laurenrose101 wrote:
Just to clarify, that means I would have to log in with a school password? I’ll try the password they gave me for the laptop in just a second but if not, could it be some sort of admin password they have set? It just seems odd to me that I need their password for my wifi - I seem to be the only teacher who has this issue 😅
Wi-Fi networks can be set up with a pre-shared key to access the Wi-Fi. This ad-hoc setup is used in most homes, coffee shops, restaurants, and in many small businesses and organizations. One password gets shared with everybody using that network (for a home, restaurant, library, whatever), or maybe there are several locally-appropriate parallel networks (SSIDs) present with unique passwords, such as home networks for parents and for kids, or school networks for staff, students, and guests, or whatever the local network needs. (Using QR codes can work great for passwords here too, but that’s a discussion for another place and time.)
Wi-Fi (and wired) networks can also be set up with enterprise security. Enterprise security means you have to log into the Wi-Fi (or wired) network with your own IT-issued credentials, rather than with shared credentials. This usually involves individually authenticating yourself to a user database stored on a local directory server, or stored in a hosted service such as Microsoft Entra. Related keywords here include 802.1X and RADIUS.
Wi-Fi networks can also be set up with no password, though that is becoming less common in recent years.
In a school or mid-to-moderate-to-larger organization, I’d lean toward using an enterprise configuration, as students and staff come and go, and the more authorized people with a password, the more unauthorized people will also have that password, and the harder the password change gets. As an ad-hoc network grows in users, it basically becomes an open network.
How your network is set up is a local decision, and is a local design. If your IT doesn’t know how the Wi-Fi is set up, that’s not really an issue we can help with. Well, not without providing us remote access credentials ([evil laugh])
We might be able to tell more with a screenshot of the Wi-Fi prompt maybe, but only with any sensitive info from the prompt expunged.