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Student Achievement

69传媒 Lost Time and Learning in the Pandemic. What 鈥楢cceleration鈥 Can Do to Help

By Stephen Sawchuk 鈥 August 19, 2020 9 min read
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The past decades of often frantic 鈥渟chool reform鈥 has yielded . Often, in addition to lackluster results, they鈥檝e left a lot of detritus in their wake: overpaid consultants, demoralized teachers, and a fragmented community.

With millions of students possibly in need of extra support to make up for last spring鈥檚 disrupted schooling, stakes are too high for approaches that won鈥檛 pay dividends for student learning.

A strategy being used in Springfield, Mass., and several other Massachusetts districts as part of their school improvement efforts seems to be breaking the mold. It offers a powerful example of a student intervention that can work, and a proof point for extended learning time.

It鈥檚 called an 鈥渁cceleration academy.鈥

How does it work?

The idea is fundamentally about providing extra learning time in smaller groups鈥攖hough not as small as tutoring鈥攚ithout taking time away from core instruction. The academies take place during weeklong fall and winter breaks, or on a series of successive Saturdays, usually for about 5-6 hours a day. Teachers and school leaders use academic data to select the students who are invited to join the academies.

BRIC ARCHIVE

District and school leaders are confronting difficult, high-stakes decisions as they plan for how to reopen schools amid a global pandemic. Through eight installments, Education Week journalists explore the big challenges education leaders must address, including running a socially distanced school, rethinking how to get students to and from school, and making up for learning losses. We present a broad spectrum of options endorsed by public health officials, explain strategies that some districts will adopt, and provide estimated costs.

Part 1: The Socially Distanced School Day
Part 2: Scheduling the School Year
Part 3: Tackling the Transportation Problem
Part 4: How to Make Remote Learning Work
Part 5: Teaching and Learning
Part 6: Overcoming Learning Loss
Full Report: How We Go Back to School

In Springfield, the initiative is run by the , a partnership between the state, district, and teachers鈥 union to free up a handful of schools from traditional rules and mandates.

In all, said Colleen Beaudoin, the co-director of the zone, students can get up to 120 hours of additional teaching in a subject over the course of an academic year, or the equivalent of about 20-25 regular school days.

The zone manages a small amount of funding to administer the program; its main costs are stipends for teachers and transportation for students. (The district is flexible on staffing, using both district teachers and others who apply from nearby districts.)

Springfield鈥檚 empowerment academies have been embraced by both administrators and teachers. They work within the existing school system rather than as part of a governance overhaul. And finally, the model has gotten results in at least two of the cities it鈥檚 been tried in. It鈥檚 an unusual trifecta of success.

What gains have been shown?

Lawrence, Mass., pioneered the idea in 2013, in addition to instituting other reforms focusing on improving teacher quality and increasing school autonomy, and . While all of Lawrence鈥檚 elements of a broader turnaround plan probably played into those math results, the research indicates that nearly all the English gains are the result of the specialized academies.

Springfield took the model a few years later in 2015-16 and ran with it. In addition to the weeklong academies, it has begun a program specifically for English-language learners, which takes place over 15 Saturdays, as well as targeted, four- to five-week summer sessions. that the weekly academy program raised the likelihood that a participating student would reach the proficient bar in middle-school math on the state test by 10 percentage points.

And there are signs that the effects go beyond academics: 69传媒 who participated in an academy had lower rates of out-of-school suspension during the school year than those who did not.

In the academy model, class sizes aren鈥檛 quite as small as in high-dosage tutoring鈥攖hey are usually about nine or 10 students to a teacher鈥攂ut those who have taught in them say that has made all the difference, too.

鈥淭here is just a practicality of it,鈥 said Emily Burdick, a dean of curriculum and instruction at a Springfield school who has both taught in the ELA-focused academies and crafted some curriculum for them. 鈥淵ou have time to check in with each student when there are 10. When there are 25, you sort of just skim over students: 鈥楾hey got it and they got it,鈥 not, 鈥楧o they need a recap? Do they need to be pushed further?鈥欌

Teachers believe the academies particularly help English-language learners, who get more time to practice their speaking skills; district data show that the speaking portion of the state鈥檚 English-language-proficiency exam is among the pieces students tend to struggle with.

