Amazon has announced that it is ending support for TenMarks, an online instructional program in math and writing.
The curriculum provider Open Up Resources will have its curriculum — which is created on an open license — distributed through Microsoft 365.
The Institute for the Study of Knowledge Management in Education was chosen by the U.S. Department of Education to help promote the #GoOpen network.
Phoenix Public Libraries wants hands-on STEM materials, and Pennfield School District, Mich., plans to upgrade three schools with new classroom technology hardware. Redwood City libraries, Calif., awarded Brainfuse a three-year contract for online homework help.
The U.S. Department of Education is seeking an outside, nonprofit organization to help it support and build the #GoOpen Network.
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Districts tend to want comprehensive curricula that they can modify, rather than piecemeal coverage of content, according to the Babson Survey Research Group.
Tech training company Galvanize has raised $7 million in a funding round led by ABS Capital Partners and University Ventures, and Canadian publisher Nelson has forged yet another education-focused partnership.
Two-thirds of administrators surveyed know about at least one of 14 open-educational curricula available today.
Amazon will use its TenMarks brand to introduce an online writing curriculum built on the platform it has in place for math.
Videos and books needed in Virginia and West Virginia. Meanwhile, Hawaii wants to find management for information technology providers.