up for the program. Qualifying teachers will receive Mac OS X v10.2 Jaguar, Mac OS 9 for Classic support and a Getting Started with Mac OS X Training CD — Apple will also pay for shipping, handling and postage.

“One of the main strategies behind the program is to get Jaguar in the hands of as many teachers as possible, so they can get familiar with it,” Paul Papageorge, Sr. Director K-12 Marketing at Apple, told MacCentral. “As the transition and migration [to Mac OS X] happens they already have experience with Jaguar.”

Jaguar sold 280,000 copies since its release on August 24. Apple is forecasting that 20 percent of its installed base, or about five million people, will be using Mac OS X as their primary operating system by year’s end. Schools that decide to switch to Mac OS X will have to worry about integration of another OS into an existing older Mac environment, a Windows network or in some cases both.

“Mac OS X with its seamless networking is at home sharing files with Macs, including much older machines still running protocols like AppleTalk,” said Ken Bereskin, director of Mac OS Product Marketing. “Now with Jaguar being able to seamlessly integrate with Windows networks, including areas that are deploying district-wide infrastructures, Mac OS X brings a level of manageability and reliability that some schools have never seen.”

X for Teachers is a grassroots program to bring teachers back to Apple. The company dominated the education market for years, before losing marketshare to Dell Corp. Recent numbers from market research firm IDC show Dell with 34.9 percent of the education market, while Apple has 15.2 percent.

School Festival Mac Os X

“The K-12 market is very special to Apple. If you take a look at the migration to Mac OS X, there are multiple elements to it — a key part of it is getting teachers up to speed with the key features of Mac OS X. That’s what this program is all about,” said Bereskin.