Sixty-eight percent of surveyed students say they turn to AI tools for math assignments or exams when they need extra help.
A lack of structured collaboration between K-12 and higher ed contributes to a disconnect between research and practice.
AI is already in the classroom--will we give it a place that makes sense for teaching and learning as the technology evolves?
As we usher in the new year, educators and industry leaders are eagerly anticipating the top education trends for 2024. The education industry has witnessed a rapid evolution in recent years, marked ...
Success lies not in rigid gender-based education but in creating diverse learning environments that can accommodate various ...
As teacher confidence grows, the way that math feels in the classroom begins to shift and evolves into a move positive ...
Reading is competing for attention in a world built for scrolling. A recent University of Florida study found that the share of Americans who read for pleasure on an average day dropped from 28 ...
ClassMate by World Book, the leading platform of trusted content that helps build knowledge through reading in every subject, ...
Addressing fragmented student data is not just an operational improvement--it directly impacts the school-home connection.
AI is here, and it’s moving fast. For schools, that speed is both an opportunity and a risk: The right tools can transform learning, but the wrong ones can compromise data, equity, and instructional ...
Inquiry-based learning can feel overwhelming, but it is very possible to establish student-led inquiry in the classroom.
More educators and policymakers are having second thoughts about the growth of ed-tech, with some school systems scaling back the use of screens ...