Microsoft Helps Schools Embrace 21st-Century Opportunities and Challenges


LONDON, January 14 /PRNewswire/ --

- Microsoft extends reach of Partners in Learning Innovative Schools 
programme to more than 72,000 schools across 100 nations.

Microsoft Corp today announced landmark expansions to its 10-year, nearly
US$500-million Partners in Learning programme, including a massive increase
in the scale of its Innovative Schools programme, which enables schools
worldwide to harness the power of technology to gear up for the educational
challenges and opportunities of the 21st century.

(Logo: http://www.newscom.com/cgi-bin/prnh/20000822/MSFTLOGO)

Microsoft kicked off the expanded Innovative Schools programme in London
today with a workshop for senior European education officials, the first in a
series of workshops for global education leaders it will hold across Asia,
Africa, Latin America and the Middle East.

The Innovative Schools programme will apply and refine lessons learned
from the two-year, 12-school Innovative Schools Pilot Program launched last
year by Microsoft to study efforts to use technology to help drive change
across diverse educational settings. The pilot study spans urban, suburban
and rural schools -- economically challenged and wealthy alike -- ranging in
size from 70 to 1,500 students across 12 nations. Microsoft announced the
release today of a report and two white papers detailing the latest findings
from the pilot project and outlining essential action steps schools can take
to ensure that students receive the education they need to succeed in the
21st-century knowledge economy.

Today's announcements build on Microsoft's long-standing track record, as
part of the Partners in Learning programme, of working closely with
international educational leaders to advance information and communication
technology (ICT)-enabled school change that supports the emerging needs of
21st-century learning.

"Our three-year partnership with Microsoft provided us with new
opportunities to have a positive impact on schools in the UK and abroad,"
said Tim Tarrant, head of ICT at the UK's Training and Development Agency
(TDA). "Microsoft's support for our jointly funded projects has been a
tremendous asset, as has the ICT expertise it has contributed. Work between
the TDA and Microsoft on Partners in Learning will continue as part of the
memo of understanding signed with the Department for Children, Schools and
Families in October 2008."

The Innovative Schools programme is a key component of the Partners in
Learning programme. With this investment, Microsoft is making a long-term
commitment to working with governments, education officials, development
organisations, teachers, students and parents globally to increase schools'
access to technology and improve its use in the classroom to empower
teachers, enrich instruction and enhance learning outcomes for students.
Partners in Learning is an integral part of the Microsoft Unlimited Potential
programme, the company's commitment to bringing the benefits of technology to
people around the world.

Since its inception in 2003, Partners in Learning has positively impacted
the lives of more than 121 million students and more than 5.5 million
educators, and these numbers continue to grow. In March 2008, the company
announced US$235 million of additional support to the initiative to bring its
total investment over 10 years to nearly US$500 million.

"With Partners in Learning, we're taking a realistic approach to
education transformation that encompasses all of the key stakeholders and
moves beyond abstract theory by putting innovative ideas into practise," said
Ralph Young, vice president of Worldwide Public Sector at Microsoft. "Through
the Innovative Schools programme, we're implementing technology and tools in
live education settings to identify what works and what doesn't in an effort
to help enhance learning outcomes around the world."

Also today, Microsoft announced a partnership between the Microsoft
Schools Technology Center Brussels and the Lumiar Institute, a groundbreaking
educational nonprofit started by Brazilian industrialist and best-selling
management thinker Ricardo Semler, and participant in the Innovative Schools
Pilot Program. Lumiar seeks to apply Semler's groundbreaking approach to
management to the field of education to reinvent schooling. Under the
research collaborative, Microsoft and Lumiar will work closely with
educators, school leaders, government officials and private partners to
identify the key skills and competencies students need in the 21st century
and how schools can be transformed to support them.

"We're delighted to be joining forces with Microsoft on this important
pioneering initiative," said Semler, president of Semco SA and author of the
international business bestsellers "Maverick" and "The Seven-Day Weekend."
"Aligning education with the needs of the emerging global knowledge economy
is one of the most pressing challenges facing the world today. Microsoft
brings invaluable vision, expertise, passion and entrepreneurial flair to the
table in helping advance this objective."

