TeachSmartHQ™ wasn't adapted for federal use after the fact. It was built for the hardest cases first — homebound and hospital-bound learners, students in residential care, kids on remote reservations and overseas bases. The accessibility floor, the four output modes on every artifact, the audit-ready data posture — those are how the platform works, not a federal add-on.
This page serves three audiences without making any of them dig: federal agencies that run schools directly, districts spending federal grant dollars on instructional tools, and the counsel or contracting officer who needs the compliance posture in one place.
First response target: within 2 business days, from a person on our team — not an autoresponder.
Compliance language on this page is descriptive — designed-to-support posture, not a certification — and is under counsel review before publication.
The agencies that run classrooms directly — and buy the curriculum and tools that go in them.
Most ed-tech is built for a school district and then asked, awkwardly, to fit a federal program. We start from the other end. The populations federal agencies serve — children of deployed and stationed service members, kids in hospital and homebound instruction, and learners on remote reservations — are exactly the cases TeachSmartHQ™ was designed around. Below are the two federal school systems at the center of this page.
Schools serving children of military and DoD-civilian families across 7 U.S. states, Guam, and Puerto Rico, plus installations overseas. Deployment-disrupted learning, frequent transfers, and continuity-of-instruction needs are the norm — not the exception TeachSmartHQ™ has to be retrofitted for.
Schools across 64 reservations in 23 states, many remote and under-connected. Print-first output and offline-friendly artifacts aren't a downgrade here — they're a primary access mode the platform ships by default.
Districts spending federal dollars on instructional tools — and the business managers who have to defend the line item.
A district doesn't need a federal contract vehicle to put TeachSmartHQ™ in front of teachers — it needs to know the purchase is defensible to the funding authority. Most federal instructional dollars flow to differentiation, intervention, IEP-related documentation, and accessibility supports. That's the work TeachSmartHQ™ does. Use the map below as a starting point for the conversation with your business manager — not as a determination.
| Funding source | Common allowable use | Where TeachSmartHQ™ fits |
|---|---|---|
| IDEA Part B§611 / §619 | Special education & related services for students with disabilities, ages 3–21. | PLAAFP drafting, IEP-aligned materials, and differentiated worksheets for students on IEPs. |
| IDEA Part DNational activities | Personnel development, technical assistance, and capacity-building. | Teacher and SPED-team enablement — building documentation and differentiation capacity. |
| Title I, Part ADisadvantaged students | Supplemental instruction & materials for students in high-poverty schools. | Intervention-ready and scaffolded materials for tiered and supplemental support. |
| ESSER & successorStabilization funds | Learning recovery, instructional support, and educational technology. | Teacher-workflow tooling for accelerated learning and recovery efforts, where funds remain available. |
| Section 619Preschool · ages 3–5 | Special education services for preschool-aged children with disabilities. | Early-learning differentiation and documentation for preschool special education. |
The reason this page earns its place. Every population here is federal, under-served, and already served.
Bridge-the-Gap is the part of TeachSmartHQ™ written for the learner who isn't in a standard classroom on a standard day. A kid whose parent just deployed. A student finishing the semester from a hospital bed. A child in residential treatment. A learner two hours from the nearest reliable connection. These are not edge cases to us — they are federal populations, and they are the populations the platform was built around.
Instruction that survives a mid-year move, a time-zone change, or a parent suddenly overseas — continuity built for families that don't get a stable nine months.
Print-ready and low-stimulation digital artifacts for a learner working from a hospital bed, a recovery room, or home — without assuming a full device setup.
Calm, scaffolded materials for restrictive and therapeutic settings where pacing, predictability, and a teacher-controlled artifact matter most.
Print-first output that works where bandwidth doesn't — the same quality of differentiated material, with no assumption of a one-to-one device.
Every worksheet TeachSmartHQ™ generates ships in four output modes by default, so the format meets the learner instead of the other way around.
the kid on the other end is the whole point ✿
The page a federal counsel or contracting officer can bookmark — written plainly, hedged honestly.
Read this section as posture, not certification. The standards below describe how TeachSmartHQ™ is designed and what it is built to support. Exact compliance wording is being finalized with counsel before publication; nothing here should be read as a formal certification or a contractual representation.
Built as an educator-facing workflow tool, not a student-information system. Designed to support districts' FERPA obligations around education records.
Not a student-account platform. The product is used by educators; it is not designed to collect data directly from children under 13.
Workflows map to IEP-related documentation, PLAAFP drafting, and differentiated materials for students with disabilities.
The accessibility output modes are built to support access and accommodation goals for students with 504 plans.
Building toward WCAG 2.1 AA. Accessibility is treated as the floor — four output modes on every artifact — with documentation available on request.
A data-privacy agreement is available for review, including NDPA-style terms, as part of a structured procurement process.
TeachSmartHQ™ is Powered by Anthropic AI. Student names and identifying details are kept generic in generated artifacts by design, and the platform is built so teacher inputs aren't used to expose one student's data to another. Full data-handling specifics are provided during DPA review.
So are we. No mystery on how to start a DPA, an NDA, or a contract-vehicle conversation.
We know federal and government procurement doesn't move like a classroom signup, and we don't pretend it does. The path below is the one we actually run — a real person reads your inquiry and routes it to the right next step, whether that's a discovery call, a privacy-agreement review, or a procurement questionnaire.
Tell us your agency or district, what you're evaluating, and your procurement constraints. The form below routes to a real person.
Within 2 business days we reply with the right next step — and start any DPA, NDPA, or NDA your process requires.
We structure a pilot or program scoped to your funding cycle, populations served, and accessibility requirements.
When a formal vehicle is the right fit, we take up federal pricing and contracting as its own dedicated conversation.
On federal pricing & contract vehicles: federal pricing is its own conversation, and formal vehicles (SAM.gov, GSA Schedule, EDU SEWP) are a future step we'll open as district pilot data matures. For now — contact us for federal pricing, and we'll meet your process where it is.
Tell us about your agency, program, or district and what you're evaluating. We review every inquiry and respond with the right next step — a discovery call, an allowable-use write-up, a DPA / NDPA review, or a pilot scoped to your funding cycle.
Inquiries are read by our team — which includes a senior enterprise IT leader, an active SPED teacher, and a K-12 paraprofessional with prior business leadership. You'll hear from one of us, not a bot.
Government / federal inquiry
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We've opened your email client with the details pre-filled — just hit send. If nothing opened, email us directly and we'll respond within 2 business days.
If you're a district spending federal grant dollars but you're really asking about pilot pricing, adoption shapes, and privacy posture, the Schools & Districts page covers that ground directly — and you can route a federal-funding question to us from here either way.