![]() ![]() Robbie Melton, Associate Vice President at Tennessee State Universityīest School District Technology Coordinator/Director Roslyn Clark Artis, JD, EdD, President at Benedict CollegeĮlmira Mangum, Vice President at Cornell Universityĭr. Winner: Janet Napolitano, President at University of California Lopez, Laredo Independent School District Laura Stout, Executive Director of School Leadership at Corpus Christi Independent School DistrictĮlizabeth Shaw, Chief Executive Officer at Chicago International Charter SchoolĮduardo E. Usamah Rodgers, Assistant Superintendent at Dallas ISDĭr. Todd Brekhus, Chief Product Officer for Renaissance Jamie Candee, President and Chief Executive Officer of Edmentum Glynn Willett and Wade Willett, Co-founders of MobyMax ![]() Winner: Marc Oswald, Co-Founder & CEO of Open Assessment Technologies S.A Winner: eSuite – The Smart Professional Learning Platform for Educatorsīest Student Information System (SIS) App or Tool Winner: Lifesize Icon 600 Video Conference Systemīest Learning Analytics/Data Mining App or Toolīest Professional Development App or Tool Winner: UWorld Online Preparation for ACT and SAT Examsīest Classroom/Behavior Management App or Tool Harmonize: Online Collaboration for Today’s Modern Student UWorld Nursing – Learning Platform for Nursingīest Parent-Teacher/School Communication App or Tool IM K–12 Math certified by Illustrative Mathematicsīest Virtual or Augmented Reality App or Toolīest Personalized/Adaptive Learning App or Toolīest Artificial Intelligence/Machine Learning App or Toolīest Blended/Flipped Learning App or Tool UWorld Physician Assistant Learning Platformīest Early Childhood Education App or Tool The Aperture System, home of the DESSA suite of SEL assessmentsĪcadience Reading K–6 with Acadience Learning Online Winners and finalists can access their award seals by clicking here. Here are our winners and finalists for 2022. The finalists and winners were ultimately selected by a panel comprised of two edtech thought leaders, two PreK-12 teachers, one college professor, two K-12 administrators, one college administrator and two PreK-12 parents. The nominee’s performance during the online voting period was used to gauge their popularity, but in no way signaled that they would become a finalist or walk away with an award. We solicited nominees from readers in June/July and held online voting from – July 31, 2022. In that spirit of change and innovation, we present the 6th Annual Tech Edvocate Awards.Īfter 4 months of hard work, we’ve narrowed down the year’s top edtech companies, products, people and more. Naturally, with increasing capital, the number of edtech companies, products, and thought leaders is also growing. This growing investment into edtech start-ups has created some exciting changes in the world of education. The education market is currently worth around $5 trillion globally, and it is forecasted that edtech investment alone will reach $300 billion by the year 2025. Though the edtech industry has been around for a few decades now, the last few years, in particular, have seen a surge in investment from both school districts and investors. In the last few years, the edtech field has attracted a lot of talented people, all with excellent knowledge bases and ideas. It is for independent practice and data gathering while being fun-so its not for intervention-that requires instruction- its for kids who just need to practice and need an engagement motivator in order to do so.Every day, technology innovations transform the way people learn and how educators teach. I have finally warmed up to Prodigy because I realize what its for-its not for teaching math, I wanted it to facilitate learning for those who are struggling-thats not what it does. ![]() there isa placement test feature and it wil bring you through lessons in sequence but I assign specific lessons to students based on need an where they are struggling in class. ![]() Since you can use the hint feature to basically say-now do this, now do that, notice this about the numbers-notice that-its good for tier 2 but it wont go farther than that-you need a teacher to go deeper. It has a nice-I do, we do, you do thing though-watch the video, try a problems using the "hints" as a walk through, then do some problems on you own. For guided practice with video tutorials and practice problems I like khan academy but it isnt as "fun". Math-we just got DreamBox but I havent really used it yet so I dont know if its good/bad/or other. I like it and I can see the benefits that my kids get from it but I have heard that the price went up this year quite a bit. Online programs we use are-Lexia for reading/phonics-my site is also piloting their new content for reading comprehension and thematic leveled close reads. ![]()
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