School IAQ monitoring gives administrators and facility managers the continuous data they need to protect student health, reduce absenteeism, and address HVAC problems before they affect learning. Most K-12 buildings have no environmental monitoring at all — no way to know whether CO2 is climbing in a classroom, whether humidity dropped below safe levels in winter, or whether one wing is running 10 degrees hotter than another. Nosy puts wireless sensors across the entire building, tracking temperature, humidity, CO2, and indoor air quality every five minutes in every room, with automated monthly reports that surface the findings that matter most.
The same building where students spend seven hours a day is quietly affecting how well they learn, how often they show up, and how healthy they stay. Temperature swings, stale air, and humidity problems don't announce themselves. They just make things harder for everyone inside.
Get Early Access → Download the GuideMost K-12 schools were built decades ago. The average school building in the U.S. is 40 to 55 years old. Systems get patched, zones get added, thermostats get removed. Nobody has a clear picture of what's actually happening throughout the building on any given day.
The results show up in ways that are easy to misattribute. Students in certain classrooms seem distracted. Teachers complain about the same rooms year after year. Absences spike in winter. The HVAC runs all day but some parts of the building are still too hot. Others are freezing.
Research consistently links poor indoor air quality to reduced cognitive function, increased respiratory illness, and higher absenteeism. A 2016 study by Allen et al. found that improved IAQ can increase cognitive performance by up to 101% and reduce respiratory illness by 9 to 20%. But most schools are flying blind.
To understand how this gap affects schools specifically, see What Is Fractional BAS? for a vendor-neutral overview of how continuous monitoring works.
Nosy sensors cover every classroom, hallway, and common area. Data updates continuously throughout the day. Instead of guessing why a classroom feels off, you can pull up a floorplan heatmap and see exactly what's happening — not just what the thermostat says.
When you can see that humidity dropped below 30% in January and absenteeism spiked the same week, you stop guessing. Nosy's dashboard shows trends over time so you can build a case for maintenance priorities and make decisions based on real data.
Nosy sensors peel, stick, and connect automatically. No contractors, no conduit, no downtime. At one school in Rhode Island, a single person installed 37 sensors across an entire floor in two hours and twelve minutes — on a regular school day.
Nosy monitors the environmental parameters that matter most in educational settings:
Tracks ventilation quality directly. When CO2 rises above 1,000 ppm in a classroom, it's a reliable signal that fresh air exchange is inadequate. Nosy shows you which rooms breach this threshold and how long they stay there.
Frequently overlooked in schools. Low humidity in winter dries out mucous membranes and helps pathogens spread. High humidity in summer creates mold risk. Nosy tracks both and gives you time-series data to correlate with health outcomes.
Reveals the problems thermostats hide. A thermostat reading 70°F in one zone tells you nothing about what's happening in a legacy classroom down the hall, or in a room with afternoon sun exposure. Nosy maps the actual temperature distribution across the whole building.
Catches things that are otherwise invisible: cleaning product fumes, off-gassing from renovation materials, and chemical pollutants from everyday school activities that affect staff and student health.
Every month, Nosy generates an automated report showing which areas had persistent issues, which had intermittent problems, and how trends look over time.
At a K-12 school in Rhode Island, Nosy is deployed across two floors of a high school building covering approximately 40,000 square feet with 70 sensors total. The building mixes a renovated science wing with full HVAC alongside legacy classrooms running on a steam boiler with no cooling.
The data told a story that would have taken years to piece together otherwise. In March, temperatures exceeded 80°F in 19 different areas of the building, with significant overheating occurring in some areas every single day. Monthly reports showed clear patterns of afternoon solar heating in west-facing classrooms.
A deeper analysis of humidity data revealed a striking pattern: a 41% increase in student medical absenteeism during periods when building humidity fell below 30%. All of these issues were invisible before Nosy.
"In March, temperatures exceeded 80°F in 19 different areas of the building... This is data we simply did not have access to before."— School president, K-12 school in Rhode Island
Our Schools and Education resource library covers classroom air quality, ventilation strategies, health outcomes, and monitoring best practices.
The research behind how IAQ affects absenteeism, and what the data actually shows.
Read →Why humidity is one of the most overlooked environmental factors in school buildings.
Read →The connection between air quality, cognitive function, and academic performance.
Read →A practical guide to monitoring approaches and what to prioritize.
Read →The ROI case for investing in school air quality, including grant funding options.
Read →How humidity problems escalate, and why early detection matters.
Read →Ready to stop guessing about your building? Get early access to Nosy and start seeing real data from every room.
Get Early Access → Download the Guide