<div dir="ltr"><div><div><div><div>I used to work in a school about four years back, so this might be out of date, but from chatting with people still working in schools I gather things have not changed much in SOE 4.<br><br>
</div>Most schools, including Independent Public Schools (IPS) will have two networks (typically VLANs on the same hardware with a few points to jump from one to the other) one staff network Department of Education network that is very locked down, controlled by head office and the school has very little say in. The other is the schools student network and the school is pretty much given free reign over that with a few restrictions but OS is not one of them, and OSX is specifically allowed for in the SOE so there is no (Whole of Department) reason why they can't let the mac connect.<br>
<br></div>Making an educated guess I'd say the reasoning is laziness, diversity of devices increases workload and a lot of the sysadmins in schools are stretched pretty thin already with many schools having ~800 users and a similar number of devices and just one guy to deal with it all. I know I've had it where I've fixed peoples personal computers or allowed odd devices that shouldn't be my responsibility only to end up needing to support them later. So maybe the school IT is worried they will end up needing to support the mac if they accept it. Obviously they might not need to go out of their way to support it in this instance but I would generally say that fear is justified and could understand an approach of "This and *only* this is what we will accept on the network".<br>
<br></div>That said it could also be an ego thing, there seems to be something about school environments that makes some people go on power trips.<br><br>--<br></div>Michael<br></div>