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U.S. Education IT Spending 2006-2011 ForecastPublished by: IDC Published: Aug. 18, 2008 - 21 Pages Table of ContentsTable of Contents Government Insights Opinion In This Report Methodology Situation Overview Table: U.S. Education IT Spending by Market Subindustry, 2006-2011 ($M) Table: U.S. Education Hardware Spending by Market Subindustry, 2006-2011 ($M) Table: U.S. Education Software Spending by Market Subindustry, 2006-2011 ($M) Table: U.S. Education IT Services Spending by Market Subindustry, 2006-2011 ($M) Assessing Current Situation Figure: Enrollment in Private and Public Elementary and Secondary Schools for Selected Years Table: U.S. Education and U.S. Total Spending on PCs, 2006-2011 ($M) School Funding Table: U.S. Education Hardware Spending for the Top 10 States, 2006-2011 ($M) Table: U.S. Education Software Spending for the Top 10 States, 2006-2011 ($M) Table: U.S. Education IT Services Spending for the Top 10 States, 2006-2011 ($M) Education IT Spending in K-12 Internet Access Effects on K-12 Table: State Grades Regarding Technology Access, Use, and Capacity to Use The Downside to Access Higher Education Future Outlook Forecast and Assumptions Essential Guidance Actions to Consider Learn More Related Research Synopsis AbstractThis Government Insights report represents the 2006-2011 forecast for U.S. education IT spending. It breaks out expenditure trends by K-12 schools, higher education institutions, and other education spending. "A review of trends indicates that K-12 schools will continue investments in PCs and networking solutions that foster student connection; however, education investments in technology will continue to morph from investments to connect and deliver content, to tools that actually provide educational value by securely improving student collaboration, and motivating students to learn," according to Adelaide O'Brien, research manager, Government Insights. "Although IT vendors find challenges in the education IT sector, such as facing a lack of centralized IT decision making, inconsistency of funding at the local, state and federal levels, and often no dedicated point of contact, this segment is growing and can reward vendors that understand the unique challenges of K-12 and higher education," adds O'Brien. Get Full Details About This Report >> |
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