A district in California is looking for professional development for counselors, while a Maryland school system seeks a performance review consultant.
How Much Freedom Do Teachers Have to Take Up Tech Products on Their Own?
An EdWeek Market Brief Survey Asked K-12 Officials Whether Educators Need Central-Office Approval First
An EdWeek Market Brief survey asked district and school leaders about whether classroom educators can start using tech tools without central office sign-off.
Instructure’s analysis looks at trends in school districts’ overall usage of digital products, and which tech tools have the most takeup.
One State’s Ambitious Plan for Protecting Student Data Privacy
South Carolina Officials Partnered With a Consortium to Set Consistent Standards for Ed-Tech Vendors
South Carolina has given all of the state’s school districts access to a consortium meant to create uniform ed-tech standards, including for protecting student data.
Users will have to manually export files before their accounts close at the end of September.
The director of instructional technology for the Metro Nashville Public Schools talks about striking a balance between tech and print-based lessons.
Key Theme at This Year’s ISTE Conference: Moving Districts Out of ‘Emergency’ Ed-Tech Mode
CEO Richard Culatta Sees a Need to Focus on Equity and Bringing Joy Back to Student Learning
What are some of the major themes that will play out at the enormous ed-tech show later this month? We get a breakdown from ISTE CEO Richard Culatta.
A district in Mississippi wants SEL professional development services while a system in New Jersey seeks a math and reading online diagnostic assessment tool.
A district in New Jersey is looking for curated culturally responsive classroom libraries while a system in Georgia seeks online classroom management and technology protection measures.
A district in Missouri is looking for a career and technical education summer program, while a system in Texas seeks a universal math screener.