A special issue: Call for research in personalized learning
More research in personalized learning is needed before specific models are widely adopted.
Ignite your summer learning (with) science
This summer’s hot new trend is learning science, right?
Racial diversity in online charter schools differs by state
A recent EdWeek article, Racial Diversity of Online Charters Varies Widely By State, Study Finds, provides valuable data while raising a set of interesting questions about the implications of diversity in online schools.
Lessons from LEAP
LEAP Innovations is a highly-regarded (and very well-funded) non-profit organization that is working with schools across Chicago to implement personalized learning.
Why online learning? Lessons from Arizona State University’s Michael Crow
Revolutionizing online education: A conversation with President Michael Crow of Arizona State University is about post-secondary education and one university’s quest to use technology to expand access.
Artificial intelligence in education: reality and hype
Artificial intelligence (AI) holds promise to improve education, but as yet is over-hyped and misunderstood…
Defining a changing landscape: Can our language keep up with our learning models?
Is it blended? Is it personalized? Is it customized?
Response to the NEPC Report
The National Education Policy Center (NEPC) recently released Virtual Schools in the U.S. 2019, the latest of NEPC’s series of annual reports looking at online and blended schools…
Academic cheating: The gaslight threatening digital learning
It’s not every day that celebrity culture and high-stakes testing collide with the law, but now that it has, people can’t seem to get enough!
The way people think about edtech misses the mark
Does adaptive learning software improve test scores? Does a 1:1 device initiative improve learning? Is screen time good for students? Questions like these are regulars in debates about edtech. But whether you’re an edtech advocate or a critic, if you’re asking questions like these, you’re missing the mark.
There's a reason why teachers don't use the software provided by their districts
Earlier this month, education news outlets buzzed with a frustrating, yet unsurprising, headline: Most educational software licenses go unused in K-12 districts. The source of the headline is a recent report by Ryan Baker, director of the University of Pennsylvania’s Center for Learning Analytics. Baker analyzed data from BrightBytes, a K-12 data management company, on students’ technology usage across 48 districts. That data revealed that a median of 70% of districts’ software licenses never get used, and a median of 97.6% of licenses are never used intensively.
“Everything's been said, but everyone hasn't said it."
“Everything's been said, but everyone hasn't said it."
“It’s not about the technology.”
“Teachers are more important than tech.”
“You can’t just put students in front of computers.”
Disrupting Class got the numbers wrong but the theory right
Eleven years ago, the book Disrupting Class predicted that in 2019 half of all high school courses would be online. It’s 2019, the disruption hasn’t happened, and I’m surprised that it’s taken a third of the year for me to see a reference to the failed prediction.
Lessons from the Summit Learning kerfuffle
There’s been quite the media backlash against Summit Learning, with articles in the New York Times, Washington Post, and smaller media outlets.
Screen time in school: Good, bad, or to be determined?
A large part of my job is working with school districts to build their capacity to support personalized and digital learning for all students. In discussing this transition with a parent group, one concerned mother brought up an intriguing question, “If the entire school is ‘going digital’, how much screen time is my child going to get every day? My pediatrician only recommends two hours a day.”
Research community @ DLAC
The inaugural Digital Learning Annual Conference (DLAC) took place on April 1-3, 2019, and one of the highlights of the event for me was the prominent and focused conversation around research and evidence. In fact, DLAC kicked off with a research community meeting, which attracted almost 50 attendees representing roles from across the digital learning sector. Teachers, administrators, policy makers, service providers, developers, and, of course, researchers attended the meeting to learn more about the existing evidence, as well as how to better connect research and practice.
A roadmap for change: Moving your personalized learning program forward
In her keynote speech at Edgenuity’s 2019 Partner Summit, CEO Sari Factor remarked that other industries have seen dramatic changes in the day-to-day of how they do business based on their innovative uses of technology. Across the country, there are promising school models that are breaking down the traditional structures of our learning system and creating high-quality effective personalized learning programs to better meet student needs, but unfortunately, this shift remains the exception rather than the norm. The transformational promise of online, blended, and digital learning is far from realized in the vast majority of our classrooms, schools, and districts - and consequently, for our students as well. So what is holding us back from truly revolutionizing teaching and learning across our country?
Digital Learning Collaborative shares new Keeping Pace report - Snapshot 2019 - and Planning for Quality Guide
We are excited to share that, as mentioned at the inaugural Digital Learning Annual Conference last week, we have published two new reports - the first of which is the new Keeping Pace report called Snapshot 2019. Snapshot 2019 presents research on policy and practice in K-12 digital learning.
Whispers about online learning: Five common misconceptions
As a child, did you ever play the game telephone? It starts when one person whispers something into another person’s ear and then the message is passed on from person to person. At the end, the message is completely different from what was first whispered. We see this a lot in real life. Unless a person experiences something for themselves, they typically align themselves with what they’ve heard from others!
Online safety tips for learners
Major advances in technology over the last three decades have significantly changed how we communicate with each other, especially through the Internet. Today, children are surrounded by technology. From a young age, most learn about how to use the Internet and end up more tech-savvy than many of the adults in their lives. However, being tech-savvy and knowing how to use the Internet doesn’t always mean that children understand how to stay safe online.