AccelaSchool Announces Partnership with Montgomery County Intermediate Unit

Quickly gather student and parent data that can be immediately reviewed, audited, and inserted directly into PowerSchool… Save time, effort and storage space. Recouped productivity more than justifies the cost.

Presto, PA

AccelaSchool is proud to announce its partnership with Montgomery County Intermediate Unit (MCIU) of Norristown, PA. MCIU serves districts in Montgomery County promoting best teaching and administrative practices but are offering this partnership with AccelaSchool to districts across the state. MCIU offers professional development and services centered on modernizing these practices to help districts get maximum results from limited resources.

The partnership with AccelaSchool allows MCIU to add Ecollect, AccelaSchool’s groundbreaking paperless platform, to their service portfolio. Ecollect allows flexible, paperless data collection and reporting to be integrated directly into the student information system.

Alison Scott, Program Administrator for MCIU, describes the partnership: “Through Ecollect Suite, our clients will have an unprecedented ability to quickly gather multiple layers of student and parent data that can be immediately reviewed, audited, and inserted directly into PowerSchool. District office staff save time, effort and storage space from no longer having to manually enter and store returned forms, and the recouped productivity more than justifies the cost.”

For more information about Ecollect, visit http://www.accelaschool.com. To work through MCIU and learn about the opportunities offered through the intermediate unit and get your district using Ecollect visit http://www.mciu.org.

AccelaSchool, located just outside Pittsburgh Pennsylvania, is a class leader in school paperless data collection focused on partnering with school districts to maximize efficiency across multiple facets of school business.

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About the Author: Carrie Brunner

Carrie Brunner grew up in a small town in northern New Brunswick. She studied chemistry in college, graduated, and married her husband one month later. They were then blessed with two baby boys within the first four years of marriage. Having babies gave their family a desire to return to the old paths – to nourish their family with traditional, homegrown foods; rid their home of toxic chemicals and petroleum products; and give their boys a chance to know a simple, sustainable way of life. They are currently building a homestead from scratch on two little acres in central Texas. There’s a lot to be done to become somewhat self-sufficient, but they are debt-free and get to spend their days living this simple, good life together with their five young children. Carrie writes mostly on provincial stories.
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