Districts seek to acquire Chromebooks and a modern learning management system.
How Education Companies Can Make ‘Hackathons’ Work for Them
One Company's Experience Offers Lessons on Molding Rough Ideas Into Actual Products
The ed-tech company Clever’s use of “badges” to help students log in to software was born during a hackathon. But the process of improving and refining the concept didn’t end there.
School districts are in the market for a student information system and a solution for filtering web content.
The Clark County school system, which includes the city of Las Vegas, will use state funding to create a centralized tech database.
Iowa state officials want vendors to bid to provide new assessments, and the Leon County, Fla., district needs a student information system.
A Texas district wants to improve college and career readiness for underrepresented students, and a California district wants a student information system.
A Florida county needs a versatile learning management system and a New Jersey district wants a digital balanced program for its K-5 students.
Data solutions needed in a South Carolina district and Virginia county.
The lack of ed-tech interoperability costs school districts time, money and efficiency, chief technology officers say. Some ed-tech companies are working to address the issue, but most are not.
The market around ed-tech tools being used by schools continues to grow, but there are limits to that growth, an analysis finds.