New Haven schools are looking for an online platform with courses for credit recovery, and an Illinois district chose three providers for English/language arts materials.
The Comal, Texas, Independent School District needs help managing a laptop purchase, and Florida’s Santa Rosa County school system is looking for vendors to meet its speech and language therapy needs.
New York state is looking for a management system focused on childhood nutrition, and New Jersey has chosen the UChicago Impact to develop an elementary literacy tool.
Glynlyon Inc. is delivering a web-based curriculum program for the Johnson City, Tenn., schools. In Maryland, vendors have until the end of August to bid on a statewide testing contract.
A Missouri district chooses Frontline to help manage and track its substitute teachers. Virginia aims to offer a voluntary statewide special education system to better coordinate local data by January 2017.
College and career-readiness platform sold to Arizona district. The platform, Naviance, will be used to provide college counseling for a student body that has seen a large influx of English language learners in recent years. Across the country, Providence R.I.’s school system is looking for a vendor to ensure its teaching is culturally appropriate. Recent Solicitations Active/upcoming…
The Evaluation Systems Group of Pearson will redevelop California’s teacher credentialing evaluations and create administrator assessments while a district in Washington state with an inefficient student information system wants a new provider.
Boston is looking for formative assessments in math and English, and Florida’s flagship virtual education program, the Florida Virtual School, appears to have settled on an LMS provider.
Tennessee has hired Questar to give state exams, and in Utah, the Waterford Institute won a big government grant to expand online pre-K education.
The largest school district in the country is giving vendors an opportunity to share their plans for improving the Big Apple’s professional development for academic intervention services. Missouri’s statewide education agency announced that it would hang onto its incumbent test-writing vendor.