Gov. Bobby Jindal’s administration has questioned the awarding of small contracts by the state education agency; some see it as a fight related to common-core standards battles.
The White House Office of Management and Budget is changing its rules so that federally funded contracts worth $150,000 or more will require school districts to negotiate profits with contractors.
Company officials and K-12 leaders have very different views of who wields the most influence over school district buying decisions, a study shows.
The Federal Bureau of Investigation hauled 20 boxes worth of evidence from the LAUSD headquarters related to the district’s ambitious 1-to-1 technology effort.
Districts find it difficult to discover the best ed-tech products, and providers of the products say it’s tough to sell to K-12.
The market for tablets at the global level, and in the U.S., continues to grow, though Apple’s sales of iPads declined in the third quarter, according to the IDC.
Oklahoma officials scrambled to find a testing vendor for exams required for high school graduation, after another company, McGraw-Hill Education CTB, backed out.
An inspector general’s report on the Los Angeles Unified School District’s controversial purchase of iPads will not be released to the public.
The Data Recognition Corporation is protesting a South Carolina award to the ACT company to conduct grade 3-11 tests, a contract potentially worth $58 million.
A major testing company has said it won’t perform winter tests for Oklahoma, after state officials delayed approval of a contract for the work.