When students choose, they learn better. How can schools deliver?
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| ROCHESTER, N.Y.
Before Michael Mota goes to sleep each school night, the 17-year-old lies in bed thinking through his plan for the next day.
Michael is a senior at聽, an all-boys charter school in the Rochester City School District whose hallmark is a program that blends online classes with more traditional classroom teaching. Students spend about half their time in computer labs doing online coursework, and it鈥檚 this part of the day that Michael plans in advance. He decides whether to tackle a math lesson or a science one, for example, taking into account his own interests as well as his responsibilities. If he鈥檚 behind in science, he knows he should focus on that, even if he likes math better.
Many of the boys enter Vertus several years behind grade level, particularly in reading and math, and the lab time gives them a chance to fill gaps in their achievement. It seems to work: Vertus says聽that 71 percent of its students pass their Regents exams,聽required by the state of New York to graduate,聽compared with 38 percent in the Rochester City School District.聽
For his part, though, Michael appreciates the opportunity to work聽faster than traditional classrooms allow. He says he used to get in trouble in middle school because he鈥檇 finish his work more quickly than his peers and have nothing else to do but goof around. Now, for example, if he finishes a history lesson first, he goes on to the next one 鈥 or switches to another subject.听听
Michael likes being able to move at his own pace. 鈥淚t helps me stay on track and focused,鈥 he says.聽
But Roshawn Murraine, a 16-year-old in his third year at Vertus, says the freedom to move at his own pace is 鈥渇ake freedom,鈥 because he still has to complete all of his classes within a set time frame. And he says Vertus鈥檚 brand of personalized learning isn鈥檛 all that personalized.聽
鈥淚t鈥檚 not like you鈥檙e learning different stuff,鈥 Roshawn says. 鈥淚t鈥檚 just a different pace.鈥 Each student still takes life sciences, global history, algebra, and the other courses New York State requires for graduation. And, unlike some schools that personalize learning by giving students a say over what they learn in each class and how they prove they have learned it, Vertus requires students to complete the exact same assignments and tests.聽
It turns out that鈥檚 common.聽
Personalized learning is among the most popular solutions in US schools today. It is seen as a way to close achievement gaps, increase student engagement, and offer a better education. Yet it doesn鈥檛 have a consistent script and every school does it differently. Giving students more control in the classroom is a common feature of personalized-learning programs, in theory, but in practice, how teachers do that and how much control they offer varies widely.
The fact is, offering students choices about their learning experience is difficult. Tanji Reed Marshall, a former teacher and聽the senior practice associate for P-12 literacy at The Education Trust, an education research and advocacy organization, recently studied how frequently teachers offer students choices in the classroom. The results 鈥 very seldom 鈥 were not entirely surprising. Dr. Reed Marshall says teachers have to know the standards they鈥檙e supposed to teach incredibly well, they have to know their curriculum enough to improvise within it, and they have to stay within the bounds of district and state mandates over what and how they teach.
鈥淎nd designing learning is very complex,鈥 she says. 鈥淭hey don鈥檛 always have the skill set.鈥澛
Autonomy leads to engagement
The Education Trust defines three areas in which teachers can give students choice: in what they learn, in the way they learn it, and in the way they demonstrate their learning 鈥 what researchers called content, process, and product in a recent study. While this was not a study of personalized learning, per se, but student choice more narrowly, the results are illustrative. A review of more than 6,800 middle school assignments found only 10 percent of the assignments in English language arts, science, and social studies offered students choice in any of these three areas. In math, only 3 percent of assignments did the same,聽.
Reed Marshall believes that is a grave missed opportunity. Giving students a say in each of these three areas is critical, she says. With the autonomy to make choices, students are more engaged, and when that鈥檚 the case,聽.听听
Krystal Bankston, who taught math for 10 years in Chattanooga, Tenn., and now coaches other teachers, saw that firsthand. When she was a teacher, she prioritized giving students a say in how they learned and how they demonstrated their progress. When they were working on projects, they also got to choose what, exactly, they studied. Ms. Bankston says students sometimes made the wrong decisions with their newfound power, but that they learned important lessons when they reflected on their choices.聽
鈥淚 think it鈥檚 a worthwhile shift because it builds student confidence and it builds student buy-in,鈥 Bankston says. 鈥淲hen students have a choice in the way they learn, they take ownership because they chose it.鈥
At Vertus, students have a level of autonomy over the process of learning. But their control ends there.
