< Key Hightlight >
Generative AI is becoming integrated in certain supplemental materials.
Simba has estimated the size of the K-12 instructional supplemental materials market to be $4.62 billion in 2024 and is forecast to grow to $4.98 billion in 2026, representing a CAGR of 2.9% and increase its the share of the total K-12 instructional materials market from 45.04% to 45.18%. Simba Information’s The State of the K-12 Supplemental Materials Market:2024 uncovers several reasons for the continued increase, including: the vast among to content available through simple internet searches the rise of Open Education Resources (OER) and a shift towards new teaching and learning best practices, such as engagement and inquiry-based learning, which often necessitate supplemental materials.
See the Beyond Textbooks: Exploring the Surge in Supplemental Materials
Simba’s The State of the K-12 Supplemental Materials Market:2024 report also examines: definitions of supplemental material; various types and sources of resources; size of market by key subject areas: science, reading, math, and social studies; teachers’ practices and perspectives when using supplemental resources: when educators seek it; where do they search; and how they search and browse; downsides and drawbacks with supplemental materials, including issues around quality and alignment to standards; problems with virtual resource pools; the role of generative AI, and implications and opportunities for states, school districts, and educational publishers to assist teachers in locating appropriate supplemental materials.
The report provides an analysis of what teachers look for when choosing a supplemental resource based on subject area; the problems with user ratings on unregulated supplementary web sites like Teachers Pay Teachers; and opportunities for educational materials publishers to play a larger role in assisting schools and teachers in choosing supplemental materials.
Simba Information’s The State of the K-12 Supplemental Materials Market:2024 report covers major themes and elements impacting the supplemental materials market, including.:
Digital instructional materials
Open web resources
Open Education Resources (OER)
Engagement-based learning
Inquiry-based learning
NGSS (Next Generation Science Standards)
Remote learning
Market dynamics
Teacher practices
Material quality
Curriculum alignment
Political influences on education
AI integration in supplemental materials
Virtual resource collections
The State of the K-12 Supplemental Materials Market:2024 report also identified and profiles major educational material publishers and small innovators in the supplemental market. The major businesses profiled include:
Boxlight
Cengage
Discovery Education
Houghton Mifflin Harcourt
Imagine Learning
McGraw Hill
Pearson
Renaissance Learning
Savvas
Scholastic
Stride Learning Solutions
Publishers and investment professionals can trust Simba Information’s State of K-12 Supplemental Materials Market 2024 to provide the inside intelligence needed to evaluate the growth potential and understand the trends impacting the market for the K-12 supplemental instructional materials market. This report is an essential tool for publishing executives, M&A advisors, market analysts, and industry consultants who need to understand the larger trends and necessary business strategies when considering the supplemental materials instructional market.
Methodology
To research and compile this report, Simba conducted a deep and comprehensive secondary search of a wide range of literature on teachers’ use of supplemental materials, including scholarly literature, trade literature, research institute reports, the open web, school materials, existing professional surveys and drew on Simba’s own past surveys, research and analysis and market data projections from our knowledge center. We also conducted in-depth interviews to supplement our secondary research; subjects included educational publishers, professors, non-profit associations, educational experts and teachers.
Some of the basic descriptions and function of supplementary materials that were outlined in Simba’s June 2022 K-12 Supplemental Materials Market and has not changed is included in this 2024 report; in addition to that unchanging information, the rest of the report has been fully updated for this edition.
Where do Supplemental Resources Come From?
While this report will provide a more detailed analysis of where (and how and why) teachers seek out supplementary materials, it is possible to initially identify at least nine different types of sources that make up the primary portion of the supplementary materials “universe.” In addition to supplemental resources that accompany core curricula materials from standard publishers, teachers also do their own research and use their contacts and creativity to find what they need if what they want is not available (or not obvious) from their core materials.
These are the places (or methods) available to teachers who choose to seek out and integrate this kind of resource into their classroom.
These key sources include:
Virtual resource collections
OER aggregation sites
A Google search
Social media sites
Customized materials, created from scratch by the teacher
Traditional educational publishers
Nonprofit organizations
Public broadcasters
Other teachers