The U.S. Department of Education’s Office of Education Technology is calling on those in the K-12 space to close critical digital divides, and vendors have a big role to play.
Public and private organizations have set cybersecurity guidelines for ed-tech companies, in an effort to shift some of burden for policing away from districts.
Elected officials are calling for new funding for schools with few policy specifics attached to that money.
Texas Approved a Sweeping Curriculum Overhaul. Here’s What Comes Next
The New Law Creates a Monetary Incentive for Districts to Adopt State Board-Approved Materials
Publishers face a deadline to comment on proposed regulations that will guide the sweeping policy change in the critical K-12 market.
The consumer protection agency’s proposed rules could limit companies’ ability to collect data for one product and use it to develop another one.
Cyberthreats Are On the Rise. Here’s How Education Companies Need to Help
A Leading Association of District Tech Directors Wants to Standardize the Questions K-12 Systems Ask Vendors
A leading K-12 association is moving to standardize the questions districts ask vendors about how they will protect against cyberattacks.
The plaintiffs say the law is unconstitutional and leaves schools without clear guidance on what content is allowed.
Jason Palmer says his campaign is focused on “conscious capitalism” and appealing to the ideas and ingenuity of young people.
Interest in pushing a “science of math” approach could rise, despite the lack of a research base in that subject, said a group of panelists at the EdWeek Market Brief Summit.
A newly released survey of school officials focused on the E-rate program underscores worries about students’ lack of internet access at home.