Vertus co-founder Leigh McGuigan is frank about why her school sets those limits: In college and in their first jobs, students likely will have to do things the way their professors and bosses say to do them. High school, she says, needs to prepare students for what comes next.听听
Ironically, this is the same argument some educators use in favor of more student control in the classroom. Personalized learning, they say, will prepare students for success in 21st-century workplaces. But Dr. McGuigan argues that while some students may end up in jobs that give them freedom and autonomy, most won鈥檛.聽
鈥淲e personalize based on what the student needs to be academically successful; we do not necessarily personalize based on what the student wants,鈥 McGuigan says. The fact is, teenagers aren鈥檛 always that good at wanting what is best for them, she adds, so teachers need to set some boundaries.
In 2014-15, the charter school鈥檚 first year, some students went months without working on subjects they didn鈥檛 like. Now the boys are expected to work on every subject at least weekly and聽in-school mentors, called preceptors (see sidebar),聽keep a close eye.
鈥淚n some cases, it鈥檚 just a student being a teenager 鈥 鈥業 don鈥檛 like this; I don鈥檛 want to work on it鈥 鈥 but we don鈥檛 want to miss the flags that it鈥檚 an academic issue and we need to have an intervention,鈥 says Julie Locey, the school principal.聽
And as much as she says she鈥檇 like to give students more say over what to study, the state requirements that every student must meet to graduate are uncompromising.
Multiple ways to personalize
That鈥檚 something school leaders across the country have to contend with. Amy Huang is the senior director of programs at Chicago-based LEAP Innovations, which created a personalized-learning framework used nationally. She acknowledges that state and even district-level requirements can limit flexibility.聽
鈥淎t the end of the day, we do need certain baseline knowledge and skills,鈥 Ms. Huang says. But, she adds, 鈥淧ersonalized learning we think of as a way to make those come to life.鈥澛
聽urges schools to personalize learning in multiple ways. Most schools focus first on giving students more control over their own education through goal-setting, monitoring of their own progress, and opportunities for self-advocacy, according to Huang. Self-paced instruction, which Vertus offers, is less common because most schools run up against the firm deadlines of the school day and year.聽
Running a charter school, though, Vertus founders were free to add an extra hour to each school day and 20 extra days to the academic year, creating the time necessary to offer students this control. And the promise of such freedom is what hooks many students thinking about enrolling.听听
And even with fairly narrow control over pace, students do take on new responsibility in the classroom.聽
Clovis Meikle, a 17-year-old senior, says that in the fall he was spending about four hours on the computer each night. In part that鈥檚 because he鈥檚 taking an extra social studies class this year and had to put in extra work to stay on track, but it鈥檚 also because he knew that when basketball season started, it would take up more of his time. That鈥檚 an example of good decisionmaking teachers tout when giving students more control over their own learning.聽
Though, of course, some of Clovis鈥檚 peers are not as self-motivated and forward-thinking, and Vertus educators want them to graduate, too.聽
That鈥檚 one reason why The Education Trust researchers advocate offering students control of something beyond just the pace of their learning. Giving students choices about what they learn and how they prove they learned it creates additional opportunities to engage them.
Reed Marshall, The Education Trust researcher, says she hopes the study identifying how few assignments offer any choice at all prompts educators to think聽carefully about the connection between student motivation and engagement and outcomes.
鈥淚f I鈥檓 motivated, I鈥檓 going to stay the course,鈥 Reed Marshall says. 鈥淚鈥檓 probably going to learn more.鈥澛
Clarification: This story was updated with Tanji Reed Marshall鈥檚 full title at The Education Trust.
This story about was produced by聽, a nonprofit, independent news organization focused on聽inequality and innovation in education.