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 “Too Many Tabs Open” — Why School Websites Fall Behind, and What Can Be Done About It

If you’ve ever visited your school’s website and found last year’s principal still listed, or clicked on the calendar and discovered two different times for the same event, you’re not alone.

Across the country, school districts of every size are facing the same persistent, quiet crisis: keeping their websites accurate, current, and trusted. Families rely on them for clarity. Staff expect them to reflect their work. The broader community sees them as the digital front door. And yet, many school sites feel stuck in the past.

The Daily Digital Burden

Behind the scenes, it’s not laziness—it’s logistics. School websites require constant, behind-the-scenes maintenance, much of which goes unseen:

  • Staff changes happen year-round: new hires, resignations, department reshuffles. Updating job titles, contact info, and staff directories is time-consuming and often delayed.
  • Photographs and bios become outdated. A new counselor may start in August but not appear on the site until October.
  • Awards, recognitions, and celebrations go unshared—not due to lack of pride, but lack of time and process.
  • Athletics, student clubs, support programs, and enrichment initiatives change constantly, and their web pages often don’t keep up.

And all of this sits atop a pile of more visible struggles:

  • Conflicting calendars for events, games, meetings, and performances.
  • Delayed posting of School Site Council (SSC) and English Learner Advisory Committee (ELAC) materials, which are often required by law.
  • LCAP/LCFF documents get buried.
  • Emergency messaging delayed or missing when timeliness is critical.
  • Information silos between schools and departments, with no central coordination.

Why It Gets Missed

Most school websites aren’t managed by a communications team—they’re patched together by well-meaning office staff, stretched administrators, or volunteering educators who “kind of know how to post.” When those individuals leave or shift roles, so does the continuity.

There’s no onboarding process for digital content. No centralized publishing calendar. Often, there’s no access to shared graphics or district branding tools. Coaches may not know where to report game results. A school’s office might be unsure whether to send updates to the district office, post them to the website, or hand them off to ParentSquare.

Speaking of ParentSquare…

A growing number of districts use third-party communication tools—ParentSquare, Finalsite, Aeries, PowerSchool, Remind, ClassDojo, and others. Each has its purpose. But when five or six systems are all vying for space on the homepage, the result can be clutter and confusion.

Parents don’t know where to look. Staff don’t know which system has the authority. Important updates get buried under popups, widgets, and links. Branding disappears. The voice of the district gets lost.

A Tipping Point

Eventually, every district reaches the same realization: this is unsustainable.

The cost isn’t just confusion or missed event, it’s trust. Families stop using the website. Teachers stop sending updates. The community disengages.

A Path Forward: Calm the Chaos with the Right Support

Many districts are now exploring the value of a dedicated third-party partner—someone who can act as a digital steward, receiving updates, reformatting them consistently, and posting them where they belong.

This isn’t about outsourcing responsibility—it’s about relieving pressure on already overworked staff, supporting school sites without dedicated communication professionals, and giving volunteering educators the structure they need to contribute meaningfully without technical hurdles.

A trusted vendor, appropriately priced, can manage:

  • Ongoing content intake from schools and departments
  • Calendar synchronization and conflict resolution
  • Formatting updates using consistent templates
  • Publishing updates in brand-aligned formats across web, newsletter, and social channels
  • Monitoring what’s missing—and prompting staff when necessary

This approach brings structure to the chaos and offers every school site the same level of professional care, no matter its size or staffing.

And Don’t Forget Branding

One often-overlooked issue is branding inconsistency across a district. Each school site, principal, department head, or communications coordinator may be using different fonts, colors, clipart, or graphic styles—often because there’s no shared brand library or training on visual standards.

The result? A disjointed public image that makes the district look less cohesive than it really is.

A dedicated vendor can bring all updates in line with the district’s brand, thereby creating unified, professional visuals across school sites, board updates, staff recognitions, and newsletters. With access to shared logos, photo libraries, colors, and typography, your district can speak with one visual voice.

Putting It All Together

As publishing technologies grow more sophisticated—integrating social feeds, API-driven calendars, live data from student information systems, and automated notification tools—the complexity of managing a school website rises dramatically. Information no longer flows from a single source but from multiple departments, applications, and community stakeholders. Without someone trained to coordinate, format, and publish this content accurately, schools risk delays, errors, and fragmentation. In this evolving landscape, the role of a dedicated web professional is no longer optional, it’s essential. A trained developer or content manager ensures not just that information is posted, but that it is published clearly, consistently, and processed through an efficient workflow that avoids cumbersome administrative delays.

When school websites fall behind, it’s rarely due to lack of care, it’s a systemic mismatch between expectations and capacity.

With a centralized, trained, and proactive support model, districts can regain control of their public presence, reduce internal strain, and restore the website as the trusted, clear, and celebratory resource it was always meant to be.

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