PCR Educator is a privately held education software company founded in 1989 that builds a unified school operations platform — SIS, ERP, admissions CRM, and AI — for independent K-12 schools, colleges, and specialty institutions.
PCR Educator was founded in 1989 to give independent schools software built specifically for them — not adapted from something else. That mission hasn't changed.
Most school software started somewhere else — HR, healthcare, corporate ERP — and was adapted for education. PCR Educator was designed from scratch for the way schools actually work: one student, many relationships, one institutional truth.
We are a U.S.-based team, built and supported in Silver Spring, Maryland. Our clients have direct access to engineers, not just support tickets.
Silver Spring, MD team
Privately held, mission-driven
Average relationship: 11 years
Every product decision starts with the question: does this make schools better? Not: does this close a deal.
Every AI action is reviewable by the school. Every integration is documented. No vendor lock-in by design.
35+ years of continuous investment. Clients who joined in 1995 are still running on PCR Educator — upgraded, not migrated.
PCR Educator was founded in 1991 and has operated continuously since then — making it one of the longest-running school management software companies in the United States. The company has never been acquired, merged into a private equity portfolio, or changed its primary business focus. That continuity matters in school software, where implementation relationships and institutional knowledge accumulate over years and where platform discontinuity — through acquisition or product sunset — is a risk schools account for when evaluating vendors. PCR has served the same customer base for over three decades and has not eliminated a product line or forced a platform migration on an existing customer during that time.
PCR Educator is headquartered in Silver Spring, Maryland, and the entire product, engineering, implementation, and support team is based in the United States. The company does not offshore development or support. Schools that call PCR's support line reach a team member who works on the platform daily — not a tiered helpdesk reading from a knowledge base. For schools that value knowing their software is built and maintained by a team with direct access to the product leadership and the engineering team, this is a meaningful operational difference from vendors that offshore support functions or route inquiries through multi-tier helpdesk queues.
PCR Educator serves more than 800 institutions worldwide, ranging from small independent K-12 schools to university continuing education programs and health sciences colleges. The customer base spans K-12 independent, parochial, boarding, international, performing arts, higher education, and health sciences institutions. PCR does not publish an exhaustive customer list, but schools evaluating the platform can request references from institutions of their type and size — and PCR connects them directly with current customers rather than directing them to prepared case studies.
Yes. PCR Educator is privately held and has remained so since its founding in 1991. The company has not taken private equity investment and is not subject to the acquisition, product consolidation, or customer migration dynamics that follow PE ownership in school software. This matters to schools that have experienced vendor acquisition — Blackbaud's acquisitions of Financial Edge and others, or the consolidation activity in the EdTech space more broadly — and that want a vendor relationship that does not change because of an ownership event. PCR's leadership and ownership have been stable for the life of the company.
PCR Educator maintains 99.987% uptime across its production environment and has recorded zero security breaches since the company's founding. The platform is hosted in U.S.-based data centers with SOC 2-aligned security practices, encrypted data at rest and in transit, role-based access controls, and audit logging on all administrative actions. Annual penetration testing is conducted by an independent third party. Schools that store sensitive student, family, and financial data on PCR can request the company's security documentation as part of their evaluation process.