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A jump of ten to twenty-five percent on a test is not a small thing. It often means the child did not just hear the idea. They understood it. Lecture-only learning can feel like listening to a rule without seeing it work.

Virtual Labs & Simulations: Science Achievement – By the Numbers

Virtual Labs & Simulations: Science Achievement – By the Numbers Read More »

Digital Note-Taking vs Handwritten: Retention Data

Digital Note-Taking vs Handwritten: Retention Data Read More »

A child in K–2 often learns best in quick, focused moments. Their attention is still growing, and their hands are still learning fine control. Even when the app is fun, a long stretch can turn into random tapping, daydreaming, or frustration.

EdTech Usage by Grade Level: K–2 vs 3–5 vs 6–12 – Stats

EdTech Usage by Grade Level: K–2 vs 3–5 vs 6–12 – Stats Read More »

Paper notes fail for reasons that have nothing to do with care. They get crushed in backpacks, left on buses, or land under a pile of homework. An app message skips all of that. It reaches the parent where their attention already lives: the phone. That is why open rates rise so sharply.

Parent-Facing School Apps: Engagement & Attendance – Data

Parent-Facing School Apps: Engagement & Attendance – Data Read More »

Multi-factor authentication (MFA) is the extra proof step after a password. It might be a code from an app, a tap to approve, or a one-time code. When around 60–75% of districts require MFA for staff, it shows one big truth: schools now know that passwords alone are easy to steal.

Cybersecurity & Student Privacy Tools: Adoption Rates – Stats

Cybersecurity & Student Privacy Tools: Adoption Rates – Stats Read More »

If a student checks a phone 1 to 3 times every 10 minutes, that can become 6 to 18 checks in a one-hour class. Each check may feel “tiny,” but it breaks the lesson into many small pieces. The brain does not switch back to learning like a light turning on.

Classroom Distraction from Devices: Off-Task Behavior – Data

Classroom Distraction from Devices: Off-Task Behavior – Data Read More »

When people hear “$100–$400 per student,” they often picture a single purchase, like a tablet. But this number usually covers many things that sit under the “EdTech” label.

EdTech Procurement Spend by Schools: Budget Trends – Stats

EdTech Procurement Spend by Schools: Budget Trends – Stats Read More »

A saving of $100–$200 may look small on paper, but in a real semester it often decides whether a student feels calm or squeezed. Many students pay for travel, food, and basic needs while also trying to learn.

Open Educational Resources (OER): Usage & Outcomes – Data

Open Educational Resources (OER): Usage & Outcomes – Data Read More »

Fifteen to twenty minutes feels small, but it is the kind of small that actually happens. That is why it works. One hour of extra practice each week becomes a steady lead over time, especially in skills like math steps, reading flow, and coding logic.

After-School EdTech Use: Practice Time & Achievement – Stats

After-School EdTech Use: Practice Time & Achievement – Stats Read More »

A 2–6 point lift sounds small until you picture a full school hall. It means real kids who would have drifted off track are now finishing on time. Graduation is not a “smart kid” prize. It is a “kept going” prize.

Long-Term Impact of EdTech Exposure: Cohort Outcomes – By the Numbers

Long-Term Impact of EdTech Exposure: Cohort Outcomes – By the Numbers Read More »

In many cities, the internet is treated like water. It is just there. A child can join a class, watch a video, or submit homework without much planning. In many rural places, the internet feels like a visitor. It comes, it goes, and it may not show up when you need it most.

Rural vs Urban EdTech Access: Infrastructure Gaps – Stats

Rural vs Urban EdTech Access: Infrastructure Gaps – Stats Read More »

When a child does not have steady home internet, school work becomes a daily obstacle course. A simple task like opening a class page, watching a short lesson, or turning in an assignment can take many tries. Pages freeze. Videos stop. Password screens fail to load.

Low-Income Schools & EdTech: Access vs Outcomes – Data

Low-Income Schools & EdTech: Access vs Outcomes – Data Read More »

This number is a quiet relief for many families. It means special education is not rare. In a typical school, many children are getting some kind of support at different times, for different reasons. Some need help with reading.

Special Education & Assistive Tech: Impact on Progress – Stats

Special Education & Assistive Tech: Impact on Progress – Stats Read More »

Everyday English is the language of daily life at school. It is the English used for greetings, quick jokes, simple questions, and small requests. This is not the same as reading a chapter book or writing a report.

English Learners & Translation Tools: Academic Effects – Data

English Learners & Translation Tools: Academic Effects – Data Read More »

When a platform is easy to open, teachers use it more, and students show up. Most “low usage” problems are not about interest. They are about friction. If a student needs five steps, a long password, and a download that fails, the class loses time and the teacher moves on.

Coding Platforms in Schools: Enrollment & Skill Gains – Stats

Coding Platforms in Schools: Enrollment & Skill Gains – Stats Read More »

Many parents believe that longer study time means better results. In reading, that is not always true. Children in Kindergarten through Grade 5 often grow the most when they practice for 15 to 20 minutes a day, five days a week. This amount of time is long enough to build skill, but short enough to keep focus strong.

Reading Apps in K–5: Fluency & Comprehension Gains – By the Numbers

Reading Apps in K–5: Fluency & Comprehension Gains – By the Numbers Read More »

This number tells us one very clear thing. AI is not coming. It is already here. When up to sixty percent of students have tried an AI writing tool, it means this is no longer a small trend. It is part of daily student life.

AI Writing Tools in Schools: Learning vs Dependence – Stats

AI Writing Tools in Schools: Learning vs Dependence – Stats Read More »

In a traditional classroom, when a teacher asks a question and waits for raised hands, participation is often low. In a class of 30 students, maybe 6 to 10 students raise their hands. That is around 20 to 40 percent of the class.

Classroom Response Systems (Clickers/Polls): Participation Data

Classroom Response Systems (Clickers/Polls): Participation Data Read More »

A 5–15% score jump can change everything for a student. It can turn a weak “just pass” score into a safe score. It can turn a child who feels nervous into a child who feels steady. It can also build trust. When kids see their scores move up, they start believing they can learn hard things.

Hybrid & Blended Learning Models: Achievement Outcomes – Stats

Hybrid & Blended Learning Models: Achievement Outcomes – Stats Read More »

Most teachers are already “using tech,” but a lot of that use is light. It often looks like showing slides, playing a video, taking attendance, or sending messages. That is not the same as using tech to teach, check learning, give fast feedback, and help each child improve.

Teacher Tech Training: Adoption vs Student Results – Data

Teacher Tech Training: Adoption vs Student Results – Data Read More »

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