A new publication details recommended best practices for procuring ed tech, and how schools can get the most out of the ed tech they buy.
Changes to the E-rate program, controversy over data privacy, and improving school budgets are expected to impact preK-12 companies doing business with schools in 2014.
Sen. Ed Markey, a Massachusetts Democrat, will soon propose legislation meant to safeguard student data, records that many privacy advocates say are at risk.
New York state is delaying the uploading of all private student data to the cloud, some say in response to political pressure.
Education technology companies selling to the PreK-12 market will need to focus more on results, as education leaders are more sophisticated in their purchasing.
K12 Inc., the largest online provider of education for students before they reach college, announced plans to launch a new company with an investor group.
Our most popular stories of 2013 tackled teachers’ spending habits, growth in the global education market, and three common core-related issues.
New York state Assembly Democrats are the latest to register opposition to education department plans to upload students’ data to the cloud via inBloom.
Two companies are banking on helping districts improve their ability to hire high-performing teachers by using predictive analytics.
The National Joint Powers Alliance awarded five companies contracts for curriculum in the cooperative purchasing organization’s first move into the pre-K to college instructional sector.