The Right Screen for the Right Room: A K–12 Guide to Panels, Projectors, and Portable Display Technology
The goal was never to get a screen on the wall. The goal was always to get students off the sidelines and into the lesson. The technology is just how you get there.
For years, classrooms ran on two things: a teacher at the front and a projector throwing light at a screen. That model worked — until it didn’t. As student expectations shifted and instructional strategies evolved, the single-direction, sit-and-get classroom started showing its limits. Teachers wanted tools that let every student contribute, not just watch. Administrators wanted investments that held their value over time. And everyone wanted technology that was easy enough to actually use every day.
Today’s classroom display landscape offers real options. Interactive flat panels. Interactive laser projectors. All-in-one mobile units. Battery-powered portability. Each solves a different problem — and knowing which problem you’re actually trying to solve is where the decision starts.
This guide covers what we sell, why districts choose each option, what the research says, and how to think about cost over time. We’ll give you an honest picture — not a sales pitch.
The Research Case: Why “Interactive” Is Not a Marketing Word
Before we talk products, we need to talk about what the data actually shows — because there’s real academic research behind these technologies, not just vendor claims.
An effect size of 0.94 is significant by any academic standard. Educational researchers generally consider anything above 0.40 to be meaningful. 0.94 puts interactive display technology in the same conversation as some of the most impactful instructional interventions ever studied.
But every major research source includes the same caveat, and it matters: these results depend on how the technology is used. A panel that becomes a $6,000 PowerPoint screen is not the same investment as a panel where students are annotating, polling, casting their work, and collaborating in real time. Training and implementation support are not optional extras. They are the mechanism by which the research outcomes actually happen.
“The research literature demonstrates unequivocally that interactive flat panels can significantly impact student achievement, motivation, engagement, and understanding. However, these benefits materialize only when implementation includes comprehensive, research-based professional learning.”
Bluum Literature Review — December 2025
That’s the foundation. Now let’s talk about which tool fits which classroom.
From Sit-and-Get to Participation: What Interactivity Actually Changes
The shift from passive to active learning is not a new idea — educators have been chasing it for decades. What interactive display technology does is remove the friction. When a student can walk up and annotate a map, drag and match vocabulary terms, or cast their Chromebook screen to the front of the room in seconds, the barrier between “paying attention” and “participating” collapses.
Casting alone changes the dynamic significantly. When a teacher can pull any student’s work to the front of the room — without cables, without swapping seats, without disruption — peer-to-peer learning becomes a practical part of the lesson rather than a logistical production. The same is true for wireless content sharing, multi-touch collaboration, and built-in formative assessment tools. These aren’t features on a spec sheet. They’re instructional moves that simply weren’t possible in a projector-and-screen setup.
Clarity matters too. A 4K panel at 75 inches in a standard classroom produces a sharp, consistent image from every seat. There’s no ambient light washing out the projection, no keystoning from an off-angle throw, no lamp-fade over the semester. Students at the back of the room see the same image as students in the front — and research on visual learning consistently shows that image clarity and size have a measurable impact on retention and attention.
The Panel: Purpose-Built for Daily Classroom Use
An interactive flat panel is the closest thing to a permanent upgrade for a standard classroom. It replaces the projector, the whiteboard, and in most cases the teacher’s desktop computer — all in one device. Panels are most commonly wall-mounted, but they also pair with rolling mobile stands so a single panel can move between classrooms, serve breakout spaces, or travel to wherever the instruction is happening that day. Wall or wheels — the choice depends on the building, not the product.
Interactive Flat Panel
The 6000A+ is the first EDLA-certified interactive panel built specifically for education — meaning it runs native Google apps, Google Classroom, and the full Google Play Store directly from the panel without workarounds or third-party launchers. It runs Android 15 OS, carries a built-in top-oriented sound bar and microphone array, and casts up to 9 devices simultaneously. Up to 40 simultaneous touch points means a small group can work together at the front of the room at the same time.
- 4K UHD Resolution
- Android 15 OS
- EDLA-Certified (Google)
- 40-Point Touch
- 9-Device Casting
- Built-in Soundbar + Mic
- 65″, 75″, 86″ Options
- 3-Year Warranty
Standard K–12 classrooms running Google Workspace, districts prioritizing native Google integration, and schools that want software included without ongoing subscription costs.
