East Bay Times

Using technology to tailor lessons to each student

- By Janet Morrissey

When 12-year- old Nina Mones was in sixth grade last year, she struggled to keep up with her math class, getting stuck on improper fractions. And as the teacher pushed ahead with new lessons, she fell further and further behind.

Then in the fall of 2019, her charter school, the Phoenix Internatio­nal Academy in Phoenix, brought in a program called Teach to One 360, which uses computer algorithms and machine learning to offer daily math instructio­n tailored to each student. Nina, now in seventh grade, flourished.

“I’m in between seventhand eighth- grade math now,” she said, proudly. “It gave me more confidence in myself.” And when the coronaviru­s shutdown occurred, she said, her studies continued uninterrup­ted, thanks to the program’s online portal.

“This is a model for personaliz­ed learning,” said Sheldon H. Jacobson, professor of computer science at the University of Illinois at Urbana- Champaign and a risk assessment public policy consultant.

The move toward a techdriven, personaliz­ed learning system, like Teach to One 360 from a nonprofit called New Classrooms, is long overdue, experts say. Other industries, such as health care and entertainm­ent, have been shifting in this direction for years. Personaliz­ed medicine, for example, looks at DNA biomarkers and personal characteri­stics to map out a patient’s most effective treatment, Jacobson said.

And experts say the COVID-19 pandemic might be the spark that finally drives schools out of their comfort zones and into the world of innovation and personaliz­ed learning programs.

“We’ve seen an embrace of technology that was rapidly accelerate­d by COVID,” said Bob Hughes, director of the K-12 Education in the United States Program at the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, which helps finance nonprofits like New Classrooms.

Randi Weingarten, president of the American Federation of Teachers, backs such programs. “Innovation­s like this,” she said, “can help educators meet students where they are and address their individual needs.”

A number of firms, like New Classrooms, Eureka Math, iReady and Illustrati­ve Mathematic­s, have been working aggressive­ly to bring personaliz­ed learning to the forefront.

Joel Rose, a former teacher, and Chris Rush, a technology and design expert, are the brains behind Teach to One 360, which is based in New York. When Rose first started teaching fifth grade in Houston in the 1990s, he was stunned by the number of students whose math skills were two or even three grade levels behind. “Some students were as low as the second grade, and other students as high as the eighth grade, and others in between,” he said.

This one-size-fits-all system is broken, he said, adding, “It is wildly outdated.”

So, in 2009, while working for the New York City schools chancellor, Rose partnered with Rush to create School of One (later renamed Teach to One 360), a technology driven math program for students in grades five through 12.

Here’s how it works: Students take a 90- minute MAP test, which is a standardiz­ed test measuring math skills, and a 60-minute diagnostic test to determine gaps and strengths. The program then uses algorithms and machine learning to identify problem areas and strengths, and creates a personaliz­ed daily lesson or “playlist.”

It also chooses the modality, or teaching method. Some may get their lesson through a traditiona­l teacher- led class; others will work in small peer groups collaborat­ing with students who are at a similar skill level; and others will work independen­tly, using online interactiv­e videos, games and math programs. Each student is assigned at least two different modalities a day, and a team of at least four math teachers oversees the program.

At the end of the day, students take a five- question quiz, and the algorithm uses the results to determine the next day’s lessons.

The program was rolled out to 1,500 students in three New York public schools one each in the Bronx, Manhattan and Brooklyn as a pilot project. In 2011, Rose spun off the program into a nonprofit firm, called New Classrooms, and renamed the program Teach To One.

The company has raised $94 million from such entities as the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, the Bezos Family Foundation and the Michael & Susan Dell Foundation, as well as government grants. The Gates Foundation, for example, has donated more than $31 million to New Classrooms since 2011.

New Classrooms faces competitio­n from companies like Eureka Math, iReady and Illustrati­ve Mathematic­s, which also offer programs to help teachers identify learning gaps and provide customized lessons.

However, most focus on current-grade-year lessons and assume that students already know the previous grades’ skills, Rose said. By contrast, New Classrooms gives every student access to multigrade curricula and skills, which better addresses learning gaps in students who are several grade levels behind, Rose said.

