Open-Source Software Saves District Over $100,000
by Christine McCormick-Liddle
Zach VanderVeen and Chris Rose, two former teachers turned IT pros at Hamilton City Schools, recognized that they had the talent and were willing to invest the time to build scalable innovative software not only for their district but others. Zach and Chris constructed a vision, built a plan, started coding and shortly thereafter Abre graced the web. They weren’t software developers building a solution for educators; they were educators building a solution for educators. The solution solves common problems we encounter as educators where staff go to five different places daily to do their jobs and have little time to invest in learning something new. Because Zach collaborates with a group of innovators in the Cincinnati area, including me, he understands what collectively plagues us and what functionality has a larger reach.
- Streams: a personalized communication module where users select topics of interest and that’s what is delivered to them. Each taking advantage of social likes and comments to create a robust online community.
- Staff Directory: A searchable staff directory with hidden information visible only to the Human Resources department.
- Curriculum: A module where staff can create or upload their curriculum maps
- eBooks: A reader so students and staff don’t have to install something new to read textbooks uploaded by the district.
- Assessments: A module capable of consuming data bank questions and coupled with the secure browser app offer a “locked-down” environment for summative assessments.
- Guided Learning: A module designed to tackle the distracted student, allowing teachers to add specific sites students can visit keeping them focused using a Chrome App.
- Class Overview: A module that interacts with the student information system and shows teachers charts of IEP students, gifted students, and ELL students in their classroom, recent absences. Teachers can click on a student in their class to see their profile, schedule, attendance, testing, and discipline.
- Coming soon: personal learner profiles with professional development suggestions, Twitter streams, and gamified courses.
How do Chris and Zach ensure their staff understand how to use the software? They test in-house prior to deployment and then the new functionality appears for the users. They watch the stats and if large groups of people are using it, it passes their litmus test. A primary tenet for both developers is to make the software simple to use, so the need to be developed is minimized. It’s another win in the education sector when there’s little time to get in front of teachers.
Interested in contributing to Abre or learning more? Abre’s site can be found at https://abre.io and their GitHub (code repository) can be found here: https://github.com/abreio. Get involved and help create a movement where software truly meets the needs of its users and if it doesn’t, tweak it so it does.
Zach and Chris hope districts across the world take advantage of Abre, allowing educators to turn their back on poor and untested software. They are certainly onto something with Abre, and the price tag is perfect for education. If other quality software developers start contributing to Abre, everyone will move farther faster.
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