Interactive Flat Panel
Clevertouch’s flagship education panel. The Pro series brings 50-point simultaneous touch, NFC teacher profile login (tap your badge, your settings load), and the bundled Clever Software Suite — LYNX Whiteboard for annotation and lesson building, CleverShare for wireless casting, CleverMDM for district-level device management, and CleverLive for digital signage and emergency alerts, all included at no additional licensing cost. Clevershare supports up to 50 connected devices, with up to 9 device screens displayed simultaneously on the panel. The Pro is a full instructional platform, not just a display.
- 50-Point Touch
- NFC Profile Login
- LYNX Whiteboard (included)
- CleverShare / CleverMDM / CleverLive
- 50 Devices / 9 Simultaneous Screens
- Antibacterial Glass
- Android OS
- 65″–86″ Options
Districts looking for a rich software ecosystem, multi-teacher buildings where NFC login saves meaningful setup time, and schools where student collaboration at the front of the room is a priority.
A Closer Look: Clear Touch Chorus and the Software Story
Hardware is half the conversation. The other half is what runs on it — and this is where Clear Touch has done something worth paying attention to.
Chorus (formerly Snowflake) is Clear Touch’s flagship teaching and learning software platform, and it ships included with every 6000A+ panel at no additional licensing cost. That matters more than it sounds. Many districts buy panels and then discover the software that makes them genuinely useful carries a recurring subscription. With Chorus, that’s not the case.
What Chorus actually does in a classroom goes well beyond whiteboarding. It’s built around Universal Design for Learning — the principle that students need multiple ways to access, engage with, and demonstrate content. In practice that means teachers can split the panel screen into independent activity zones, run interactive polls in real time, assign and receive student work without leaving the platform, and access a community library of pre-built, curriculum-aligned lesson activities. Students move from consuming content to creating it — presentations, learning games, multimedia projects — directly within the platform.
“Chorus transcends a platform — it’s a digital collaborative hub built to help master, simplify, and transform the learning process.”
Clear Touch — Chorus for Education
The Chorus AI Assistant is the most recent development and it’s a practical one. It doesn’t replace teacher judgment — it handles the time-consuming scaffolding work that typically happens before the lesson starts. The AI Assistant can take a YouTube video or an image and build an interactive lesson activity from it, generate curriculum-aligned activity suggestions, and support differentiated instruction across more than 85 languages. For districts with large EL populations or multilingual classrooms, that last feature is significant.
Chorus Online extends the platform beyond the physical panel. Students and teachers can access lessons, collaborate in real time, and pick up where they left off from any internet-connected device. It integrates natively with Google Classroom, Canvas LMS, ClassLink, Clever, and Microsoft — which means it fits into whatever workflow a district already has rather than requiring a new one.
Clear Touch also offers structured professional development around Chorus specifically — including Certified Trainer Workshops where district staff become internal champions, and the Clear Touch Academy, a free online resource hub for ongoing learning. If you’ve heard about AI-focused training sessions through Clear Touch recently, that’s where it lives. It’s worth asking your Central Technologies rep about current availability in your area.
The software story matters for one reason above all others: it’s what converts a panel from a $6,000 display into a daily instructional tool that teachers actually want to use.
The Projector: When the Room Is the Canvas
Not every situation calls for a panel. Some rooms are simply too large for a 75-inch display to reach every seat. Some budgets require a lower entry cost. Some administrators want to preserve existing whiteboard surfaces. And some spaces — gyms, cafeterias, multi-purpose rooms, large-format presentation areas — need a screen that a fixed panel cannot practically deliver.
Interactive projectors meet those rooms where they are. The key word is interactive — the BrightLink line from Epson is not a passive display. It brings touch interactivity, wireless casting, and whiteboarding capability to large-throw surfaces, which changes what’s possible even in a traditionally awkward space.
Interactive Laser Projector
The BrightLink line turns virtually any wall surface into an interactive workspace. The 770Fi delivers a 100-inch full HD image — up to 75% more interactive area than a 75-inch flat panel — at a lower cost per square inch. The 1485Fi steps up to a 120-inch ultra-wide display and can network with other BrightLink units, allowing multiple rooms or stations to collaborate on a single canvas. Both models use Epson’s 20,000-hour solid-state laser light source: no lamps, no replacement cycles, no mid-year budget surprises. Wireless casting reaches up to 50 devices via Epson iProjection software.
