In this context, ELECTIQ offers a specialized solution. We have extensive experience in the organization and management of school elections and we provide schools, family associations and promoting bodies with a secure, guaranteed and easy-to-use system, designed specifically for this type of process. Our goal is to make the election of representatives simple and reliable for the entire educational community.
To implement our system, the school only needs to have the complete list of voters with a unique email for each voter, as well as the list of candidates standing for election.
Our electronic voting system follows all the recommendations of the Council of Europe on digital electoral processes. This allows for the remote participation of all voters, while ensuring the secrecy of the vote and the integrity of the result.
Finally, to guarantee maximum transparency, participants will receive access to an information environment where they can easily verify how the secrecy of their vote is protected and how the reliability of the entire electoral process is ensured.
Each candidate is proposed individually. There are no lists, nor partial constituencies (there is no subdivision by stages for example).
Yes, there are differentiated sectors between students, families, staff and teachers, but the clearest target of the electronic system is families (because the other two groups are physically present at the center for most of the electoral period).
Each of the parents or guardians of a student at the center is a voter. One opportunity to vote per person who meets the requirement, regardless of their family structure.
Each voter can vote for as many people as positions are to be renewed in the sector in which vote.
In private schools, families choose four representatives (three if one of the places is occupied by a representative designated by the AFA). In general, the person calling the election must indicate how many places are to be filled.
In public schools, the number of family representatives is a little more complicated to calculate, but basically the same rule applies that the person calling the election can indicate the number of places.