Wednesday, April 2, 2014

SaaS Market: Predicted Growth Staggering


The SaaS subscription market, a $14.5B market in 2012, is targeted by Gartner to reach $22.1 billion in 2015.  50% growth over 3 years.

Revenue for the worldwide software-as-a-service (SaaS) market grew by 18% in 2012 to $14.5 billion, according to  research from Gartner.  The SaaS market is expected to expand up to $22.1 billion by 2015. That 2015 figure is an increase of almost $1 billion from the prediction Gartner made last year.
SaaS adoption in 2012 will be driven by the growth of the platform-as-a-service developer communities, Gartner said, as well as a growing interest in cloud computing.

Organisations most commonly use SaaS for horizontal applications (i.e. applications that address business divisions, rather than specific industries) with common processes, Gartner said, but added that there was increasing interest in vertical-specific offerings. Sharon Mertz, a Gartner research director, said the issues holding back SaaS deployments varied strongly by region. "Limited flexibility of customisation and limited integration to existing systems are the primary reasons in North America," she said. "In EMEA, network instability is the issue most frequently encountered, whereas longer-than-expected deployments are the top issue in Asia/Pacific."
Gartner said it is seeing increasing penetration of North American SaaS vendors into the WEstern European market, forecasting Western Europe's SaaS revenues to surpass $3.2 billion this year, up 35% from $2.7 billion in 2011.
- See more at: http://www.information-age.com/technology/cloud-and-virtualisation

Tuesday, April 1, 2014

Forrester Case and Special Needs Kids' Education

Special Needs Children and Private School Tuition Reimbursement

Supreme Court Ruling May Increase Hearings on Private School Tuition

The special needs children and private school tuition reimbursement debate took an interesting turn with the recent Supreme Court ruling in the Forest Grove School District v. T.A. case decided in June 2009. Does this mean that special needs children are now entitled to private school tuition reimbursement?

1. Special Needs Children and Private School Tuition Reimbursement

Special Needs Children and Private School Tuition ReimbursementGetty Images
The special needs children and private school tuition reimbursement debate has raged since the inception of the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act (IDEA). In the early 1980's, the Supreme Court established, in the famed Rowley case, that special needs children are entitled only to appropriate educational services and not the best services available. Parents and advocates have been litigating the issue since then in hope of gaining the right to educational alternatives for children with special needs. The Forest Grove School District v. T.A. ruling may have tipped the scales of justice toward the parent and private school tuition reimbursement, but only under certain circumstances.
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2. Supreme Court Ruling - Understanding the Forrest Case

On Writ of Certiorari from the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals, the Supreme Court reviewed the Forest case and ruled that school districts that do not make a Free Appropriate Public Education (FAPE) available to students with disabilities may have to provide private school tuition reimbursement under certain conditions, even if the student had not been served in public schools. This is a significant difference from previous caselaw that established parents could be eligible to seek tuition reimbursement through due process only if:
  • they allowed schools the opportunity to provide FAPE to the child in a public school; and
  • the schools failed to provide appropriate services.

3. Did the Parents Win Reimbursement?

Did the Supreme Court ruling grant the parents tuition reimbursement in the Forest case? No. The ruling only gave parents the right to seek reimbursement for private school tuitionthrough due process for their special needs child.
The parents requested an evaluation for the child, which the school denied. A private evaluator diagnosed the student with a disability, and the parents subsequently placed the child in a private school program.
With the Forest ruling, the parents won the right to seek reimbursement through due processby means of a due process hearing. The case was remanded the case to the U.S. District Court, District of Oregon for further proceedings.

4. Can All Special Needs Students Get Tuition Reimbursement?

The Supreme Court ruling does not mean that all special needs students will receive private school tuition reimbursement. Whether or not a child receives tuition reimbursement will continue to be decided on an individual basis through the established due process procedures in the IDEA. Consequently, unless the school district voluntarily agrees to place a child in a private program and to pay for it, parents must seek reimbursement through a due process hearing by proving the district:

Special Needs Children and Private Schools - Share your Private School Experiences

Have you enrolled your special needs child in a private school? Are you currently in a debate with your district about private school placement or tuition reimbursement? Share your experiences here with other readers.