Some parents and lawmakers argue laptops in classrooms are “poisoning kids.” Education technology leaders say taking them away could set schools back decades.
NASHVILLE, Tenn.—Talk of what’s possible with AI permeated conversations this week among the 7,000 attendees at Educause, the sector’s leading education-technology conference. But amid the product ...
Instructure and InnovateEDU’s analysis of common classroom technologies found 60 percent of designated ed-tech tools and 98 percent of consumer tools haven't met standards of evidence recognized by ...
The heavy use of technology in K-12 schools—from 1-to-1 computing programs to artificial intelligence —is causing some policymakers and parents to call for educators to dial back their use of ...