| | NOVEMBER - 20176CIOReviewCopyright © 2017 ValleyMedia, Inc. All rights reserved. Reproduction in whole or part of any text, photography or illustrations without written permission from the publisher is prohibited. The publisher assumes no responsibility for unsolicited manuscripts, photographs or illustrations. Views and opinions expressed in this publication are not necessarily those of the magazine and accordingly, no liability is assumed by the publisher thereof.NOVEMBER - 22 - 2017Mailing AddressCIOReview44790 S. Grimmer Blvd Suite 202, Fremont, CA 94538T:510.565.7624, F:510-894-8405 NOVEMBER - 22 - 2017, Vol 06 SE 125 - Published by ValleyMedia, Inc. To subscribe to CIOReviewVisit www.cioreview.com K-12 SPECIALCIOReviewEditorial StaffSalesAva Garcia Hrushikesh Arun DondeJessica ThomasBanu JohnJade Ray Sarah Lauren AndersonJessica Stanleyjessica@cioreview.comT: 510.996.5126VisualizersDave BrownManaging EditorJeevan GeorgeK. Manoj KumarEditorialThe rapid adoption of technologies like cloud, big data and augmented reality (AR) are transforming not just teaching process today, but also the allied parts of the education system. Now, the learning process can cross the confines of classrooms and students have the privilege to set the pace of learning and exercising the knowledge. The success of this new system, however, lies on student engagement.Though historically technological preferences of educationalists are variable, modern day tools will fixate their technological roadmap as active learning has become a buzz word. Improving student participation and imparting one-to-one teaching even outside the classrooms will give impetus to the usage of cloud, big data and augmented reality-based tools and solutions. K-12 education is set to witness more seismic shifts regarding knowledge impartment in tandem with the regulatory changes. Stakes are higher, for the introduction of solutions developed by private schools and funded by the federal grant as federal government push the agenda of school choice. This will pave way for more collaboration between private school and vendors to envision and develop specialized, student-oriented tools and solutions. Learning courses, which provide online content through mobile devices, have also created a need for robust security frameworks to protect the student identity and data. In the journey so far, solution providers have developed cutting-edge solutions that cater to the needs of educational institutions. In this edition, CIOReview brings to you companies that are at the leading edge of these trends, transforming the K-12 landscape through holistic solutions. Let us know your thoughts.Jeevan George Managing Editoreditor@cioreview.comLearning beyond the Walls*Some of the Insights are based on the interviews with respective CIOs and CXOs to our editorial staff
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