TechEd stories
Students should get closer access to studio practice, as seven industry specialists will help update Arena Animation’s courses and mentoring.
Higher margins and a record dividend followed Tech Mahindra’s FY26 as deal wins jumped and profit rose despite a tough macro backdrop.
Local data hosting and a flat NZD $168 monthly fee could make classroom journals more affordable for primary schools across both markets.
Customer engagement gains, including a USD $1 billion revenue impact at Lenovo, topped Adobe’s 2026 Experience Maker Awards shortlist.
Households facing rising AI fraud risks are the target of a new family assistant as the firm shifts its consumer unit around digital safety.
The update could help developers keep longer projects moving by letting Codex handle desktop tasks, browser work and persistent context.
Backed by Shine Capital, the London edtech aims to deepen US college growth and widen its AI tools as 13 million learners use it globally.
Students could gain an AI-focused degree for under USD $10,000 as employers back a new skills-based model for faster entry to work.
Employers facing widening AI skills gaps may find the new certificate more useful because it verifies practical work, not just course completion.
The three-year spend will expand local cloud capacity, boost cyber defences and train millions of workers as demand for AI grows.
The rollout is intended to speed up admissions and student support at the medical school, where staff face rising pressure to respond quickly.
Strong search demand for children’s designs is prompting Canva to expand licensed content, with more than 60 PEPPA PIG templates now live.
Schools and trusts could cut admin and spot pupil risks earlier as fragmented data and software are pulled into one system.
Schools should gain earlier warning of staffing and safeguarding issues as Tes360 links data from classroom, HR and timetabling systems.
The showcase highlighted early-stage ventures tackling clinical delays, relationship support and school safety as finalists pitched to investors and local firms.
The nomination comes as employers seek apprenticeships to fill digital skills gaps, with QA supporting around 12,000 learners last year.
The rollout aims to fill a gap in career advice for 14- to 24-year-olds, as schools face ratios of about 560 students per adviser.
The deal aims to help companies turn AI training into changed workflows and measurable performance, rather than standalone learning.
Clearer campus communication is becoming urgent as more than half of students report weak AI guidance and universities roll out live translation tools.
The deal gives Redsquid nearly 80 more staff and more than GBP £8 million in revenue as it deepens its UK education technology push.