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Schools of Castilla y Leon, at the forefront of the digital society

Image: Pixabay

Orange has been selected to carry out the deployment of the Connected Schools project in Castilla y Leon, with which it will provide high-speed broadband to 1,360 schools and 142,000 students, in a project endowed with 25 million euros .With this new award, Orange already has a total of three projects in which its competitors have been imposed within the Connected Schools program, promoted by Red.es.This initiative was created in 2015 with the aim of providing of access to ultra-fast broadband to public schools in the autonomous communities of Spain.

The deployment in Castilla y Leon is one of the largest projects within the program and, thanks to it, most of the schools will have:


  • Broadband Internet with fiber optic access

  • Ultra-fast technologies to reach speeds of up to 1 symmetric Gbps, the maximum currently available in Spain

  • WiFi connectivity with speeds of 927 Mbps per Access Point

This solution will place the schools of Castilla y Leon, the largest Spanish autonomous community, at the forefront of high speeds in educational settings.


orange, a partner for public administration


With this new award, Orange is positioned as the second operator of the program, and manages to strengthen itself further in the Public Administration segment.


In 2016 Orange already won two tenders of the first phase of the program: Galicia, endowed with 14.6 million, to connect 811 educational centers and 143,373 students; and Asturias, endowed with 6.5 million, to connect 399 schools and 88,432 students.


According to Monica Sala, General Director of Orange Network and Business , "this great achievement fills us with pride because, not only do we participate in a project that contributes to the quality and innovation of education , but also supports the work and professionalism of the entire company."


tics in the classrooms


According to a report published by the European Commission, the situation in Spain has a high level of ICT equipment in the classroom, but its connectivity is still insufficient.


This fact has two readings, on the one hand, which does not take advantage of in an optimal way the technological equipment that has required a high investment by the educational system.


On the other, there are tens of thousands of digital content that Spanish schoolchildren cannot take advantage of to complete their training since they need high-speed internet.Among these materials are videos, online tools, presentations, and a long list of content that are not inaccessible without enough broadband.


connected schools


To combat this problem, the Government of Spain launched the Connected Schools Program, which combines the objectives of the Digital Agency for Spain, the Digital Culture Plan in the School and the Commission for the Reform of the Public Administrations (CORA).This program seeks to reduce the digital divide and promote innovative and quality education.

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