Why is coordinated daily oversight essential for maintaining student safety across school campuses Every school day is a coordinated promise: that every student arrives safely, is accounted for at every moment and returns home securely. Delivering on that promise demands seamless oversight of campus movement, vigilant visitor management and precise, parent-synced dismissal. All through this, keeping parents at the center of school safety is not only critical, but essential. Student safety is not a routine task. It is a responsibility that must work flawlessly every single day. In many schools, that responsibility is still managed through multiple tools or manual steps, which can create miscommunication and operational friction. During emergencies, the lack of a unified view can make coordination more difficult for administrators. Pikmykid supports the shared responsibility of closing these gaps, giving schools and parents a coordinated way to manage daily student movement. Its dismissal and safety platform treats on-campus safety as a continuous, daily process rather than a crisis-only response. The system combines arrival and dismissal, attendance, visitor management, hall monitoring, reunification and emergency response within a single intuitive interface. “Our platform focuses on the safety journey of each student from arrival on campus until they safely return home,” says Chitra Kanagaraj, COO and co-founder. Scalable and affordable for schools of all sizes, the platform seamlessly integrates with various tools that enable safety and protect privacy. It creates real-time visibility across campus operations and alerts the right contacts instantly during internal escalations or emergencies. Features such as tardy checks, digital hall passes, visitor checks, emergency alerts, dismissal notifications and reunification tools unify daily operations and crisis response. Schools run more efficiently, educators focus on teaching and parents gain peace of mind, all while students remain protected.

Top School Community Engagement Platform 2026

Why has community engagement become operationally critical for school districts facing fiscal pressure? In 2026, the fiscal landscape for U.S. public education remains a primary concern for district leadership. Navigating the "perfect storm" of post-ESSER funding, persistent inflationary pressures, and shifting state-level budget priorities has transformed community engagement from a supplementary activity into a mission-critical strategy. Major educational policy research highlights that districts increasingly rely on community support to maintain the quality of student programs. In this environment the ability to effectively mobilize and manage community resources is no longer a benefit — it is a necessity for operational resilience. How does Relatrix structure community engagement into measurable operational systems for districts? Relatrix helps districts navigate community challenges by treating engagement as a rigorous, scalable process, and is unique for its comprehensive scope. It offers a unified ecosystem that integrates four traditionally siloed pillars: volunteer management, corporate partnerships, visitor tracking, and stakeholder communications. This "all-in-one" architecture ensures engagement is a visible and measurable asset, rather than a series of disconnected activities. At the heart of the Relatrix philosophy is a commitment to data-driven improvement. "Effective community engagement, while fundamentally about relationships, requires schools to implement quantifiable processes. Ultimately, we can’t improve what we don’t measure," said Mark Franke, President of Relatrix. By adopting this mindset, districts can systematically backfill limited resources through structured engagement..

Multi Tiered Systems Of Support Solutions

Educators across the country are working harder than ever to support students academically, behaviorally, and emotionally. However, navigating the complexity of multi-tiered system of supports (MTSS) often means juggling fragmented data, slow intervention cycles, and limited training, all within their already limited time frame. Neulight, a company rooted in advanced engineering and applied AI, is resolving this three-fold knot. It designed IntelliTier—an AI-powered MTSS platform to help schools operationalize support frameworks efficiently, consistently, and in real time. Despite its Silicon Valley pedigree and AI expertise, the team made IntelliTier for practical use in real classrooms, not abstract tech uses. “Our mission isn’t disruption—it’s collaboration,” says Andrew Lawrence, co-founder and CTO. That philosophy is reflected across IntelliTier’s feature set. Schools often struggle with data silos, behavior events tracked on paper, and interventions scattered across Google Docs, resulting in the loss of critical decision-making information. IntelliTier replaces this with a unified, FERPA-compliant repository that brings together academic, behavioral, and social-emotional data. It integrates with student information systems (SIS), pulling in grades, attendance, and other data without requiring redundant entry. “We co-create tools with educators that make MTSS more actionable, less burdensome, and more consistent, so students actually get the support they need, when they need it,” says Jose Moreno, founder and CEO. Beyond centralization, it brings consistency and clarity. Educators record behavioral events using customizable forms built around the antecedent-behavior-consequence (ABC) model, ensuring a common language across staff. Each school can configure form fields and dropdowns to reflect their workflows, while dashboards surface risk trends across district, school, grade, class, or student levels—giving educators a high-level view and granular insight. IntelliTier’s AI builds on this visibility by highlighting key patterns and recommending interventions tailored to each student, translating information into research-backed action.

IN FOCUS

School Safety and Dismissal Platforms Transforming Student Protection and Operational Efficiency

School safety and dismissal platforms enhance student protection, streamline pickup coordination, and strengthen communication between schools, staff, and families.

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Enhancing School Community Connections: The Role of Integrated Engagement Platforms

School community engagement platforms are consolidating, integrating, and aligning with institutional strategy to drive retention, transparency, and long-term financial stability.

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EDITORIAL

Building Predictable Safety in Education Systems

Education systems are increasingly defined by how effectively they integrate safety, engagement and technology into daily operations. This edition of Education Technology Insights examines how institutions are moving beyond fragmented tools toward unified, process-driven ecosystems that strengthen accountability and operational clarity.

At the center of the issue is Pikmykid, recognized as the School Safety and Dismissal Platform of the Year 2026. The company has redefined campus safety as a continuous, end-to-end process rather than an event-driven response. Its unified platform brings together dismissal management, visitor tracking, emergency response and parent communication into a single interface, creating real-time visibility across the student journey. By embedding safety into daily routines and aligning schools with parents through synchronized systems, Pikmykid enables predictable operations, reduces administrative friction and ensures that safety is consistently executed at scale.

Complementing this is Relatrix Corporation, recognized as the Top School Community Engagement Platform 2026, which addresses a different but equally critical dimension: structured community participation. Its integrated ecosystem unifies volunteer management, partner collaboration and communications into measurable workflows. By treating engagement as a data-driven operational function, Relatrix enables districts to quantify impact, optimize resource allocation and reinforce safety and resilience through coordinated community involvement.

From a leadership standpoint, Keba Baldwin, Director of Transportation and Central Garage at Prince George’s County Public Schools, emphasizes that school safety is inherently layered, combining vehicle design, driver readiness, student behavior and traffic systems into a cohesive framework. Maria Stavropoulos, Director of Technology at Northbrook School District 28, reinforces that as AI enters this ecosystem, its role must remain assistive, with human judgment guiding ethical use, equity and decision-making.

Together, these perspectives point to a clear direction: scalable systems, measurable processes and human-centered leadership are defining the next phase of education technology. We invite readers to explore how these models are shaping more accountable, secure and connected learning environments.