Case Study: K-12 Public School District
This school district overhauled its over-built, budget-draining IT infrastructure and strategically planned for the future
About the customer
This urban East Coast public school district serves about 13,000 K-12 students at 20 schools. While considered a large school district, its enrollment and student count had steadily declined over a decade due to competition with area charter schools. Consequently, federal funding based on enrollment figures had steeply declined — forcing closure of some schools. With fewer students and a decreased budget, district officials needed solutions to reduce IT costs and make its technology work for students, teachers and administrators.
Challenge
Dysfunctional phone lines and conference room projectors
Decreasing budget, spiraling IT costs
8 million paper records needed to be digitized
Limited technology tools for students and teachers
School district administrators reached a boiling point when they couldn't get an active phone line to call out or use an overhead projector for conference room meetings. Furthermore, workstations for district employees were subpar and workers couldn't even access the internet. Despite having an in-house IT department, these frustrations persisted and administrators realized they needed to upgrade their IT infrastructure.
Yet, with continual annual budget decreases, the district didn't have the funds to support restructuring its entire network. They needed a structure that would allow them to close schools as needed and make the schools they did keep open more efficient. And, they had paper files that were comprised of eight-million student records in a building they could no longer afford, making digitizing those records an urgent matter.
Additionally, district teachers didn't have dedicated devices to help them be more productive, easily share assignments electronically or enhance classroom learning with visual tools. Students as well were under equipped with technology — there were only 2,500 student computing devices district-wide to serve approximately 13,000 students.
Solution
The district needed a technology partner with education expertise to provide strategic guidance for school technology, network stabilization and ongoing direction for the changing environment.
Assessed current IT environment
Uncovered over-built, budget-draining excess
Implemented Managed IT Services with variable cost model
Completely re-engineered and right-sized the network
During our assessment, Ricoh discovered 320 servers in the district, many which no longer served a purpose. We discovered the district was spending $200,000 a year on duplicate or unused software licenses and other technology. We found pallets of new technology worth about $500,000 that had been ordered but never installed. And, only 20 percent of the aging 700 whiteboards were functional. Impressed, the district contracted with us for Managed IT Services — an approach we've applied in 150 school districts — with a variable cost model that adjusts based on student population. If enrollment continued to drop, so would the district's IT costs.
Once the structural problems were diagnosed, we then set out to stabilize the environment. The district's IT infrastructure was completely overhauled, the network redesigned and data centers were relocated and condensed. We stabilized server and email environments and repaired and stabilized the backup system. Content filtering was enabled and a temporary IT infrastructure at a temp school was set up after a flood. Laptop and desktop computer issues were resolved and PARCC testing technology was implemented. We upgraded software and moved it to new hardware, and repaired a broken domain name server. Interactive and networked whiteboards were added and we began digitizing paper student records. To support the new IT infrastructure, remote desktop control, a help desk and 24/7 monitoring and maintenance was implemented.
Going forward, we plan to migrate and consolidate servers, deploy a centralized wireless controller solution to migrate students to Chromebooks®, transition email to Microsoft Office® 365, refresh hardware, right-size the phone system and upgrade and consolidate the network switching environment. These efforts are expected to lower infrastructure and licensing costs, simplify the IT infrastructure, improve system reliability and performance, reallocate funding toward student computing devices and improve teaching technology.
Results
Cut $200,000 a year in redundant software licenses
Created a strategic technology roadmap for the district
Streamlined IT network runs more efficiently
Enhanced services to keep technology running
The district's IT expenses are now lower and more transparent with the variable cost model that only requires them to pay for the users they have. If the student population shrinks, so do IT costs. In addition, the district is saving $200,000 a year in redundant software licenses and other technology.
Phones are functional, workstations can access the internet, email can be seamlessly sent and received, instructional materials can be distributed electronically and classroom lessons can be enhanced with interactive technology.
With remote monitoring, the maintenance of systems and technology is proactive — helping to avoid lengthy downtime. And, when issues do arise, teachers now have a convenient, knowledgeable resource to address their questions and get technology back up and running.