鈥淚t鈥檚 more comfortable for them to speak when there鈥檚 only nine other students than with 25. We have seen a big change in them trying to speak English and trying to read,鈥 said Misael Ramos, a math teacher and coach who has also taught in the Saturday academy for English-learners.

What makes it workable across different schools?

There鈥檚 flexibility in teaching, and principals play a large part in tailoring the programming. In some academies, they put students into groups based on the types of skills and content they need to practice. (This is a subtle but important distinction: Ability grouping for core instruction in reading and math has long had a terrible track record, but grouping kids as needed for supplemental instruction can be effective.) Others are taught in heterogeneous groups. In some academies, teachers rotate based on sub-specialty; and in others, they don鈥檛.

Springfield鈥檚 academies were initially fairly loose on curriculum, allowing each participating teacher to craft their own. But now the zone is providing more supports to the teachers who work in it, like a foundational phonics and phonemic awareness sequence to bolster the English/language arts programming. And before each academy, there鈥檚 training for teachers in research-based content teaching. (No more giving below-grade-level books in English class, for instance.)

鈥淲e have high expectations for teachers to teach at the grade level, no matter where a student may be functioning. But we need to give the teachers the training they need to keep the grade-level content, and the rigor high, and how to bridge the unfinished learning gap,鈥 Beaudoin said.

The academies are also significantly cheaper than high-dosage tutoring. Lawrence spent about $800 per student for a weeklong academy, according to analyses of the program. Springfield鈥檚 academies started at about $600 per student, but more recent figures from Zone officials estimate they now cost about $240-$325 per student. (The costs vary depending on class size, a function of student/family uptake.)

How can academies work in a remote or hybrid setting?

Other than costs, the challenge for school districts who want to replicate the model has to do with how to translate the core tenets of its academies into a remote or hybrid learning environment.

Springfield already offers some ideas it tested this summer. Knowing that crafting lesson plans and resources for online learning differs markedly from in-person teaching, it shifted to having 鈥渓esson designers鈥濃攅xpert teachers in content areas鈥攃reate the online learning pieces for the academies, and 鈥渓esson implementers,鈥 who are the teachers who actually do the instruction. It will use some of those strategies for core teaching in the Zone schools this fall as well.

Ramos has also translated the grades 6-8 online math lessons into Spanish so that parents of English-learners can be more involved in helping their children succeed at remote learning.

Many of the core strategies to keep kids engaged remain the same, though. 69传媒 used to win small prizes and snacks for maintaining good attendance at an academy; now, Empowerment Zone Partnership officials plan to mail them or drop them off. And students used to come early to the academy sites to play board games, use the gym, or hang out. So this summer, when Emily Burdick began her academy classes, the first 15 minutes are open-ended, allowing for students to socialize or for Burdick to play a few rounds of 鈥淲ould You Rather?鈥

鈥淏ring the joy factor into teaching, even if it鈥檚 online,鈥 she recommended. 鈥淲e still need to build a very real sense of community when we鈥檙e apart. And having these small moments brought them into showing up every day.鈥

Putting It All Together

Establish a centralizing force behind the academies.

Springfield鈥檚 Empowerment Zone Partnership is a partnership between the state, the local teachers鈥 union, and the school district. The zone takes care of many of the administrative pieces of the academies, including reserving building space, advertising for tutors, arranging bus transportation, and paying stipends.

The goal of this centralized arrangement is to take the burden off principals and teachers who are already tasked with making the core 180-day school year work.

鈥淏ecause this is additional time, we feel like we can be diluting or taking away from a principal or educator鈥檚 focus on getting those 180 days perfectly right. We want to take it off the plate of our leaders and our learners,鈥 said Beaudoin. 鈥淪o we鈥檙e making sure it鈥檚 hitting the criteria of good teacher training and tools, the right students, clear identification of the unfinished learning gaps, and all of the operational issues to make it work.鈥

Districts interested in an acceleration academy may want to find a nonprofit partner to help with those roles, or they could replicate the structure by designating administrators in the central office to manage the extended learning time and coordinate with schools and parents on the ground.

Make the intervention appealing, not punitive.

Too often, interventions feel punitive. Springfield messaged the program not around student 鈥渇ailure,鈥 but as an avenue for their teachers to spend more time with students working on fun, exciting lessons.

The Empowerment Zone offered incentives like gift cards and prize raffles to encourage attendance. Those nudges get students in the door, but they tend to return because of the program鈥檚 caring adults, community of peers, and an opportunity to show they can master learning goals.

