Technology provides instant accessibility to information, which is why its presence in the classroom is so vital. Smart phones, computers, and tablets are already an omnipresent element of everyday ...
As digital tools become more sophisticated, the focus for teachers across the United States has shifted from mere awareness ...
A large body of evidence demonstrates the use of technology in schools is nuanced, with more downsides to technology use than most people expect.
Walk into any school and you will find teachers using classroom technology in very different ways. One teacher builds interactive lessons with embedded videos and real-time polls. Down the hall, ...
Amid fears of possible federal funding cuts, colleges and universities are looking for ways to use existing technology, such as collaboration platforms, without reinvesting major dollars. The ...
Despite warnings from early childhood experts against too much screen time, schools' reliance on educational technology for grade levels as low as transitional kindergarten has grown — and frustrated ...
In education, there's a constant hum about the future of classrooms and how technology will change everything. But as much as our world evolves, the foundational needs of education remain the same.
Technology in the classroom has transformed how students learn and how teachers teach. What once was a space filled with lectures, textbooks, and rigid routines has evolved into a dynamic, interactive ...
Education technology has cemented itself in Oklahoma classrooms over the last decade. Schools across the state regularly use programs like Amira or IXL, which offer students adaptive lessons with real ...
Technology has transformed education and our society. Cell phones, projectors, artificial intelligence (AI), wireless Internet access, interactive whiteboards, graphing calculators, laptop computers, ...
The vast majority of school districts in the United States now provide school-issued laptops and tablets to students. But many educators now say the devices have become major classroom distractions.