
Alberta school division adopts innovative technology to help students’ families access school information
CBC
Red Deer Public Schools has launched a data transparency platform designed to make key school information public, and easier to access through charts and graphs.
“It takes a bunch of different information that was able to be accessed in a bunch of different areas and puts it all in one place,” Red Deer Public Schools board chair Nicole Buchanan explained as she spoke about the interactive dashboard being made available to the public for the first time this week.
The dashboard covers the division’s 23 schools and more than 11,000 students. While much of the information already exists in provincial records, Buchanan said the goal is to make it easier for families to understand how schools are operating.
Univerus Baragar Systems’ District Intelligence information-sharing platform, a planning software used by school districts, is available for students’ families — as well as other interested citizens — to access on the Red Deer Public Schools website. It includes charts and graphs on indicators such as literacy, student achievement, class sizes, school finances and education quality.
Buchanan said the dashboard was not launched in response to previous transparency concerns or complaints.
“It was our board recognizing that the best way to be responsive to our constituents ... was to be transparent,” she said. “As a parent myself, when I want information, I don’t want to have to go looking for it in a bunch of different locations.
“This allows families and staff to go to one location and have all of that information easily accessible.”
Similar platforms are already publicly available in several school districts in Ontario and New Brunswick, according to Univerus Baragar Systems.
Jason Curteis, a principal solutions consultant at the company, said the Upper Canada District School Board in Ontario was one of the first school districts in Canada to begin making information publicly available through District Intelligence.
“The school districts have a hard job,” he said. “Oftentimes they are criticized by people who don’t often have enough information.”
Curteis said the dashboard helps people ask better questions instead of reacting emotionally during major school decisions, such as program relocations or changes to school size.
“The trickle-down effect would be better education for kids,” he said.
Red Deer Public Schools said prior to making the dashboard available for students’ parents, District Intelligence was already being used by the school division for internal planning and decision-making.
Darryl Hunter, an education policy professor at the University of Alberta who researches data interpretation, applauds the use of the platform.