- 100″–120″ Display Area
- 20,000-Hr Laser (No Lamps)
- Dual-Pen + Touch Interactivity
- Up to 50-Device Casting
- PC-Free Whiteboarding
- Google Workspace Compatible
- Auto Image Alignment
Larger classrooms or irregular spaces, buildings replacing older projector infrastructure with minimal new wall penetration, rooms where image size is a priority, and environments where ambient light is controlled.
The Portable Solution: When the Classroom Has to Move
Fixed displays assume fixed classrooms. But schools don’t always work that way. Breakout spaces, media centers, outdoor learning areas, gym floors, portable buildings, and multi-use spaces — these are real environments where teachers are expected to teach, and a panel bolted to drywall or a projector anchored to a ceiling mount is simply not the answer.
The portable category has matured significantly. Whether you need a self-contained AV box like the Huddlbox, a battery-powered panel via the Clear Touch Fuel, or a large-format mobile projection unit like the Artome, districts can now bring a full audio-visual experience to spaces that previously had nothing useful on the wall — or no wall at all.
Portable AV — All-in-One
Huddlbox is exactly what it sounds like: a rugged, portable box that combines a smart TV display, a Bluetooth audio system, and a PA/microphone system into a single plug-and-play unit. No installation, no cabling runs, no IT ticket required. Roll it in, plug one power cable into the wall, connect your device via Bluetooth or HDMI, and you have video with full room audio — in the classroom, the gym, the cafeteria, or outside on the practice field. One Marion County, TN Federal Programs Director used Title II funds to purchase a Huddlbox specifically for PD, PLCs, and family involvement — a practical example of how flexible procurement can match flexible technology.
- Smart TV Display
- Bluetooth Audio System
- PA / Microphone System
- Plug-and-Play Setup
- Water-Resistant Enclosure
- Indoor / Outdoor Use
- 1 or 2 TV Configurations
Gyms, cafeterias, outdoor spaces, assemblies, athletic coaching, PLCs, family events, and any situation where a teacher needs a self-contained audio-visual system with zero setup time. Not an interactive display — but the most portable full AV solution in the category.
Portable Power — Interactive Panel
The Fuel is a battery system designed to untether a Clear Touch interactive panel from the wall entirely. With 4+ hours of standard runtime, intelligent charging technology, triple AC output, and a low-center-of-gravity stand design for safe classroom movement, the Fuel turns a mounted panel into a traveling one. It integrates directly with Clear Touch’s mobile stand system, requires no external battery management, and LED indicators give teachers real-time charge visibility at a glance.
- 4+ Hour Runtime
- Triple AC Output
- LED Battery Indicators
- Mobile Stand Integrated
- Intelligent Charge Technology
- Compatible with Clear Touch Panels
Districts that want to move a Clear Touch panel between rooms or into spaces without dedicated outlet access. Outdoor learning, portable buildings, gym instruction, and any scenario where the panel needs to follow the teacher rather than wait for the teacher to return to it.
Portable AV — Large Format
The Artome M10 is smart furniture — a wheeled, all-in-one unit that integrates an Epson laser projector (up to 150-inch image), embedded 2.1 sound system, integrated camera, and microphones for video conferencing. No ceiling mounts, no wall penetration, no cabling runs required. Roll it in, plug one power cable into the wall, connect via HDMI, and you’re projecting. Designed for spaces that need to serve multiple purposes: classrooms by day, presentation spaces by evening, training rooms on weekends.
- Up to 150″ Image
- Epson Laser Projector
- 2.1 Embedded Sound System
- Integrated Camera + Mics
- Zero Installation Required
- Video Conferencing Ready
Multi-purpose rooms, media centers, auditoriums, libraries, and any space that hosts multiple types of activities. Excellent as a backup or supplemental unit in buildings with fixed panels in standard rooms. Note: the M10 is not an interactive projector — it’s a premium presentation and collaboration system.