鈥淥nce they鈥檝e been there before, they want to come back. Kids will go home and text their friends, and kids we haven鈥檛 even invited will show up,鈥 Beaudoin said. 鈥淭he kids love the small groups and targeted attention they get; and they feel more successful.鈥

Surveys of students showed that they overwhelmingly valued the time. In Springfield, 81 percent of attending students who completed a survey reported learning new math skills and 80 percent said they鈥檇 return.

Collect data to tailor the academies and make changes as needed.

Springfield has used a mix of both test-score data and teacher knowledge to guide its programming.

It uses benchmark assessments given periodically to track pupil progress and supplies that data to schools to inform teachers鈥 and principals鈥 decisions about which students could most benefit from attending an empowerment academy. (Ultimately, it鈥檚 the educators who decide which students to recommend for the program.) It鈥檚 also used to pinpoint the specific plan for each student.

The zone has also moved nimbly to evolve programs as needs arrive. For example, a Saturday program for English-learners was developed once it became clear too many middle school ELL students had not received enough explicit teaching in foundational reading skills, which aren鈥檛 typically taught at the middle school level.

厂辞耻谤肠别蝉:鈥
Jawana Akuffo, counselor, White River (Wash.) school district; Elaine Allensworth, director, University of Chicago Consortium on School Research; Amy D鈥橝ngelo, Regional superintendent and high school lead, Achievement First; Colleen Beaudoin, co-executive director, Springfield Empowerment Zone Partnership; Greg Benjamin, counselor, White River (Wash.) school district; Emily Burdick, Dean of Curriculum & Instruction, Emergency Academy, Springfield, Mass.; Carla Burgi, counselor, White River (Wash.) school district; Robbie Coleman, acting director, National Tutoring Programme; Stephanie Dann, mental health coordinator, White River (Wash.) school district; Heather Hill, professor of education, Harvard Graduate School of Education; James Ellout, managing director for impact, City Year Jacksonville; Sarah Frazelle, director of early warning indicator systems and multitiered systems of support, Puget Sound Education Service District; Emily Freitag, CEO, Instruction Partners; Michelle Kaffenberger, research fellow, Research on Improving Systems of Education (RISE) Programme; Matthew Kraft, associate professor of education and economics, Brown University; Ken Koedinger, professor of Computer Science, Carnegie-Mellon University; Steve Leifsen, executive director, equity and student support services, White River (Wash.) school district; Cody Mothershead, principal, White River (Wash.) school district; Misael Ramos, ELL math teacher and coach, Springfield (Mass.) public schools; Sonja Santelises, superintendent, Baltimore city schools; Beth Schueler, assistant professor of education and public policy, University of Virginia; Nathaniel Schwartz, leader, Brown University Annenberg Institute for School Reform; Anne Sinclair, Chief Learning Officer, 69传媒 and Math, Inc.; Robert Slavin, professor, Johns Hopkins University and director of the Center for Research and Reform in Education; Christine SySantos Levy, special projects coordinator, Johns Hopkins School of Education鈥檚 Center for Research and Reform; Stephanie Wu, Chief Impact Officer, City Year.

