Referenced by schools and district resource systems.

Atomency is beginning to appear in public instructional-resource listings. These references are useful credibility signals, but a listing is not the same as a district-wide license, endorsement, partnership, or formal classroom adoption.

01
Public references

Listings appear in school or district instructional-resource systems where educators search for digital learning tools.

02
Restrained claim

Atomency does not present these listings as formal adoption, procurement approval, or district endorsement.

03
Review in progress

Instructional technology review staff in the listed districts have been contacted for follow-up.

Current public references.

Each entry below separates what is publicly observable from what is not being claimed. This page can expand as additional districts, teachers, curriculum reviewers, or media outlets reference Atomency.

Rio Rancho Public Schools

New Mexico District catalog Approved with caution

Atomency appears in the Rio Rancho Public Schools Digital Resource Catalog. Catalog status: "Approved with Caution."

This is a public district resource-catalog reference. It is not described as district-wide adoption, paid licensing, partnership, or blanket instructional endorsement unless the district states that explicitly.

Livonia Public Schools - Holmes Media Center

Michigan Teacher resources School resource reference

Atomency is referenced through Holmes Media Center Teacher Resources in Livonia Public Schools in the Detroit metro area.

This is presented as a school resource reference. It is not described as district endorsement, partnership, procurement approval, or official district-wide adoption unless Livonia Public Schools states that explicitly.

How Atomency describes recognition.

Atomency uses conservative recognition language. "Referenced by" means the platform appears in a school or district resource context. It does not mean a district has purchased a license, approved district-wide classroom use, formally endorsed the platform, or entered a partnership. Schools and districts must still contact Atomency for paid licensing or written authorization before classroom instruction, assigned work, schoolwide deployment, or institutional pilot testing.