The Honest Conversation About Cost Over Time
Upfront cost is not total cost — and in K–12 purchasing, confusing the two leads to budget headaches a few years down the road. Here’s a straightforward breakdown of what to factor in.
| Cost Factor | Interactive Panel | BrightLink Projector | Huddlbox / Artome / Clear Touch Fuel |
|---|---|---|---|
| Upfront Hardware | Higher | Moderate | Low–Moderate (Huddlbox lowest entry) |
| Installation | Wall mount or cart + wiring | Ceiling or wall mount + wiring | Minimal / zero |
| Lamp Replacement | None (LED backlight) | None (20,000-hr laser) | None (LED/laser) |
| Calibration / Alignment | None required | Periodic auto-alignAuto-alignment via Setting Assistant app | None |
| Software Subscription | Included — Chorus (Clear Touch) + Clever Suite (Clevertouch) | iProjection free; GoBoard 1-yr trial | N/A |
| Warranty | 3 yr (Clear Touch) / 5 yr (Clevertouch Pro) | Epson Brighter Futures 3-yr education | Manufacturer warranty |
| Lifespan Expectation | 8–12 years | 8–10 years | 7–10 years |
| Cost Per Year (Est.) | Lower over full lifecycle | Lower upfront, comparable lifecycle | Highest flexibility value |
The elimination of lamp replacement cycles is one of the most underappreciated cost factors in this conversation. Traditional projector lamps ran $150–$400 each and needed replacement every 3,000–5,000 hours. In a classroom running 6–7 hours a day, that’s a replacement cycle every 18 months. Over a decade, that adds up to several costly cycles per projector — an expense that no longer exists in any of the products listed above.
Clear Touch makes a particularly direct case: their panels are designed to pay for themselves compared to projector-and-whiteboard setups when software subscriptions, bulb replacements, and calibration service calls are factored over a multi-year period.
Training Is Not Optional — It’s the Investment
The most consistent finding across every major research study on interactive display technology is this: outcomes depend on implementation. Hardware without professional development produces results that look a lot like expensive PowerPoint. Central Technologies supports every display product we sell with hands-on training and ongoing professional development. What that means in practice:
- Teacher onboarding at installation
- Software-specific instructional coaching
- Refresher sessions at the start of each school year
- Administrator-level device management training
- District-level deployment planning
- Ongoing technical support post-installation
Verified Research Sources
- Bluum — “The Impact of Interactive Flat Panels on Teaching and Learning” (December 2025)
Full literature review synthesizing 47 experimental studies with nearly 3,000 students. Effect size d = 0.94 on academic achievement.
bluum.com/resources/the-impact-of-interactive-flat-panels-on-teaching-and-learning - Clevertouch Technologies — Educator Engagement Research (April 2025)
71% of educators report longer student attention; 76% report higher engagement with interactive displays in use.
clevertouch.com — How Interactive Displays Enhance Classroom Engagement - Marzano / ASCD — Interactive Board Technology and Student Achievement
Landmark study finding a 16 percentile point gain in student achievement tied to interactive board technology.
stsed.com/interactive-flat-panels/ - eSchool News — “Are You Choosing the Right Classroom Visual Displays?” (May 2023)
Balanced IFP vs. projector analysis; 75% of IFPs purchased in 2022 were 75″ or larger.
eschoolnews.com — Choosing the Right Classroom Visual Displays - Clear Touch — Chorus for Education / IFP Trends 2025
Manufacturer research on IFP adoption, Chorus AI platform capabilities, and UDL-based instructional design.
getcleartouch.com/software/chorus-for-education - Epson — BrightLink Product Specifications (2024–2025)
BrightLink 770Fi and 1485Fi specs including interactive area comparisons and laser source ratings.
epson.com/brightlink-interactive-displays
So — Which One?
The honest answer is that most districts end up with a mix. Standard classrooms get panels. Larger instructional spaces get interactive projectors. Multi-purpose rooms and buildings with mobile-learning initiatives get portable solutions. The goal is matching the tool to the space and the instructional model — not standardizing on one product because it was easiest to procure.
What we can tell you from working with districts across Tennessee and beyond: the schools that see the strongest results from these investments are the ones that took training seriously, involved their teachers in the selection process, and thought about the full lifecycle cost rather than just the purchase order.
If you’re evaluating options for your district — whether for a single building, a bond project, or a grant-funded initiative — Central Technologies is here to help you work through it. We’ll bring the products, the research, and the honest conversation about what fits your rooms, your budget, and your teachers.
Central Technologies, Inc. is a Tennessee-based K–12 education technology Value Added Reseller. We hold cooperative purchasing contracts through TIPS, BuyBoard, and Tennessee state contracts. Contact us at centralinc.com to schedule a demo or discuss your district’s needs.
