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For years, educators have been overwhelmed by digital tools promising to simplify teaching and boost efficiency. Yet in classrooms, the reality has been the opposite. Teachers juggle platforms that add complexity, and students grow increasingly disengaged, uncertain why they are learning or how it connects to their goals. The rise of generative AI only heightened these problems. Instead of solving core issues, it created new ones. Teachers feared being replaced, students used AI to bypass real learning, and schools slipped into a cycle of AI producing assignments, completing them, and grading them, with little actual learning occurring. Amid this confusion, a different idea emerged: what if the true opportunity was not more content, but helping students understand themselves as learners? What if technology could finally support the agency, purpose, and cognitive skills the education system has long struggled to cultivate? These questions guided former teacher Myriam Da Silva, who saw how disconnected students felt and how overwhelmed teachers had become. She realized the missing piece was not better automation but a deeper understanding of how the brain learns and a way to bring that science into everyday classroom practice. This was the realization that helped CheckIT Learning take shape.
Technology education in schools is evolving quickly and that evolution brings a natural mix of needs. Younger students need age-appropriate entry points, teachers benefit from consistent structure and school leaders look for alignment with recognized standards. Parents, meanwhile, appreciate visibility into how their children are growing as digital creators. These needs shape how technology education takes form in classrooms. Technology Box (TBox) was created to bring coherence to that landscape. The company builds a unified educational system that connects curriculum, platforms, school practices and community engagement into a single, long-term learning journey. By combining a structured project methodology, internationally recognized standards like ISTE, Cambridge, Microsoft and Adobe, and age-appropriate design, TBox helps schools align their objectives with global expectations. “We designed TBox around four primary groups: students, teachers, school management and parents,” explains Juan Valiente, executive director. “Each of them has distinct expectations, and our model aligns those expectations through clear, measurable progress at every grade level.” A Methodology That Guides the Journey TBox uses a four-stage project method that gives every project a clear shape: research, explore, build and apply. The research stage asks students to examine a problem and identify options. The explore stage introduces tools and basic techniques tailored to the grade level. Build stage expects a concrete product such as a robot, a website or a short film. The apply stage asks students to place that product into a real context and test it against other subject areas. The sequence reduces scale of each task and makes progress visible at every step. Teachers use this sequence to set objectives that match cognitive development and classroom rhythms..
Each school day brings new opportunities to support students and strengthen school communities. For small- to medium-sized schools such as charter schools, religious institutions or independent institutions, keeping things running smoothly depends on having simple, reliable tools tailored to their needs. This is where EZ School Apps makes a meaningful difference. EZ School Apps offers a unified platform with four core solutions, comprising school lunch ordering, substitute management, after-school care and school payments. These solutions are designed to reduce a school’s administrative burden without adding complexity or cost, filling critical functionality gaps in traditional student information systems (SIS). Used by over 2,000 schools, the platform has supported educators for 12 years by reducing workload and making everyday tasks easier to manage. A Platform Developed Around Real Needs As many small schools do not have the infrastructure to support a cafeteria, they often rely on external meal providers. To make this seamless, EZ School Apps enables parents to place meal orders online, make payments digitally and have meals delivered from third-party providers. Depending on the arrangement, schools can also submit the orders to providers through the software. “Most schools start by using a single solution, such as the lunch ordering app, and once they see its value they adopt additional tools,” says Matt Stockbridge, CEO. “With a single login, parents and admin can access multiple applications across schools, making the entire process efficient.”
Niki Bray, Director of Academic Innovation, University of Memphis School of Health Studies
Kent Seaver, Director of Academic Operations, Naveen Jindal School of Management, the University of Texas, Dallas
Michael J Forder, Director of E-Learning - College of Health Professions, Virginia Commonwealth University
Sandra Mohr, Dean of Digital Learning and Instruction, Angelo State University
Jenny Zapf, Faculty Director, Global Certificate in Education Innovation & Entrepreneurship, Barbara Bobbi Kurshan, Senior Fellow and Innovation Advisor, University of Pennsylvania
Academic management platforms now form the backbone of digital campuses, unifying administration, learning, and analytics to streamline operations, personalize student journeys, and enhance institutional agility and security.
Neuroscience-driven adaptive learning tailors education to brain biology by leveraging neuroplasticity, managing cognitive load, and optimizing motivation, leading to more efficient, engaging, and lasting learning experiences.
The Next Era of Learning Systems
Neuroscience-driven learning management systems continue to mature digitally, placing greater focus on instructional design, assessment structures, and feedback approaches that reflect how learners process and retain information. By embedding cognitive science principles within digital environments, these platforms are strengthening instructional structure and learner engagement.
In parallel, academic management platforms are changing how learning data is interpreted and applied, connecting classroom activity with institutional accountability. Cloud-based school software further supports this ecosystem by enabling operational continuity across learning programs.
In this edition of Education Technology Insights, we examine the latest advancements in learning systems that are converging to address engagement, consistency and academic measurement across education ecosystems.
The cover features CheckIT Learning, with its neuroscience-driven LMS that represents a novel approach to instructional design. By embedding cognitive science principles into digital workflows, the platform shows how LMS solutions can evolve beyond administration to support learner organization and instructional clarity.
This issue also features perspectives from higher education leaders shaping how these technologies are evaluated and implemented. Kent Seaver, director of academic operations at the Naveen Jindal School of Management, UT Dallas, examines technology's role in strengthening assessment practices and academic accountability. Michael J. Forder, director of learning experience and architecture at Virginia Commonwealth University, highlights the importance of flexible, equity-minded LMS designs that support student experience without compromising institutional structure.
We hope this edition gives you clear insights into how learning platforms that combine cognitive awareness with operational clarity are set to define the next phase of digital learning.
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