Technology: Page 77
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More ed leaders working to expand role of arts in STEM
In various springtime education conferences, ed leaders will lecture on the importance of blending art and science, and adding arts to STEM.
By Erin McIntyre • Feb. 22, 2016 -
How can districts increase teacher buy-in for new ed tech?
The CEOs of Jefferson Education Accelerator and LEAP Innovations say teachers and principals need to play a greater role in ed tech selection and purchasing.
By Erin McIntyre • Feb. 22, 2016 -
Trendline
School Safety and Security
Safety and security has been a growing concern for school districts, with shootings continuing to rise amid concerns over how to best prevent and respond to them.
By K-12 Dive staff -
Deep Dive
How can $4B best advance computer science education?
Focusing on teachers may give President Obama's 'Computer Science For All' the biggest impact as it seeks to boost the subject in K-12.
By Erin McIntyre • Feb. 19, 2016 -
California AG Harris unveils online toolkit to battle elementary truancy
The state's attorney general unveiled a new online toolkit designed to help elementary schools boost attendance.
By Erin McIntyre • Feb. 19, 2016 -
Statewide virtual school plan advances in Virginia
Legislation that would create a statewide virtual school has passed the state's House of Delegates.
By Erin McIntyre • Feb. 19, 2016 -
NewSchools Ignite tackles secondary math in latest grant competition
The 'no strings attached' grants offer significant opportunities to ed tech startups — but can they produce a solution that will help close math gaps?
By Roger Riddell • Feb. 17, 2016 -
Google to shut down Play for Education in March
The tech giant has quietly decided to end the service, effective March 14.
By Erin McIntyre • Feb. 17, 2016 -
Deep Dive
Measuring the costs and benefits of new ed tech
Schools and districts must consider a number of factors before taking leaps into the digital space.
By Erin McIntyre • Feb. 17, 2016 -
FTC investigates 'brain training' programs like Lumosity
The Federal Trade Commission has investigated and settled several claims against such platforms, which make claims of cognitive improvement that are largely unproven.
By Erin McIntyre • Feb. 16, 2016 -
Informal study questions classroom benefits of iPads
The small-scale study of 15 intern-teachers examined the educational effectiveness and positive consequences of Apple's tablets.
By Erin McIntyre • Feb. 16, 2016 -
Computer science proponents grapple with balancing theory, practice
Coding bootcamps have sprung up, teaching largely the mechanics of coding rather than the theory and science behind it — but many argue that piece is critical, too.
By Tara García Mathewson • Feb. 16, 2016 -
GT struggles, Gallup rankings, and Obama's budget: The week's most-read education news
Fall behind? Get caught up on the $1.1 billion sale taking Apollo Education private and more right here!
By Roger Riddell • Feb. 12, 2016 -
New York district pushes for home Wi-Fi before 1:1 tech rollout
The district is working with Verizon and ClassBook.com's OpenRoom to help families understand their connectivity options.
By Erin McIntyre • Feb. 11, 2016 -
Mackin Educational Resources pushes for school libraries to incorporate tech
The company's 'Transform Your School Library' campaign is designed to engage school libraries via national and regional conferences, webinars, and guest-speaking events
By Erin McIntyre • Feb. 9, 2016 -
Study: Adaptive gamified approach can boost math performance
A new study commissioned by Front Row finds that ed tech products can help students improve in math.
By Erin McIntyre • Feb. 8, 2016 -
Gates' higher ed data push and Pearson's LMS exit: The week's most-read education news
Fall behind? Catch up on President Obama's $4-billion computer science proposal, an MIT prof's new institution, and more here.
By Roger Riddell • Feb. 5, 2016 -
Discrepancies in PARCC test results raise concerns
On average, students who took the 2014-15 PARCC exams on computers received lower scores than those who took the test in with paper and pencil, raising concerns.
By Erin McIntyre • Feb. 4, 2016 -
Prepping for new ed tech? First, examine existing infrastructure
A director of e-learning from Australia's Saint Stephens College offers a blueprint for districts to examine their infrastructure in advance of rolling out new ed tech.
By Erin McIntyre • Feb. 4, 2016 -
Digital video offers teachers bouquet of new PD opportunities
The role of online video for peer-to-peer reviews is gaining more importance when it comes to professional development.
By Erin McIntyre • Feb. 3, 2016 -
Ed Dept CIO's ethics questioned amid poor agency cybersecurity performance
While officials have questioned CIO Danny Harris' conduct, the department earned negative scores in last year's 30-Day Cyber Sprint as well as a failing FITARA grade.
By Justine Brown • Feb. 3, 2016 -
Christensen Institute's blended learning directory goes social
The institute's Blended Learning Universe directory is allowing schools to create profiles that spotlight their models, demographics, tools used, and outcomes.
By Roger Riddell • Feb. 2, 2016 -
Districts increasingly looking to social media in teacher recruitment
Teacher shortages across the US have led to round-the-clock recruiting efforts in some districts, creating a need to look beyond traditional hiring techniques.
By Erin McIntyre • Feb. 2, 2016 -
'Micro schools' catching on as mixed-grade, blended, personalized option
Is a modern one-room schoolhouse the next big thing in K-12?
By Erin McIntyre • Feb. 2, 2016 -
Deep Dive
Using satellite Internet to bridge the 'homework gap'
For some rural districts without access to fiber or cable Internet connections, satellite access can serve as an affordable alternative.
By Erin McIntyre • Feb. 2, 2016 -
Is a one-standard solution possible for a nationwide ed-tech workflow problem?
A new open interoperability standard called OneRoster aims to streamline roster and sign-on management workflow between vendors and schools.
By Erin McIntyre • Feb. 1, 2016