BloomBoard Intros Curated Collections with Micro-Credentials

BloomBoard, a professional development platform for educators, has launched a new site that combines curated collections of learning resources with micro-credentials.

Inspired by the content curation capabilities of popular sites like Pinterest, BloomBoard created an alternative community exclusively for K-12 educators. The site is organized around the concept of collections, which are groups of learning resources focused on specific topics, such as Using Children's Literature To Teach Writing or Effective Strategies for Teaching Students with Disabilities. Teachers can sign up for free to create their own collections on topics of professional interest and follow collections created by other teachers. According to a news release from the company, "Collections are reviewed by BloomBoard's team of master educators to ensure each resource can help a teacher succeed in addressing that problem of practice."

Ella Bowling, a middle school teacher in Maysville, KY, prefers BloomBoard to general interest sites such as Pinterest or Google to find high-quality educational resources. "BloomBoard provides a better way for me to leverage the expertise of the educator community and quickly find solutions to the challenges that come up in my daily practice," she said in a prepared statement.

In November 2015, BloomBoard announced its partnership with Digital Promise, a nonprofit organization authorized by Congress to spur innovation in education. BloomBoard and Digital Promise launched a micro-credential system for educators that provides an alternative method of recognizing educators' professional development accomplishments. Now, teachers can earn micro-credentials in a wide variety of topics through BloomBoard's new site, and those micro-credentials can then be translated into professional development credit hours. "BloomBoard and Digital Promise are already approved for statewide credit hour equivalency in Texas, Illinois and North Carolina, with additional states expected to provide approval in the coming months," stated a news release from BloomBoard.

In addition to the new site for K-12 educators, BloomBoard will continue to offer its private content tools for schools and districts.

About the Author

Leila Meyer is a technology writer based in British Columbia. She can be reached at [email protected].

Featured

  • Stylized illustration of an AI microchip connected to a laptop, server rack, and monitor with a chart

    HPE and Nvidia Expand AI Infrastructure Partnership

    Hewlett Packard Enterprise and Nvidia have announced an expanded partnership to accelerate enterprise artificial intelligence adoption through new modular infrastructure and turnkey AI platform offerings.

  • shield with an AI microchip emblem hovering above stacks of gold coins

    Report: AI Security Spend Surges While Traditional Security Budgets Shrink

    A new report from global cybersecurity company Thales reveals that while enterprises are pouring resources into AI-specific protections, only 8% are encrypting the majority of their sensitive cloud data — leaving critical assets exposed even as AI-driven threats escalate and traditional security budgets shrink.

  • digital learning resources including a document, video tutorial, quiz checklist, pie chart, and AI cloud icon

    Quizizz Rebrands as Wayground, Announces New AI Features

    Learning platform Quizizz has become Wayground, in a rebranding meant to reflect "the platform's evolution from a quiz tool into a more versatile supplemental learning platform that's supported by AI," according to a news announcement.

  • teen studying with smartphone and laptop

    OpenAI Developing Teen Version of ChatGPT with Parental Controls

    OpenAI has announced it is developing a separate version of ChatGPT for teenagers and will use an age-prediction system to steer users under 18 away from the standard product, as U.S. lawmakers and regulators intensify scrutiny of chatbot risks to minors.