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Education News
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Migration to the cloud was all the rage from around 2010 through the pandemic, but some IT leaders are having second thoughts due to high costs, compliance issues, and the need for better data security and local control.
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School-zone speed cameras in Richmond, Va., which are only online while children arrive or leave from school, produced just over 100,000 violations in their first year of use.
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The town of Vernon recently became the latest of several local governments in Connecticut to put enforcement cameras on school buses, hoping to curb moving violations around the vehicles when students are present.
The CDG/CDE AWS Champions Awards honor AWS customers who are setting new standards for innovation in the public sector.
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Some of the larger counties across the state suspended testing again Tuesday because of the technology issues, which may have helped the connected speed in Manatee.
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Students or schools that are selected to receive a solar suitcase will be trained by nonprofit Green Tech on how to assemble the kits and the basics of how solar power works.
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BotsIQ, a robot slugfest sponsored by Western Pennsylvania manufacturers and educators aims to develop young, technically skilled employees who can replace retiring baby boomers.
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Gov. C.L. Otter signed legislation on Friday sending the Department of Education $3.64 million to reimburse school districts for their own broadband costs.
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Gov. C.L. Otter signed legislation on Friday sending the Department of Education $3.64 million to reimburse school districts for their own broadband costs.
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In the battle against cybercriminals, Virginia is mustering its troops.
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The measure allows school districts to negotiate their own broadband contracts for the rest of this school year to replace the Idaho Education Network system.
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Colorado lawmakers approved legislation last year that strengthened disclosure of what individual student data is reported, but the bill did not address privacy when it comes to vendors or school districts.
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States should push public universities to adopt open data policies.
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With information drawn from millions of anonymous medical records, microbiology students at the university are doing a mix of computational and experimental work.
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Study finds that social media lets campus authorities instantly reach a large percentage of students, who are more likely to comply with emergency notifications received in that manner.
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Today, with two tenants signed on for long-term leases and finally beginning construction, university officials are hoping to kickstart their vision of a research nexus.
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The areas are public safety, out-of-school time programming, community schools, school funding and marketing the city’s “excellent public school options.”
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School and library officials had feared that the FCC, acting in response to a federal court ruling, might change its policies in ways that would restrict access to online resources.
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For the first time, geographic information system technology is extending into traditionally non-technological majors at the California university, where information of all sorts is merged and analyzed with computerized maps.
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Demanding personal passwords could violate students' free-speech rights, as well as their Fourth Amendment protection from unlawful searches and seizures, according to critics.
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The analysis specifically highlights that the skills gap goes beyond young people who are typically seen as more "at-risk," like immigrants and high school dropouts.
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The contract, issued in 2009 to two politically-connected firms, was mired in controversy from the start, culminating in a judge’s final declaration last week that it was illegal and void.
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