The new application, named Doramas, will be launched in a pilot phase next September in about thirty schools and will be extended to the rest of the educational centers in the Canary Islands in November. The main objective is to simplify administrative and management processes for teaching staff, families, and students themselves.
The Minister of Education, Poli Suárez, highlighted that simplifying paperwork was one of his first commitments upon taking office in July 2023, responding to a "historic demand from the educational community." The platform unifies various applications currently used by teachers, the result of "a lot of work" by the IT team.
Carmen Fernández Fernández, director of La Lomada school in La Gomera, noted that paperwork consumes "several hours a week" and that centralizing communication with families and managing student records in Doramas will allow more time to be dedicated to teaching and direct student attention.
The implementation will be progressive, starting with Infant and Primary education. Enrollment in May is expected to be "more agile and completely digital." The pilot phase will include ten centers in Gran Canaria, ten in Tenerife, three in Fuerteventura, two in Lanzarote and La Palma, and one each in La Gomera and El Hierro. Subsequently, it will be extended to 534 schools.
For the 2027-28 academic year, Doramas will be tested in Secondary and Baccalaureate education, and the following year in Vocational Training (FP), covering approximately 300 centers. The platform will also feature its own mobile application, reinforcing the commitment to digitalization.
The development of Doramas is based on Séneca, a service from Andalusia provided free of charge, and has received over 10 million euros from European funds. It is part of a package of 65 measures to reduce bureaucracy in classrooms, considered the "number one objective" of the Ministry.




