A new multimillion-dollar effort will fund K-12 tutoring projects, experiment with new models, and bring more clarity to what works and what doesn鈥檛鈥攁nd create a tutoring network connecting dozens of districts and some states.
Unveiled April 5, the venture will be run by a newly created organization, Accelerate, and will receive its initial funding from The Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, Arnold Ventures, the Overdeck Family Foundation, and Kenneth C. Griffin, who leads Citadel, an investment firm. So far, the partners have raised $65 million out of a target of $100 million.
The effort will be led by CEO Kevin Huffman, formerly a Tennessee state superintendent of education. Janice Jackson, the former leader of the Chicago Public schools will serve as executive chair.
鈥淭he goal, if we鈥檙e successful 10 years from now is that high-quality tutoring will be a part of what students can expect to get in a school system. That can only happen if we figure out how to do it well, if we figure out some of these staffing challenges,鈥 Jackson said. 鈥淎nd it can鈥檛 cost $3,000 per student.鈥
69传媒 need intensive help, but the blueprint for how is unclear
The organization will immediately begin to seek districts, tutoring providers, and states to join its network. It envisions working with about a dozen districts and two to three states.
The need for tutoring programs that work at scale is clear. Study after study finds that students鈥 learning growth slowed during the pandemic exacerbating already-yawning opportunity gaps among students. And the final of three rounds of federal pandemic relief funding for schools directed districts to put at least a fifth of their cut of the funding into tutoring and other evidence-based ways of catching students up.
As recently as his State of the Union address, President Joe Biden called on districts to prioritize tutoring, and for others to volunteer to tutor.
鈥淲e can all play a part: Sign up to be a tutor or a mentor,鈥 he said.
But nearly two years after the pandemic first hit schools, several big challenges with tutoring at scale have become readily apparent.
- Staffing. Many districts have reported challenges finding tutors, although the shortage is not as severe as bus drivers, substitutes, and other positions. Still, the same forces that have caused widespread disruption to the labor market are complicating districts鈥 ability to hire and adequately compensate tutors.
- Capacity. Earlier this year, providers have struggled to begin programs as the rapid spread of the omicron variant led to massive staff outages. And some state initiatives, like the New Jersey Tutoring Corps, have relied extensively on outside partners in part because school districts often simply did not have the bandwidth to oversee programs with fidelity.
- Uptake. As with many tutoring programs are voluntary, and it鈥檚 not always clear that the students who most need additional help are getting it. For logistical reasons and flexibility, tutoring is often offered as an voluntary add-on rather than integrated into the regular school schedule.
- Lack of research on online tutoring. Most of the research on tutoring doesn鈥檛 reflect the constraints that school districts face to get programs up and running now. And very little of it specifically looks at online tutoring, which is increasingly being considered by districts.
The online-tutoring landscape is particularly variable. Some of the biggest online providers are effectively offering on-demand homework help with a tutor, not the kind of sustained mentorship much of the prior research has pointed to as a successful practice. And other providers that built their reputations on in-person tutoring are now like ed-tech software that draws on artificial intelligence or other forms of computer learning, to supplement traditional modes.
Partly because of the multitude of options, the new organization鈥檚 leaders say they will work with partners that are launching both in-person and online tutoring models.
鈥淪ome kids, in some subject areas, in some settings need small, in-person, high-dosage tutoring. Some may do really well with hybrid where they鈥檙e some bit online, and some bit reinforced in person,鈥 said Huffman. 鈥淪ome students might do really well with tech-enabled tutoring if there鈥檚 a program that鈥檚 well researched and works for them.鈥
A research鈥攁nd philanthropic鈥攁genda
But the end goal, the leaders say, is shaping the marketplace to support effectiveness and taking the burden of quality control off overtaxed school and district leaders.
鈥淭here all these actors out there with no incentive to research their programs and see how effective they are,鈥 Jackson noted. 鈥淲e need to bring some parameters into this space. If I hear one more [online tutoring company] saying, 鈥榃e went from X to Y million of students signed up鈥 as a marker of success, I鈥檒l be ready to jump out the window. We need to make sure they鈥檙e closing these gaps.鈥
There鈥檚 already a subtext that schools and districts aren鈥檛 spending their relief funds quickly enough or wisely, she noted; the project could help counteract that narrative.
鈥淥ne of my concerns is that public school systems were struggling with finances before the pandemic, and I don鈥檛 want this infusion of cash to be seen as wasted. I want to be able to do things to show its effectiveness,鈥 Jackson said.
The new project will contain a significant research component: The University of Chicago will work with the new organization to conduct a random-experiment study as part of the project, though details about how that will work aren鈥檛 yet available. Accelerate will also work with the Annenberg Institute at Brown University, which has launched i.
Accelerate鈥檚 supporters have a long history of K-12 education philanthropy. The Gates Foundation has supported hundreds of millions of dollars in projects to boost teacher quality, use of effective curriculum, and learning. Arnold Ventures, formerly the John and Laura Arnold Foundation, has supported blended-learning initiatives in schools. (Education Week currently receives operating support from the Gates Foundation.)
The Overdeck Family Foundation, meanwhile, has helped fund statewide tutoring programs in Tennessee and New Jersey, among other investments.