While technology has potential to distract students, it can also boost engagement and help them actively demonstrate their learning.
Educational technology improves efficiency in the classroom by streamlining administrative tasks, facilitating real-time assessments, and automating grading. Tools like digital lesson planners and ...
Education technology in the classroom is essential for modern education, offering dynamic tools that enhance learning. It enables personalized instruction, increases student engagement, and provides ...
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, ...
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 ...
Is your classroom technology falling short of its promise of changing the classroom dynamic? It's a question that often lingers in the background as district leaders navigate the vast array of options ...
Educational technology in schools is sometimes described as a wicked problem — a term coined by a design and planning professor, Horst Rittel, in the 1960s, meaning a problem for which even defining ...
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 ...
Teaching is inherently a challenging job, and technology can make it more effective and less stressful or more difficult and less fulfilling. How can we make it more of the former and less of the ...
Rebecca Torchia is a web editor for EdTech: Focus on K–12. Previously, she has produced podcasts and written for several publications in Maryland, Washington, D.C., and her hometown of Pittsburgh.
After years of teaching commercial law at the University of Virginia, associate professor Sherri Moore’s philosophy remains true: “When you write it, you learn it.” That’s why, in her 300-person ...