Companies large and small are trying to convince K-12 schools to buy their products in the massive exhibit hall at ISTE’s 2014 gathering in Atlanta.
One of the nation’s biggest ed-tech conferences, expected to draw at least 18,000 attendees, has opened in Atlanta.
Requests for E-rate funding are 79 percent higher for charter school buildings than traditional school buildings for 2014-15.
The American Institutes for Research, in its protest over a common-core testing contract, argues that Pearson and PARCC are behaving like “business partners.”
Schools can now use Chromebooks as well as Androids to access Google Play for Education, a portal with apps, videos, and book rentals, Google announced today.
A division of McGraw-Hill is partnering with Follett in an effort to sell e-books focused on test-prep through online forums.
Forty-six percent of school administrators cite mobile device use as a “major factor” in college- and career-readiness instruction for students.
Hybrid learning models, motion-based technology and the use of open resources are all expected to become more prevalent in the coming years, according to a new report.
New Mexico state officials describe a protest over a major common-core testing contract by the American Institutes for Research as “frivolous,” in a filing with the state purchasing director.
While the magazine’s 2014 rankings do not include education companies, they do feature leading businesses that sell in the K-12 marketplace.