Arab Times

Can computers enhance teachers’ work?

Experts caution approach still needs scrutiny

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WASHINGTON, Aug 28, (AP): In middle school, Junior Alvarado often struggled with multiplica­tion and earned poor grades in math, so when he started his freshman year at Washington Leadership Academy, a charter high school in the nation’s capital, he fretted that he would lag behind.

But his teachers used technology to identify his weak spots, customize a learning plan just for him and coach him through it. This past week, as Alvarado started sophomore geometry, he was more confident in his skills.

“For me personaliz­ed learning is having classes set at your level,” Alvarado, 15, said in between lessons. “They explain the problem step by step, it wouldn’t be as fast, it will be at your pace.”

As schools struggle to raise high school graduation rates and close the persistent achievemen­t gap for minority and low-income students, many educators tout digital technology in the classroom as a way forward. But experts caution that this approach still needs more scrutiny and warn schools and parents against being overly reliant on computers.

The use of technology in schools is part of a broader concept of personaliz­ed learning that has been gaining popularity in recent years. It’s a pedagogica­l philosophy centered on the interests and needs of each individual child as opposed to universal standards. Other features include flexible learning environmen­ts, customized education paths and letting students have a say in what and how they want to learn.

Under the Obama administra­tion, the Education Department poured $500 million into personaliz­ed learning programs in 68 school districts serving close to a half million students in 13 states plus the District of Columbia. Large organizati­ons such as the Melinda and Bill Gates Foundation have also invested heavily in digital tools and other student-centered practices.

Schools

The Internatio­nal Associatio­n for K-12 Online Learning estimates that up to 10 percent of all America’s public schools have adopted some form of personaliz­ed learning. Rhode Island plans to spend $2 million to become the first state to make instructio­n in every one of its schools individual­ized. Education Secretary Betsy DeVos also embraces personaliz­ed learning as part of her broader push for school choice.

Supporters say the traditiona­l education model, in which a teacher lectures at the blackboard and then tests all students at the same time, is obsolete and doesn’t reflect the modern world.

“The economy needs kids who are creative problem solvers, who synthesize informatio­n, formulate and express a point of view,” said Rhode Island Education Commission­er Ken Wagner. “That’s the model we are trying to move toward.”

At Washington Leadership Academy, educators rely on software and data to track student progress and adapt teaching to enable students to master topics at their own speed.

This past week, sophomores used special computer programs to take diagnostic tests in math and reading, and teachers then used that data to develop individual learning plans. In English class, for example, students reading below grade level would be assigned the same books or articles as their peers, but complicate­d vocabulary in the text would be annotated on their screen.

“The digital tool tells us: We have a problem to fix with these kids right here and we can do it right then and there; we don’t have to wait for the problem to come to us,” said Joseph Webb, founding principal at the school, which opened last year.

Webb, dressed in a green T-shirt reading “super school builder,” greeted students Wednesday with high-fives, hugs and humor. “Red boxers are not part of our uniform!” he shouted to one student, who responded by pulling up his pants.

The school serves some 200 predominan­tly African-American students from high-poverty and high-risk neighborho­ods. Flags of prestigiou­s universiti­es hang from the ceiling and a “You are a leader” poster is taped to a classroom door. Based on a national assessment last year, the school ranked in the 96th percentile for improvemen­t in math and in the 99th percentile in reading compared with schools whose students scored similarly at the beginning of the year.

It was one of 10 schools to win a $10 million grant in a national competitio­n aimed at reinventin­g American high schools that is funded by Lauren Powell Jobs, widow of Apple founder Steve Jobs.

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