While classrooms become increasingly digital, one truth remains: students still rely on printed materials to learn, retain information, and stay organized. Print isn’t just paper; it’s a tool for equity, accessibility, and academic confidence. When schools make printing affordable, secure, and easy to access, they’re not just providing a service — they’re actively investing in student success.
Digital-first strategies are growing, but the reality is clear—not every student has reliable access to devices, internet, or personal printers at home. When printing becomes a privilege instead of a standard resource, students fall into two categories:
This is more than a convenience issue. It’s an equity issue.
Print allows students to annotate, highlight, re-read without distractions, and learn in a tangible, brain-friendly format. Without it, comprehension drops, stress rises, and student engagement suffers.
Print accessibility means ensuring students, staff, and faculty can easily create, access, and use printed materials when needed—securely, affordably, and without barriers (financial, physical, or technological).
Accessible print means:
When print is easy, secure, and equitable, student performance, engagement, and retention measurably improve.
This isn’t just a feel-good initiative. It delivers tangible returns:
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ROI Benefit |
Impact for K-12/Universities |
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Higher Academic Performance |
Students who print and annotate score higher on tests and retain information longer. |
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Retention & Enrollment Stability |
Schools seen as “supportive and accessible” keep more students through graduation. |
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Lower IT & Help Desk Burden |
Self-service print reduces student tech complaints and device compatibility issues. |
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Stronger Parent & Community Trust (K-12) |
Families notice when schools invest in tools that support every learner. |
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Improved ADA & Compliance Standing |
Accessible print supports accommodations, IEPs, 504 plans, and OCR standards. |
Equity in print isn’t about giving every student the same; it’s about giving each student what they need to succeed. Examples:
Schools that remove print barriers send a powerful message: “You belong here. We’re investing in your success.”
Step 1: Centralize & Modernize Printing Systems
Step 2: Offer Safe, Affordable Student Print Plans
Step 3: Design for Accessibility & Inclusion
Step 4: Promote Availability & Remove Stigma
When schools invest in print accessibility, they’re not just giving students paper—they’re giving them confidence, dignity, and the tools to learn anywhere.
It creates:
And that’s the true ROI of service.
Small changes in print access can create big shifts in learning equity. Contact SumnerOne to see what’s possible on your campus.