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Alberta school board’s NAC plan: Take your time

Alberta school board’s NAC plan: Take your time

By:  Howard Solomon  On: 24 Oct 2011 For: Network World Canada Creator

The Wolf Creek School Board District needed a security solution when it decided to let students bring their own devices. But it also decided not to rush implementation

Network access control solutions aren’t new, but according to James Quin, a lead analyst at Info-Tech Research of London Ont., who leads the company’s risk management practice, enterprises have been slower to adopt them than the education sector.

 “A lot of organizations have found it difficult to implement,” he said in an interview, “but I think that’s going to change because with BYOD policies NAC makes a lot more sense.”

There are three kinds of NAC solutions, he said: Network-based, offered by companies like Cisco Systems Inc. and Juniper Networks Inc.; endpoint-based, offered by companies such as Symantec, McAfee and Sophos; and appliance-based, offered by companies like Bradford, Enterasys and InfoExpress.

School boards are being forced to turn to NAC, Quin said, because they have two groups of users: Trustworthy staff, and youngsters who need to be looked at as large group of hackers. Organziations like school boards that can’t control the end-user devices may prefer an appliance solution, Quin said.

As for Wolf Creek, it sees NAC as helping its vision of ensuring its students are fully prepared to learn in a digital world.

Computers “are increasingly becoming part of the digital landscape,” said McWhinnie. “They’re becoming digital literacy tools for our students. So the next step is ensuring that we’re using these resources in powerful ways to build a successful learning environment for all of our students that focuses on 21st century skills like problem-solving, critical thinking and collaboration.”










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Howard Solomon Howard Solomon I'm assistant editor of ComputerWorld Canada covering network infrastructure, communications and government IT issues. An IT journalist  since 1997, I've written ... more
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