What Is the COPS SVPP Grant, and How Can It Fund School Safety?
EdTech K–12 Magazine
by Adam Stone
23h ago
To address the rising tide of school violence, K–12 school districts need advanced security technologies to augment their thinly stretched staffs. Upgrading physical security, prevention, cybersecurity and emotional wellness solutions — which constitute the four pillars of physical safety — can protect staff and students. Unfortunately, physical safety solutions, especially those that connect to a district’s network or integrate artificial intelligence, can be costly for K–12 districts. For those schools whose budgets can’t support the needed safety upgrades, grant funding can h ..read more
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How to Fund School Safety Upgrades
EdTech K–12 Magazine
by Bryan Krause, Curtiss Strietelmeier
23h ago
Schools are taking initiative to update their physical security systems for the modern era. In some cases, legislation has spurred the changes. For example, several states have adopted Alyssa’s Law, which requires public elementary and secondary schools to have a silent panic alarm that contacts local law enforcement in emergencies. In other instances, schools have decided to upgrade because their surveillance cameras, access control systems and other safety technologies are outdated. Many school districts rely on analog camera systems that don’t connect to their networks&n ..read more
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Spring 2024
EdTech K–12 Magazine
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23h ago
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Sandbox Technology Should Be One Piece of a School’s Security Plan
EdTech K–12 Magazine
by Christopher Lee
3d ago
Seventeen years ago, the biggest concerns for a K–12 IT department were adware, popups and viruses. Today’s security threats are much more complex. We have to worry about scams, phishing emails and malicious code embedded in emails or even images. People see education as an area where you may not need heavy security, but the truth is quite the opposite. Schools house sensitive data, including students’ personal identifiable information. On top of that, IT departments are often small teams wearing multiple hats. We get involved with a little bit of everything: infrastructure, classroom ..read more
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Q&A: Determine What Your K–12 District Needs in an Interactive Display
EdTech K–12 Magazine
by Alexandra Shimalla
6d ago
Modern classrooms in today’s K–12 education environment often call for interactive displays that allow students to collaborate and engage with the material. Choosing the right interactive display, however, can be daunting. IT leaders and administrators must know exactly what their classrooms need and how different displays will align with the teaching and learning in their districts. Micah Shippee spent 22 years in the classroom teaching American history to middle school students. His time there led to an interest in cutting-edge educational technology. Now, Shippee is the director of ..read more
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Schools Must Focus on Narrowing Digital Divides
EdTech K–12 Magazine
by Ryan Petersen
6d ago
Concern about digital equity in schools hit its zenith during the pandemic. However, its importance certainly has not declined. Recently, the topic received renewed attention in the 2024 update to the U.S. Department of Education’s National Educational Technology Plan, which underscores its continued importance. The plan delves deeply into shrinking three types of digital inequity: the digital use divide, the digital design divide and the digital access divide. Click the banner to unlock complimentary resources from CDW for your modern K–12 classroom ..read more
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High-Touch Learning for the Modern Classroom
EdTech K–12 Magazine
by Wylie Wong
1w ago
When Fresno Unified School District purchased new digital whiteboards, district leaders strategically placed them on mobile stands in the middle of each classroom. “We purposefully put the interactive displays in the middle so teachers would know they were mobile and easy to move,” Soyinthisane says. “Otherwise, if we put them in front, teachers could assume they were supposed to be there, and they might have stayed there forever.” The strategy worked. While some teachers still put the whiteboards in front, some redesigned their classroom layouts, parking the whiteboard on a corner or a side ..read more
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Why Teaching Students How to Use Artificial Intelligence Could Make Them Employable Adults
EdTech K–12 Magazine
by Wendy Jones, Jennette Vanderpool
1w ago
K–12 schools looking to adequately prepare students to participate successfully in a rapidly changing 21st century economy can no longer avoid artificial intelligence. There is an increasing consensus that teaching students to use AI is more than just a nice-to-have — it will make them competitive job candidates later in life. Harvard Business School professor Karim Lakhani, who has long studied AI and machine learning in the workplace, says, “AI is not going to replace humans, but humans with AI are going to replace humans without AI.”   The Department of Education's Office of Educationa ..read more
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3 Keys to Designing Successful Tech-Enabled Education
EdTech K–12 Magazine
by Victoria Sanville
1w ago
Classroom technology supports the daily needs of educators and students across the country. With a wide variety of hardware and software solutions that gather and share information, facilitate group work, enable remote learning, broadcast messages and more, the scope of educational technology is broadening, leaving some schools unsure about where to invest. As K–12 leaders endeavor to design classrooms to best serve today’s learners, they must leverage technology to ensure that the educational experience is relevant to students’ learning goals and outcomes. To maximize the educational returns ..read more
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What Happens When K–12 IT Leaders Consolidate Their Schools’ Ed Tech?
EdTech K–12 Magazine
by Alexandra Frost
1w ago
IT departments are strapped for time and resources. Educators are combating tech overload and burnout. Yet, many K–12 school districts are still dealing with a plethora of patchworked applications, services and solutions, creating the problems tech is supposed to solve. On top of that, each of these applications costs time and money to deploy and manage. Some K–12 schools are looking to solve this problem through tech consolidation, in which IT leaders audit and analyze their current tools, eliminate redundancies and move forward on a single platform with everything in one place ..read more
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