The Challenge Of Personalizing Learning In Real Time
by aghuzt
The
conversation on the need to use student achievement data in education
is fast-tracking its importance in today’s classrooms. But with so much
data now directed at school leaders, teachers and students – how do you
make sense of it all?
First and foremost, it is imperative that
every data point has a face – it is not about the number but about
students and their performance. Student data can only be useful if the
right environment is created with procedures that create conversations
where data is informative, useful and put into practice. For students to
grow and for teachers to personalize instruction – data must constantly
be formative and meaningful.
Here in Clarke County School
District of Athens, Georgia, we are taking steps to truly integrate our
digital learning initiatives with are common planning process using
data. We are forging ahead with designing a new model that relies on
using data for real-time progress monitoring that results in a true
personalized learning environment – no more pre and post test analysis.
This
is a major focus for us, and our district leaders and teachers use new
innovative technology such as Waggle from Triumph Learning to help make
it happen. Waggle is a digital learning platform that monitors student
performance based on practice. Students are presented with a variety of
questions for the subjects of math and English and must continually be
successful (the practice) to be able to move forward. When they continue
to get questions right over time, then they progress to the next stage.
When they answer a question incorrectly, they are able to try again,
and are offered hints and customized feedback to help them find the path
to the right answer.
In this program, seeking the right answer
is a critical skill that is developed. The idea here is to move past
simply telling students if they are right or wrong. Educators now
present them with opportunities that demonstrate the benefits of putting
in the work to increase their understanding of the subjects they are
tasked to learn. Learning how to find answers – productive struggle –
becomes equally important as giving the right answer.
Our new
personalized learning model is moving towards real-time formation. If
educators can create tools that monitor students on an ongoing basis
around proficiency, then administrators like myself don’t have to worry
about the time and focus put on them pre- and post-test. We now can plan
and assess students by monitor growth and progress.
One of the
biggest obstacles with traditional testing methods is that there isn’t
an opportunity to effectively intervene with struggling students until
the results of a test are available. Implementing tools that utilize
real-time formative data helps educators identify students who need more
help mastering the skills that are being taught and to use personalized
interventions to get them where they need to be.
On the other
end of the spectrum, it can also alert educators when students aren’t
being challenged. Students who complete work quickly and accurately have
likely already mastered the skills being presented to them. This
provides the educator with an opportunity to advance students and keep
them engaged by offering them more challenging work.
As I said,
the main goal of formative learning is to help students grow, and when
learning isn’t personalized it makes it that much harder for students to
do that. Students can’t grow when they are discouraged to the point of
giving up or sailing through schoolwork without putting any effort into
it. That’s what makes the productive struggle found in this system such
an effective part of the strategies found in formative learning
environments. Students are able to learn at a pace that helps them
retain knowledge and skills that can build into the next stage of their
academic growth.
Using real time performance information for
planning and monitoring leads to the best alignment of the learning
expectations to students’ personalized needs. And developing the
qualities of determination and endurance to seek the right answer is the
most powerful skill we can provide our students. I am excited to bring
together this process with our partnership with Triumph Learning as
Waggle is being designed for the next generation of learners.
Dr.
Philip Lanoue has worked for the Clarke County School District since
2009 and was an administrator for the Cobb County School District before
that. Under Lanoue’s leadership, Clarke County became a Title I
Distinguished District and received a number of other statewide honors.
He was chosen as Georgia Superintendent of the Year in December and the
American Association of School Administrators’ 2015 National
Superintendent of the Year.
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