The school administration has never requested access to servers, though the superintendent has all the server admin passwords (in a sealed file in the safe) in case the school needs them. So technically he does have access, though he has never indicated any desire to use it. Anything he wants done that would require this sort of access is delegated to me.
School administrators have local admin rights to their daily use machines so long as no repeated problems crop up. Not a best practice, certainly, but it does save frequent complaints and "drop everything" trips to the office. School administrators also have file permissions set according to skill level and access need. Generally, this means modify rights on folders they manage or use regularly (which are shadow-copied twice a day and backed up every evening). On Sun, Sep 12, 2010 at 9:32 AM, Mike Swanson <mswan...@pgd46.org> wrote: > Do you enable admin rights to servers and domains to your administrators? > > ---------- > "He that is good for making excuses is seldom good for anything else." > --- Benjamin Franklin > > | Subscription info at http://www.tech-geeks.org | > | Subscription info at http://www.tech-geeks.org |