Classroom Technology
Digital literacy, screen time, cellphones. Learn more about how schools handling technology’s effect on teaching and learning
Technology in Education: An Overview
From blended learning to computerized testing, digital and online technologies are reshaping the classroom experience for students.
Special Report
Technology Counts 2019
K-12 educators do not believe the continued expansion of new technologies into U.S. schools is transforming education, according to an Education Week survey. Learn more in this special report.
Special Report
What Do Principals Believe?
This year’s report takes a hard look at what principals are thinking and doing about some of the most vexing technology issues in their schools.
- Classroom Technology Cellphones in Schools: A Huge Nuisance and a Powerful Teaching ToolIf you can’t beat cellphones, some educators say, find ways to make them work for learning.Classroom Technology Video VIDEO: The Tech Tools That Are Here to StayThe pandemic has forever altered the way educators and administrators do business—from checking on students’ math understanding to conducting meetings to providing mental health supports.Classroom Technology Webinar Developing an Outcomes-Based Virtual Learning ProgramSponsorThis content is provided by our sponsor. It is not written by and does not necessarily reflect the views of Education Week's editorial staff.Join EdTech practitioners for a discussion on developing an engaging outcomes-based virtual learning program in your school or district.Classroom Technology Video VIDEO: How Expanded Tech Use Is Changing Teaching and LearningFor teachers, the sudden switch to remote learning during the pandemic brought huge growth in tech use. A look at what that means today.Classroom Technology Video Technology Has Changed Teaching and Learning. Here's How (Videos)The pandemic has changed the way educators and administrators check students’ math understanding, conduct meetings, and provide mental health support.Special Report Classroom Technology: The Good, the Bad, and What's NextSchools struggle to balance increasing use of ed-tech tools for teaching and learning with growing concerns about "tech fatigue."Classroom Technology From Our Research Center Online Quizzes Are Now Wildly Popular With TeachersSee how other digital learning tools stack up in popularity with online quizzes.Classroom Technology From Our Research Center Teachers Are Transferring Their New Virtual Teaching Skills to In-Person InstructionMany educators are embracing the use of technology for teaching and learning in deeper ways than ever before.Classroom Technology From Our Research Center What's Getting in the Way of More-Effective Digital Learning?Educators are running up against hurdles as they seek to broaden their use of education technology.Classroom Technology Q&A How to Make Tech Use in Schools Easier on TeachersAsk teachers what they think schools should do to improve tech use and give them more time to make it happen.Classroom Technology From Our Research Center Pandemic Tech Tools That Are Here to StayVideoconferencing platforms, social-emotional-learning supports, and digital math tools took root during the pandemic, survey data show.Classroom Technology Tech Fatigue Is Real for Teachers and Students. Here's How to Ease the BurdenNearly two-thirds of teachers, principals, and district leaders report experiencing technology fatigue, survey found.Classroom Technology Spotlight Spotlight on Anywhere, Anytime LearningThis Spotlight will help you review key lessons from virtual learning, discover how to improve remote options in your district, and more.Classroom Technology Sponsor 3 Ways Technology is Transforming EducationSponsorThis content is provided by our sponsor. It is not written by and does not necessarily reflect the views of Education Week's editorial staff.Education-as-a-service is the entryway to modern and inclusive classrooms of the futureClassroom Technology Q&A Is Remote Learning Here to Stay? Yes, But It Needs to Get BetterVirtual instruction is now baked into K-12 education, but mostly as a supplement to in-person schooling—at least for now, two experts say.