This week’s article summary is Raising
Student Voice and Choice is the Mantra But is It a Good Idea.
I found the article
interesting because it hits on the either/or extreme of education: should kids
be given more voice in what they study, how they study, and how they
demonstrate their learning and understanding (a more progressive pedagogy) or
should standard content knowledge be the principal goal of education and the
common foundation upon which subsequent learning and application is possible (a
more traditional pedagogy).
As you’ll see in the
article, the reason student choice is being questioned in many schools is
because it doesn’t directly lead to higher student achievement on state tests.
Trinity is fortunate in that
our success as a school is not based on standardized tests results. (Our
students perform well on standardized tests yet this is really a byproduct of our
program.) Our Program Pillars are replete with phases about fostering student
engagement in and excitement for school and learning:
- “Cultivate
voice, choice, and self-reflection”
- “Exhibit
continued curiosity, creativity, and confidence
- “Imagine,
discover, and experiment independently and collaboratively”
Certainly content knowledge
is important and teachers need to be experienced guides to help students make
informed choices about their learning, yet to me building upon a child’s innate
curiosity should be a paramount goal of any school.
Here’s an additional article that provides
some examples of student choice in the classroom: What
Giving Students Choice Looks Like in the Classroom.
Joe
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Giving students more choice over what they learn and how
they demonstrate mastery is a tricky task for educators. Take the case of one 10th grader. He had to pick from three
options to report on his summer reading project, and opted to create a mock
Instagram post because he thought it would be fun.
But was the "fun" option the best educational
one? How much of a role should the teacher have played in helping the teenager
choose from the options? And will giving students greater choice in what they
learn and how they learn it lead to higher student achievement?
Educators are wrestling with those kinds of questions as
more and more schools embrace personalized learning and its accompanying mantra
to give students more individualized control over their academic experiences.
Proponents of this belief argue that it fuels student
motivation—which, in turn, improves achievement.
But critics see it very differently.
"We're exacerbating an existing problem" by
letting kids, instead of teachers, guide learning, said Benjamin Riley, the
executive director of Deans for Impact, a coalition of education school
directors working to improve teacher preparation and student achievement.
"Whether a student is smiling, happy, and jumping around doesn't tell you
whether they've learned anything."
The worry is that too much student choice could turn into a
free-for-all that could hurt graduation rates, lead to poor performance on state
tests, and weaken academic skills.
Still, educators across the country involved in
personalized learning initiatives are embracing greater student choice. They
cite higher student engagement, lower absentee rates, and even improvements in
test scores.
But leaving more learning decisions up to
students—especially those who are struggling academically—may leave a lot to
chance.
"If you have kids working far-below grade level, how
do you reconcile those things?" asked Laura Hamilton, a senior behavioral
scientist at the Rand Corporation who has researched personalized learning.
At Myrtle Beach Middle School in the 42,000-student Horry
County, S.C., district, personalized learning has taken some interesting twists
and turns. When it began in the middle school five years ago, the model was
heavy on the use of digital curricula and was highly prescriptive in terms of
pacing and what teachers were expected to cover.
Five years later, teachers and students have more control
over the resources they use and the lessons they progress through. Students can
make choices about their path and focus through digital content. Teachers
frequently meet with students and help them set their own goals for
achievement.
Myrtle Beach Middle School teacher Rebecca Myers said her
students often work on very different projects or assignments in the same
class. Some might be collaborating on a project, others working in small groups
to build academic skills, and others meeting with her one-on-one. Sometimes,
these might be self-selected tasks, while on other occasions they might be
driven by the teacher's decision. Students also have choices about how to
demonstrate their understanding of a reading passage, picking from an essay or
a Google slide presentation, she said.
Myers insists it's not a free-for-all. What students learn
is tied tightly to state standards. Teachers frequently meet with students to
guide them in setting their own goals, and data play a critical role.
But the student is a key player in this process, examining
data and setting expectations for where he or she should be in the learning
process.
"When all the adults share a vision for student
achievement, the piece that often goes missing is when children are left out of
the loop," Christy said. "We are really focused on making sure we
bring the kids into the conversation."
Though the results don't conclusively demonstrate the
impact of that approach, the school has seen jumps in achievement on state
tests in reading and math in 7th and 8th grade. For example, from 2015 to 2018,
8th grade reading proficiency jumped from 59 percent to 65 percent. Seventh
grade math proficiency jumped by 10 percentage points in the same period.
Empowering students to make choices can build important
skills, said Betheny Gross, a senior analyst and research director for the
Center on Reinventing Public Education.
"We want kids to grow up and be confident and capable
and charting their own course," Gross said. "We know from brain
science that developing the capacity to enlist your executive function and
meta-cognitive skills takes training, and school is a good place to do
that."
The downside is it's tricky to do that well.
Gross said researchers working on the report did see
instances of students taking positive control of their own learning and
developing that agency and capacity. But they also saw drawbacks.
Often, she said, teachers don't have a clear theory of
action about how to provide "voice and choice" for student learning.
When students are picking among options without a rationale behind what
matters, "students are just picking," she said.
In fact, when they have choices, students often go for the
option that will be the easiest, not the one that will help them improve their
skills the most, Gross said. "The kids suffer the consequences of making
bad choices—always picking the collage, never developing the writing
skills," she said.
And that reality, many educators say, can affect students
who struggle in class—or even typical students—significantly more than
high-achieving students.
Riley of Deans for Impact said educators often point to
student engagement as a way to measure whether giving students greater choice
over learning is beneficial. But he said there's little evidence that
engagement leads to better learning outcomes: "Engagement is a poor proxy
for learning."
Similarly, some researchers say allowing students to go at
their own pace through materials presents complications. Researchers at RAND
who are studying personalized learning found that when given flexible
deadlines, some students wait until the last minute to do their work, the
research group's Hamilton said. "You can create some inequities if you
allow pace to vary for different students," she said.
Plus, she said, "there's an inherent conflict between
wanting students to have developed those skills required and giving students
choices about what and how they learn. We heard from a lot of folks that there
is this tension between state standards and grade-level testing and letting
kids go at their own pace."
In teacher Sarah Martindale's Advanced Placement biology
and chemistry classes students get plenty of options to demonstrate learning,
using a tic-tac-toe board with choices in every square. As assignments
progress, students must use at least three of the options to demonstrate
mastery.
The student who chose the "fun" option for his
summer reading project, is in Martindale's class. He concedes that he does
sometimes choose the fastest option. "You always think: What's going to
take the most and least time? But I only think about what will be fastest if my
schedule is packed. Otherwise, it's more about what I want to learn."
Martindale is particularly proud of the fact that all of her
students passed the State of Texas Assessments of Academic Readiness, or STAAR,
biology tests—a record in her 18-year teaching career. She attributes it, in
part, to students having those choices and taking ownership of their own
educational success. "If they're more excited about the work, they'll
remember it," she said.
Martindale frequently does "check-ins" with
students to make sure they're progressing and sets deadlines. During those
meetings, she pushes them to take learning further. "Even the procrastinators,
when they know you're not going to leave them alone, they get it," she
said.
Another 10th grader in Martindale's class said she
appreciates the value of allowing students to have greater control over their
education. "Not every student gets it when the teacher lectures and they
take notes. Some students need to go home and watch videos," she said.
"I want to be able to choose the way I learn."
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