At Drieam, we believe that technology should remove barriers, not create them.
For years, Eduframe has offered a seamless WordPress integration. This allowed institutions to automatically publish course information directly from Eduframe to their institutional website. Course descriptions, pricing, start dates, formats, and other essential details could be managed in one central place and displayed instantly online. No manual copying. No inconsistencies. No delays.
For many institutions, this has been a game-changer. Marketing and continuing education teams could move faster. Course catalogs became easier to maintain. Speed to market improved significantly.
But over the past year, we noticed something important.
More and more US institutions approached us with the same request. They were not using WordPress. They were using Drupal. And they wanted the same streamlined experience.
Rather than seeing this as a limitation, we saw it as an opportunity. We listened.
What we built
A few months ago, we developed and released our Drupal module for Eduframe. The functionality mirrors what our WordPress users already value: institutions manage their course offerings in Eduframe, and the relevant information is automatically populated on their website.
One source of truth. Consistent messaging. Reduced administrative workload.
The benefits for continuing education teams
Built the way we work
This development reflects a fundamental aspect of how we work at Drieam. We do not build features in isolation. We build in partnership with our customers. When we see a clear market pattern, we explore how to support it in a scalable and sustainable way.
For continuing education teams, especially, agility matters. The ability to quickly launch new programs, adjust pricing, update schedules, and respond to workforce needs is critical. Your technology stack should support that agility, not slow it down.
The Drupal module is designed as a plug-and-play solution. The initial setup includes a full catalog import to bring your existing Eduframe offerings into Drupal immediately. From there, webhooks keep everything in sync automatically. The look and feel is fully customizable, so the module fits within your existing Drupal theme rather than imposing a fixed design on your institution.
With the Drupal module, institutions using Drupal now have the same streamlined publishing workflow that WordPress users have relied on for years.