Tuesday, March 10, 2009

Bueller? Bueller? Bueller?


According to the United Kingdom Biometrics Institute, biometrics are taking schools by storm -- the group estimates about one million children have had fingerprints taken to borrow library books, pay for school dinners or other rudimentary activities, and some UK community colleges are taking these technologies to the next level.

St. Neots Community College in Huntingdon, Cambridgeshire and the City of Ely Community College are taking part in a pilot program to monitor students' presence on campus. As this article indicates, the process is quite streamlined and student check-in only takes about two seconds each time.

"When students check in or out of school, they enter a pin on to the keypad and look at the camera. The measurements from the photograph are matched against the student’s biometric identifier, and the time of arrival (or departure) is stored in the unit’s internal computer."

Not only reliable in recording attendance data (and with the added capability of providing accurate print-outs of students on campus in case of an emergency), the technology has turned out to be quite the shortcut in taking attendance compared to traditional methods. According to sources, the system saves staff members about ninety minutes each day in recording attendance data.

City of Ely Community College Principal Richard Barker said: "With this new registration technology, we are hoping to free up our teachers' time and allow them to spend it on what they are meant to be doing, which is teaching."

Ninety minutes of extra class time per day? That's a worthy investment in itself.

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