“Our assessment identifies which specific skills at

each grade level the student does and does not know,” Rush said. “A road map may say, go back and work on just these 10 fourth-grade skills and these 12 fifthgrade skills and 25 sixthgrade skills.”

On the content side, New Classrooms has partnered with some of its rivals, as well as online content providers like Carnegie Learning, Khan Academy, EngageNY and IXL, so that students can have access to their math content through the Teach to One portal.

A lfred Cordova , the principal at Taos Middle School in Taos, New Mexico, brought in Teach to One for his sixth- grade math students in 2015 to turn around his school’s dismal math scores. “Our scores had really tanked,” he said, partly because of the large number of students entering from elementary school with poor math skills.

“Very quickly, our sixthgrade students started excelling and passing our seventh and eighth graders ability-wise in math,” Cordova said. “It’s been a huge success.” He has since expanded the program to all grades.

The program also helps gifted students.

Jade Parish, a 13-yearold student at Taos Middle School, is in seventh grade but working on eighth

grade math, thanks to the Teach to One program. She said she used to be bored in the old system, where one teacher taught the same lesson to every student, regardless of their skills. “Working at your own pace is a lot better,” she said.

Currently, 27 schools across 11 states have adopted Teach to One. Still, getting schools to sign on has been challengin­g.

Cost, bureaucrat­ic inertia, schools and teachers being set in their ways, and fears that technology could replace teachers are among the barriers, Rose said.

Schools are often under pressure to follow a traditiona­l curriculum with textbooks and teacher-led classes to ensure that they cover the content needed for standardiz­ed tests. Many worry, Rose said, that veering away from traditiona­l practices could affect test results, which would then affect school rankings and funding.

“Innovation has always lagged in education, and we are slow to change and slow to respond as an organizati­on,” said Scott Muri, superinten­dent of schools at the Ector County Independen­t School District in Odessa, Texas, which brought the Teach to One program into three schools in 2019.

Then there’s the cost of purchasing the program itself, buying computers for students, adding math teachers and sometimes reconstruc­ting classrooms to accommodat­e the different modalities. The total costs of such programs can vary substantia­lly, and most school systems depend on grants to cover them.

Sometimes, money simply has to be redirected. “In our country, we invest a tremendous amount in K-12 and many people criticize that the current model just is not working,” Jacobson said. “So it’s not a matter of spending more money it’s spending money in different ways.”

Teachers and principals must also be fully onboard for the program to work.

“You can have the best program on God’s green earth, but if you don’t have good implementa­tion of it, it’s all for nothing,” Cordova said.

And this can be tricky. Some teachers are reluctant to try innovative teaching methods, while others worry that technology could eliminate their jobs.

But Muri pointed out: “The program is not standalone. It’s married to the teacher. Neither work by themselves you have to have both together.”

New Classrooms is expanding its program this month to include tools for schools currently not in the core program that want to help students learn from home. Its Teach to One Roadmaps Free program offers a free 90-minute virtual assessment and cranks out a road map of courses and content that the student needs to master the grade. In this free version, it’s up to the student to find the online content recommende­d.

Its Teach to One Roadmaps Plus goes one step further, giving students access to the tailored online content through its portal and charging schools $15 per student per year.

Rose hopes to expand the Teach to One 360 program beyond math to other subjects within five years.

“We are so underinves­ted in innovation in K-12 relative to every other sector of our society,” he said. “And I think in moments like this we’re now feeling the impact of all that.”

 ?? CAITLIN O’HARA — THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? Seventh-grader Nina Mones is a student at Phoenix Internatio­nal Academy, in Phoenix. Computer algorithms and machine learning are helping students succeed in math, and some experts see such efforts as a crucial next step in education.
CAITLIN O’HARA — THE NEW YORK TIMES Seventh-grader Nina Mones is a student at Phoenix Internatio­nal Academy, in Phoenix. Computer algorithms and machine learning are helping students succeed in math, and some experts see such efforts as a crucial next step in education.

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