Long before remote learning went mainstream during the pandemic, Cobb County School District Superintendent Chris Ragsdale had a strong vision of a tech-enabled future for his schools. A customized learning management system (LMS), called the Cobb Teaching and Learning System (CTLS), had been in development for years when the COVID-19 pandemic hit.
Forced to accelerate its ambitious vision in a few short weeks, Cobb Schools worked with Education Incites (EdIncites), an education software company, to build out a synchronous learning experience for the district’s 110,000-plus students and 9,000 teachers. By integrating Zoom seamlessly into CTLS, Cobb Schools and EdIncites created a robust digital experience that engaged students with a 97% login rate across the district — and will continue to support flexible learning models going forward.
‘We had a vision for our own ecosystem’
CTLS was conceived as an online hub where Cobb Schools could “deliver anything a student, parent, or teacher needs in the digital space,” according to John Floresta, chief strategy officer of Cobb County School District.
“CTLS is our digital home — not just for online learning but face-to-face resources with digital tools for teachers, assessments and digital content for students, parent communications, and soon, instructional resources for parents to support learning from home,” he said.
“We wanted to bring capabilities together in an integrated way and make workflows as smooth as possible for parents, teachers, students, and administrators,” said Steve Campbell, president and chief operating officer of EdIncites.
The district had a vision, timeline, and budget for continued development of the platform over several years. Then, COVID-19 hit, accelerating plans nearly overnight.
“When the pandemic hit, we knew we had to move faster on building out synchronous capabilities for Cobb. We started looking at potential providers in the market that offered video capabilities,” Campbell said. “But we would have to integrate our application into their ecosystem — and that wasn’t what we were looking for. We had a vision for our own ecosystem.”
“Integration was really important — over the years, we have learned that no one tool or platform by itself could provide what our teachers and students needed,” added Marc Smith, chief technology officer at Cobb Schools. “Our superintendent has been clear that solutions for teachers and students should be driven by teachers and students. We had to find the right partners that allow for flexible video options.”
‘Zoom could integrate into our point of view’
Cobb Schools and EdIncites found Zoom fit the bill when it came to integration, with a flexible, customizable platform that also checked the boxes for reliability and scalability.
“We never approached this as ‘Let’s create an asynchronous experience’ — which is what many others did. We wanted to create something as robust and synchronous as possible,” Campbell said. “Our goal was functionality at the point of need. We didn’t want teachers to have to log in and out of system one to go to system two or three — instead, we wanted to integrate the capabilities into their workflows.”
Using webhooks and APIs, EdIncites built a seamless digital classroom experience where students could join live Zoom sessions directly within CTLS.