Remove 2003 Remove 2013 Remove E-rate Remove Trends
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U.S. K-12 Educational Technology Policy: Historical Notes on the Federal Role

Doug Levin

Finally, somewhat for the sake of brevity, I have excluded consideration of the role of the E-rate (which is overseen by the Federal Communications Commission and not the U.S. FY 2003 $700,500,000. FY 2013 $0. Federal Program Evaluations and Program-Related Reports: National Educational Technology Trends Study (NETTS).

Policies 150
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Many Hispanic students never have a teacher who looks like them

The Hechinger Report

Schools mirror that trend — among students. students in kindergarten through 12th grade that is Hispanic increased from 19 to 25 percent between 2003 and 2013, while the black non-Hispanic population dropped from 17 to 16 percent and the white non-Hispanic population fell from 59 to 50 percent. population as a whole by 2060.

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The Politics of Education Technology

Hack Education

One of the challenges of writing this series – and trust me, there are many – is separating my analysis out into ten articles that name ten distinct “trends.” But when trying to write about ten “trends,” it’s evident: everything overlaps. million in E-Rate rebates.).