New applications January 2020
Each month, our list of application partners grows. Check out which learning applications are new to Clever.
Want to add an app you don’t see on our list? Let us know and we’ll build an SSO connection for your school district.
The following applications roster and provision accounts through Clever Secure Sync and also offer single sign-on through Clever Portal.

Magoosh SAT offers comprehensive online SAT practice questions and SAT prep with hundreds of videos.

n2y empowers learning with a total solution tailored to help individuals with special needs access the general education curriculum.

Computency is an auto-grading, in-app platform with every tool needed to teach and learn computer applications.

MyVRSpot is a complete, customizable and affordable video and digital media management solution built specifically for K-12 education.
The following applications offer single sign-on through Clever Portal.
Essentials of Comparative Politics, 6th AP edition
Request these new apps and any others your district uses in your Clever dashboard. Don’t have a Clever account? Sign up today to start giving your schools a secure SSO portal experience.
More to read

June 23, 2025
Empowering education IT admins: Clever’s latest release puts you in controlDiscover Clever’s Summer 2025 product release—packed with powerful, no-cost tools that give K-12 IT administrators more control over security, access, and onboarding. Simplify account management, enable secure substitute access, and prepare for the year ahead with role-based permissions, multi-role switching, and more.

May 5, 2025
Making Student MFA Easy: Lessons from North KitsapNorth Kitsap made student logins safer and easier with Clever Classroom MFA—yes, even for little kids. With age-appropriate tools and strong support, students quickly adapted, and staff followed suit. The result? Better security without the hassle.

April 24, 2025
5 Common Cybersecurity Myths, Debunked by ExpertsExperts from Clever, Microsoft Education, InnovateEDU, and public schools debunk common cybersecurity myths that could put student accounts at risk.