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Special Report
School & District Management

Principals and Teachers Are Out of Sync on Personalized Learning, Data Show

School leaders tend to be more optimistic about personalized learning than classroom educators, survey comparison shows
By Kevin Bushweller 鈥 November 05, 2019 5 min read
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To better understand and appreciate the difficulties teachers face in making personalized-learning approaches work, Vermont Principal Adam Bunting decided to jump back into the classroom for a brief teaching stint.

He taught a two-week course for 21 students in grades 9-12 at the end of the school year at Champlain Valley Union High School. Students had to produce personalized-learning projects based on their own interests that were also linked to graduation standards. One student project, for instance, examined what it would take to persuade pharmaceutical companies to lower the cost of insulin.

It was an eye-opening experience for Bunting, who is a big fan of personalized learning and works in a state that has had a personalized-learning law in place for six years.

鈥淥h, this is hard,鈥 he remembers thinking. 鈥淚t wasn鈥檛 perfect. But it was good for me to be feet on the ground.鈥

That back-to-teaching experience might be something other principals might want to consider, given the differing results of 91制片厂视频 Week鈥檚 national survey of teachers on personalized learning, conducted this summer, and a 2018 survey of principals鈥 perspectives that included some similar questions.

That comparison found that principals tended to have a much more optimistic view of the promise of personalized learning than teachers and lower levels of concern about the potentially negative effects of digitally driven personalized learning.

For instance, when asked how much confidence they had that digital technologies to personalize learning can improve student engagement, 62 percent of principals said 鈥渜uite a lot鈥 or 鈥渁 great deal,鈥 while 41 percent of teachers noted those levels of confidence. Regarding confidence in improving student learning, the difference was 51 percent to 33 percent, respectively.

There were also significant differences between principals and teachers when they were asked about concerns that using digital technologies to personalize learning could contribute to some problems. For instance, 49 percent of principals are concerned such technologies could lead to students spending too much time on screens, compared with 72 percent of teachers.

Teachers were also more concerned about such technologies leading to students working alone too often, with 48 percent expressing that opinion, compared with 38 percent for principals.

鈥淣one of this surprises me,鈥 said Betheny Gross, an associate director for the Center on Reinventing Public 91制片厂视频 at the University of Washington. 鈥淲hen principals and teachers talk about delivery of instruction, teachers would express more caution about shifting to the tech tools. They like to have control over what鈥檚 happening in their classrooms.鈥

Skipping Important Steps

Gross is a co-author of 鈥Personalized Learning at a Crossroads,鈥 a 2018 report that, among other things, examined the important role principals play in the success or failure of personalized-learning efforts. The report鈥檚 vision or definition for personalized learning is that it should customize instruction to students鈥 strengths and weaknesses and personal interests鈥攁nd where appropriate, integrate technology tools鈥攖o boost student learning.

But attaining that vision is easier said than done, according to the report, which was based on more than 450 interviews with 300-plus teachers, principals, superintendents, and other district administrators, as well as a survey of more than 900 teachers.

One big finding was that principals largely left it up to teachers to define personalization, which fostered inconsistent approaches from classroom to classroom within a school, and ultimately, confusion among students, too. As a consequence, maintaining academic rigor schoolwide became a problem.

What happens often, the report notes, is that district leaders and principals skip a few very important steps in personalized-learning efforts: explaining to teachers why they should move in this direction, crafting a strategic vision for what that should look like, and then giving teachers the time and training to learn how to make it work.

鈥淓verybody absolutely needs an understanding of why鈥'We鈥檙e doing this because we want students to be able to do X, Y, and Z,鈥 鈥 said Gross. 鈥淲hat happens when that strategic vision is not in place is you end up with a lot of haphazard stuff that is not valuable to students or teachers.鈥

John F. Pane, a senior scientist for the RAND Corporation who has conducted extensive research on personalized learning, concurs.

Pane, a co-author of a 2017 report titled 鈥Informing Progress: Insights on Personalized Learning Implementation and Effects,鈥 spent time observing classrooms as part of the research. 鈥淪ome schools I visited just left the teachers to do [personalized learning] on their own,鈥 he said. 鈥淭here was no professional development.鈥

鈥楴o Professional Development鈥

That failure of principals to ensure good training is in place might explain the higher levels of skepticism about personalized learning among teachers. 鈥淚 think it鈥檚 very important for [principals and teachers] to be on the same page, to know what actual practices they are going to implement, and what tools they鈥檙e going to use,鈥 Pane said.

Michelle Wheatfill, an assistant principal at C.C. Ronnow Elementary School in the Clark County district in Nevada, which includes Las Vegas, worked in a tech-savvy school before moving to C.C. Ronnow this school year. Her new school is in the beginning stages of a 1-to-1 computing initiative designed to drive more sophisticated use of educational technology.

Wheatfill, who responded to the 91制片厂视频 Week principal survey in 2018, said in a more recent telephone interview that in most grade levels there鈥檚 usually one teacher who wants to push the envelope on classroom innovation. Principals need to do a better job of encouraging and rewarding those teachers for sharing lessons learned about using technology to personalize learning.

Unfortunately, what happens often is teachers get overly worried about students misusing new technologies, she said. 鈥淭eachers need to break down that wall and not be scared about what kids do with technology. It鈥檚 that assumption that cripples them a lot in using it.鈥

Still, many teachers do see the value of digitally driven personalized learning when it is done right.

Kurt Vonnahme, who heads up the math department at Hinsdale Central High School near Chicago, agreed to talk to 91制片厂视频 Week after responding to its national survey this year of teachers about personalized learning. While he doesn鈥檛 see personalized learning as a 鈥渟ilver bullet,鈥 he suggested it does have a lot of advantages., especially to help teachers better understand their students.

鈥淭hat is a huge aspect of personalized learning,鈥 he said. 鈥淎s teachers, if we鈥檙e working in a traditional way, we just don鈥檛 have the capacity to do that, particularly if you鈥檙e a teacher teaching 150 students.鈥 Digital tools designed to personalize learning, he said 鈥渉elp us home in on an individual-by-individual basis [and] better understand who that student is.鈥

Assistant Editor Alyson Klein contributed to this article.
Coverage of whole-child approaches to learning is supported in part by a grant from the Chan Zuckerberg Initiative, at . 91制片厂视频 Week retains sole editorial control over the content of this coverage.
A version of this article appeared in the November 06, 2019 edition of 91制片厂视频 Week as Principals and Teachers Out of Sync

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