- Our Research
- Working With Us
- Our Data
- Our Team
- About Us
- Blog
Blog:
Innovation in the Classroom
0
May 16, 2012
With the seemingly exponential growth in technology tools, people may wonder why these innovations have not had more effect on education. In a recent article for the Atlantic, Joel Rose (CEO of the New Classrooms Innovation Partners) offers some compelling ideas on how to use 21st century innovation to tackle a “19th-Century Factory-Model Education System.”
Poverty Rates Nearly Perfect Predictor of School Ratings
April 24, 2012
Recently my wife and I started looking for a new house here in Portland, OR. We bought our house B.C. (i.e., Before Children), when a two bedroom one bath house met our needs perfectly. Seven years and two daughters later, our notion of the ideal home has changed dramatically. I, for one, wouldn’t mind living in a house where daddy’s office wasn’t a tent in the backyard.
New NCAA Eligibility Rules Force Universities to Up Their Academic Game
April 2, 2012
As March Madness draws to a close, basketball fans have more to worry about than just bracket busters in upcoming years. Several tournament teams will need to ratchet up their athletes’ academic performances if they want to return to the Big Dance. Former Harvard hoopster and Secretary of Education Arne Duncan led an effort urging university presidents to pass the 50% on track to graduate eligibility requirement for postseason play. The new NCAA rule, that passed in October, will use an Academic Progress Rate (APR) which rewards student athletes for remaining eligible, continuing education at the same institution, and will be phased in over the next four years.
Why Teachers are Unsatisfied
March 23, 2012
I recently read through The MetLife Survey of the American Teacher: Teachers, Parents and the Economy, a survey that gauges the thoughts and attitudes of teachers, parents, students, and education leaders about the current state of the teaching profession (among other things). For those of you close to education, one of the biggest findings from these surveys will likely not surprise you:
“Teachers are less satisfied with their careers; in the past two years there has been a significant decline in teachers’ satisfaction with their profession.” (p.5)
Mind the Gap: Research on Achievement Disparities Rekindles Old Debate
March 13, 2012
Stanford University’s Dr. Sean Reardon’s latest research about the widening achievement gap between rich and poor students has received ample attention in the educational community as well as the popular press. In sum, Reardon examined standardized test scores in reading and math over the last forty years, and found an increasing gap (about a 40%) in achievement between high- and low-income families. These findings really shouldn’t shock anyone. Okay- perhaps the magnitude of the disparities is surprising, but Reardon’s work is one in a long line of research that finds family socio-economic background is the biggest predictor of student educational achievement. What is noteworthy is how the latest research about the impact of poverty has renewed an old debate: can schools make a difference?
Latest Kingsbury Center Data Award - A Look at School Size and Student Growth
March 7, 2012
The Kingsbury Center is pleased to announce our latest Data Award, granted to doctoral student Anna Jacob from the University of Arkansas. Ms. Jacob will receive a dataset from NWEA’s Growth Research Database to use for her dissertation project, an analysis of the effects of school size on student growth. Using five years of longitudinal student assessment data from four states, the study will analyze the relationship between school size and student growth, and how school size affects sub- groups of students differently. We are looking forward to seeing what Ms. Jacob discovers – check back in the fall, when we will post the study findings!
Our next Data Award application review is June 1 – click here to learn more.
Measuring Growth Toward College Readiness
February 28, 2012
I have had the privilege of meeting many wonderful educators in my 36 years of work experience. One such individual was Dr. Robert Marzano who has documented some sound educational research. One of his books which I used as a “bible” was ”What Works in Schools”, in which he examined 204 different studies and found that, on average, the act of setting academic goals had an effect size of 0.55. In other words, this means that the achievement scores in classes where clear learning goals were exhibited were 0.55 standard deviations higher than the achievement scores for classes where clear learning goals were not established. This differential translates into a 21-percentage point difference in achievement.
Education Reform Needs to Focus on Kids, not Teachers
February 21, 2012
A recent story in the New York Times described a series of studies finding that the academic achievement gap between wealthy and poorer students has continued to increase over the years, even as gaps between white and minority students have narrowed. This trend is doubly disturbing for poorer students with college aspirations, since it means that fewer will be college ready by the time they graduate from high school, and will therefore have less access to the higher incomes associated with higher education (see for example, Education Pays 2010).
A Case for Immersive Learning Environments
February 15, 2012
Not a week goes by it seems without tech companies (both old and new) competing for air time hawking the next big thing. With the exception of maybe a company such as Apple, most of the products or solutions end up being just another cog in the increasingly crowded (and fragmented) gadget-centric economy.
Data in Action
February 7, 2012
It’s always neat to see what other people can do with MAP data, and this visualization is a really nice example of someone taking an analysis that has the potential to be confusing or complex, and displaying it in such a way that the interpretation is immediately clear.