
Sports Display Case: When Schools Should Use Static Cases, Touchscreens, or Both
Walk down any school hallway built before 2010 and you’ll pass the same fixture: a glass-fronted sports display case lined with trophies, laminated photos, and plaques that haven’t changed since the previous decade’s championship run. That case serves a real purpose — visible, permanent recognition of athletic achievement — but it also has real limits. It fills up. It can’t tell the story behind the trophy. And adding a new inductee means a fabrication order, an installation appointment, and several hundred dollars.
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Touchscreen Recognition Software vs. Digital Signage Software: Which Does Your School Lobby Actually Need?
When a principal announces “we’re getting a touchscreen display for the lobby,” everyone pictures something different. The athletic director imagines an interactive hall of fame where visitors browse athlete profiles by sport, year, or name. The communications coordinator pictures a digital bulletin board cycling through morning announcements. Both envision a screen in the lobby—but they’re describing two fundamentally different categories of software built for completely different goals.
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School Newspaper Template: How to Lay Out Recognition Stories That Look Great in Print and on Touchscreen Displays
Recognition stories are among the most read content in any school newspaper — students look for their names, parents clip and save the pages, and administrators cite them in board presentations. Yet many journalism advisors build each recognition layout from scratch, issue after issue, without a repeatable school newspaper template designed specifically for this content type. The result is inconsistent design, missed photo opportunities, and recognition stories that fail to travel beyond the printed page into the digital spaces where modern schools increasingly display student achievement.
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