The Innovative Schools programme will bring participating schools
together through a global digital forum, enabling them to discuss innovation
models, disseminate best practices, exchange smart ideas with their peers
worldwide, support one other and access professional development resources.
The digital network will be part of the next version of Microsoft's
Innovative Teachers Network, which today connects more than 1.6 million
teachers worldwide. It will be supplemented by a roster of global symposia
and workshops that will spotlight individual school initiatives and tackle
specific reform issues affecting individual schools.

In addition to the expansion of the programme to 72,000 schools,
Microsoft will select a group of 345 "developer schools" to work closely with
the company, which includes 45 "mentor schools" that will help guide clusters
of other innovative schools in their regions.

The Innovative Schools programme seeks to foster improved global
understanding of how schools can help students acquire the skills required
for success in the global knowledge economy. To this end, Microsoft works
with schools to examine how they can marshal technology to meet the
educational imperatives of the 21st century and how technological innovation
can underpin a comprehensive "whole school" approach to reform, spanning
instruction, assessment, curricula, teacher training, school leadership and
learning-space design.

"Participating schools benefit from Microsoft's long-term commitment to
education and exposure to insights captured from thousands of learning
environments worldwide," Young said. "It's tremendous to see the bold, fresh
thinking by local schools and, in turn, offer them the help and support of
Microsoft and our partner network to design and deploy great technology that
creates opportunities for their students, educators and communities."

By design, the 12 schools taking part in the Innovative Schools Pilot
Program constitute a representative cross-section of the diversity found in
schools worldwide, which helps identify the universal challenges schools face
plus those specific to particular countries. The ultimate goal is to generate
viable, benchmarked and proven learning models for 21st-century education
that can be cost-effectively replicated across entire school systems and
easily adapted to local conditions, to underpin wide-scale education
transformation.

The report being issued today will distil key insights gleaned from the
first year of the Innovative Schools Pilot Program, including the following:

-- The importance of strong school leadership and a collaborative
professional teacher community as part of a common commitment to goal-setting
and innovation

-- The value of technology in support of innovative teaching practices,
which involve students in higher-level thinking and regulating of their own
learning

The separate white papers walk schools through the 6i process, a road map
for envisioning, implementing and managing ICT-driven change, and the School
Innovation Framework, which gives school leaders a guide to effecting
educational change based on proven approaches, respectively.

In addition, this week Microsoft is hosting a two-day Innovative Schools
Conference on 14-15 Jan in London that will enable schools participating in
the Innovative Schools Pilot Program to compare notes, evaluate their
progress and hear from leading thinkers. The event will also feature an
opportunity to view the state-of-the-art New Line Learning Academy in
Maidstone, Kent, an example of the cutting-edge use of technology to enable
new, more interactive and personalised forms of pedagogy. Microsoft served as
a technology advisor to the academy under Partners in Learning.

"Technology allows us to rethink how we educate children by opening up
possibilities that simply didn't exist before," said Chris Gerry, executive
principal of New Line Learning, UK. "But to truly realise its potential,
technology needs to be accompanied by a comprehensive vision for change. In
working with Microsoft, we've been impressed with how the company understands
the big picture and that technology by itself is not a panacea. It has
brought to bear a refreshingly holistic approach to educational
transformation, and we've valued its strategic counsel every step of the
way."

More Information

Additional background on the events occurring this week, including case
studies, fact sheets, executive biographies and other materials supporting
Microsoft's goal of enabling access to high-quality educational experiences,
is available at
http://www.microsoft.com/emea/presscentre/EducationVPR/default.mspx.

About Unlimited Potential

Microsoft, through its Unlimited Potential vision, is committed to making
technology more affordable, relevant and accessible for the 5 billion people
around the world who do not yet enjoy its benefits. The company aims to do so
by helping to transform education and foster a culture of innovation, and
through these means enable better jobs and opportunities. By working with
governments, intergovernmental organisations, nongovernmental organisations
and industry partners, Microsoft hopes to reach its first major milestone --
to reach the next 1 billion people who are not yet realising the benefits of
technology -- by 2015.

About Microsoft

Founded in 1975, Microsoft (Nasdaq: MSFT) is the worldwide leader in
software, services and solutions that help people and businesses realise
their full potential.

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