Studies and Documents:
鈥淐an States Take over and Turn Around School Districts? Evidence from Lawrence, Massachusetts.鈥 2016. By Beth E. Schueler, Joshua Goodman, and David J. Demming. National Bureau of Economic Research working paper 21895; 鈥淢aking the Most of School Vacations; A Field Experiment of Small Group Instruction.鈥 2018. By Beth E. Schueler. Association for Education Finance and Policy; 鈥淚mproving Academic Outcomes for 69传媒: Scaling Up individualized Tutorials.鈥 2016. By Roseanna Ander, Jonathan Guryan, and Jens Ludwig. The Hamilton Project, Brookings Institution; 鈥淓ffective Programs in Elementary Mathematics: A Meta-Analysis.鈥 2020. By Marta Pellegrini, Cynthia Lake, Amanda Neitzel, and Robert E. Slavin. Best Evidence Encyclopedia; 鈥淎 Synthesis of Quantitative Research on Programs for Struggling Readers in Elementary 69传媒.鈥 2020. By Amanda J. Neitzel, Cynthia Lake, Marta Pellegrini, and Robert Slavin. Best Evidence Encyclopedia; 鈥淔ailing to Plan? Estimating the Impact of Achieving Schooling Goals on Cohort Learning.鈥 2020. By Michelle Kaffenberger and Lant Pritchett. Research on Improving Systems of Education; 鈥淗uman Capital Accumulation and Disasters: Evidence from the Pakistani Earthquake of 2005.鈥 2020. By Tahiri Andrabi, Benjamin Daniels, and Jishnu Das. Research on Improving Systems of Education; 鈥淩emedial Math Goes to High School: An Evaluation of the Tennessee SAILS Program.鈥 2018. By Thomas J. Kane, Angela Boatman, Whitney Kozakowski, Chris Bennett, Rachel Hitch, Dana Weisenfeld. Center for Education Policy Research, Harvard University; 鈥淚mpact of School Closures on the Attainment Gap: Rapid Evidence Assessment.鈥 2020. Education Endowment Foundation; 鈥淩emote Learning: Rapid Evidence Assessment.鈥 2020. Education Endowment Foundation; 鈥淐OVID-19 and Student Learning Loss in the United States: The Hurt Could Last a Lifetime.鈥 2020. By Emma Dorn, Bryan Hancock, Jimmy Sarakatsannis, and Ellen Viruleg. McKinsey; 鈥淭he Impressive Effects of Tutoring on PreK-12 Learning: A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis of the Experimental Evidence.鈥 2020. By Andre Nickow, Phillip Oreopoulos, and Vincent Quan; 鈥淭he (Surprising) Efficacy of Academic and Behavioral Intervention with Disadvantaged Youth: Results from a Randomized Experiment in Chicago.鈥 2014. By Philip J. Cook, Kenneth Dodge, George Farkas, Roland G. Fryer, Jr., Jonathan Guryan, Jens Ludwig, Susan Mayer, Harold Pollack, and Laurence Steinberg. National Bureau of Economic Research working paper 19862; 鈥淭he Aftermath of Accelerating Algebra: Evidence from a District Policy Initiative.鈥 2012. By Charles T. Clotfelter, Helen F. Ladd, and Jacob L. Vigdor. National Bureau of Economic Research working paper 18161; 鈥淎iming High and Falling Short: California鈥檚 Eighth-Grade Algebra-for-All Effort.鈥 2015. By Thurston Domina, Andrew McEachin, Andrew Penner, and Emily Penner. Education Evaluation and Policy Analysis; 鈥淎 Meta-Analysis of the Effectiveness of Intelligent Tutoring Systems on K-12 Mathematical Learning.鈥 2013. By Saiying Steenbergen-Hu and Harris Cooper. Journal of Education Psychology; 鈥淚ntelligent Tutoring Systems and Learning Outcomes: A Meta-Analysis.鈥 2014. By Wenting Ma, Olusola O. Adesope, John C. Nesbit, and Qing Liu. Journal of Educational Psychology; 鈥淓ffectiveness of Intelligent Tutoring Systems: A Meta-Analytic Review.鈥 2016.鈥 By James A. Kulick and J.D. Fletcher. Review of Educational Research; 鈥淎 Practitioner鈥檚 Guide to Implementing Early Warning Systems.鈥 2015. By Sarah Frazelle and Aisling Nagel. Education Northwest; 鈥淲hen the Saints Go Marching Out: Long-Term Outcomes for Student Evacuees from Hurricanes Katrina and Rita.鈥 2012. By Bruce Sacerdote. American Economic Journal: Applied Economics; 鈥淪chool Practices To Address Student Learning Loss.鈥 2020. By Elaine Allensworth and Nate Schwartz. EdResearch for Recovery, Annenberg Institute, Brown University; 鈥淭he Big Problem with Little Interruptions to Classroom Learning.鈥 2020. By Matthew Kraft and Manuel Monti-Nussbaum. The Annenberg Institute at Brown University; 鈥淗igh-Dosage Tutoring and 69传媒 Achievement: Evidence from New York City鈥.鈥 2017. By Roland G. Fryer, Jr. and Megan Howard Noveck. National Bureau of Economic Research Working Paper 23792; 鈥淭he Production of Human Capital in Developed Countries: Evidence from 196 Randomized Field Experiments.鈥 2016. By Roland G. Fryer, Jr., Harvard University, and National Bureau of Economic Research.

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