Leicester, UK - September 17, 2012. Suffolk County Council is working with Jadu, a web experience management vendor, to provide schools with free tools to enable students to learn how to build mobile apps as part of an ICT education initiative.
We wanted to ensure we took an inclusive approach to building innovation into our mobile strategy. Most of all, we wanted to share the learning potential of the weejot.com platform and encourage local developers to work with us. What we have delivered for the council and our customers is a first iteration in a very short timeframe with continuous improvement. What we have also delivered is a new, better approach to innovation in Local Government and a dramatic opportunity to potentially transform ICT learning and skills in the UK.
Mark Adams-Wright, CIO of Suffolk County Council
Following the success of the mobile app development day and the feedback received from teachers and school children, Suffolk is now looking to introduce the weejot.com service into education institutions as part of its 'Raising the Bar' agenda. Raising the Bar is a Suffolk led initiative to raise attainment levels across the County.
Suraj Kika, CEO of Jadu
Countries are just like businesses. They need to innovate to grow, If there is a way the UK will lead the technology sector and innovate to stimulate economic growth, it's by encouraging software development in schools, colleges and universities and build the next generation of developers. weejot.com is how we intend to put mobile web app development on the curriculum and on the map. We're very serious about that.
The
Government has empowered education institutions to choose their own ICT
curriculum, enabling them to manage and control what technology they
teach and how it is delivered.
"As a UK based SME we are primed and ready to help build a new generation of software engineers. Local Authorities in particular can help us make a difference here, as well as transform their own businesses," says Suraj. "What Suffolk County Council have shown is that you can do that and you don't have to spend millions of pounds scoping out, before you start doing something about it."
"We are thrilled that one of the first G-Cloud procurements has had such a positive and dramatic effect," says Denise McDonagh, G-Cloud Programme Director and Head of Home Office IT. "The impact is that this initiative could be transformational for schools and their approach to teaching of ICT."
The weejot.com Software as a Service (SaaS) solution enables both technical and non-technical users to create and publish mobile apps in real-time, without the need for approval through App Stores or downloading to the user's device.
Jadu intends to offer the weejot.com service to every school, college and university in the UK to add to the curriculum for teaching modern ICT to students from key stage 3 and upwards right up into higher education. Using the weejot.com software development kit, launched recently by Jadu as a beta, the platform can be used to build any kind of mobile app using HTML5 and JavaScript. Any local education authority who would like to participate in the pilot programme can register an interest from the Weejot website at www.weejot.com.
Jadu is also offering free developer accounts for weejot.com to anyone interested in building mobile apps using their HTML and JavaScript skills.
The commercial Weejot service can be purchased on the Government's G-Cloud or from the company directly.
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About Suffolk County Council
Suffolk County Council is the largest local authority in the county and is responsible for Suffolk-wide services including: schools and community education, the fire service, trading standards, road maintenance and improvements, support for older people and adults with disabilities, support for vulnerable children (including fostering and adoption), support for local businesses, support for public transport (subsidising rural buses, community transport schemes and park and ride sites); waste disposal and registrars.
Suffolk has a population of around 719,500 (ONS 2010) and is one of three counties which make up East Anglia alongside Norfolk and Cambridgeshire. The county town of Ipswich is around 70 miles from London and there are regular trains to the capital. Suffolk has no motorways: the A12 and A14 provide access both to London and the north of the country and are major transportation routes for goods routed through Felixstowe port.
www.suffolk.gov.uk
http://suffolk.weejot.com