Education Week
 
 
'Personalized' Instruction  Using Tech Yields Uneven Results, Study Says
By _Michele  Molnar_ (http://blogs.edweek.org/edweek/marketplacek12/)  on 
November 25, 2014 4:56 PM | _1  Comment_ 
(http://blogs.edweek.org/edweek/marketplacek12/2014/11/personalized_instruction_using_tech_yields_uneven_results_
study_says.html#comments)  

 
 

UPDATED 
Using technology to educate students isn't always effective, or  
cost-effective, and doesn't necessarily translate into what is often called  
"personalized learning," according to a report released Monday. 
The review of various studies  by Noel Enyedy, an associate professor of 
education and information  studies at the University of California-Los 
Angeles, concludes  that education technology deployed in the name of 
personalized  
instruction yields modest improvements in  educational outcomes, at best, 
in some cases, and none at all in  others.  
Enyedy summarized his  findings in a brief with a long title—"Personalized 
Instruction: New Interest, Old Rhetoric,  Limited Results, and the Need for 
a New Direction for Computer-Mediated  Learning"—which was released by the 
_National Education Policy Center_ (http://nepc.colorado.edu/) , housed at  
the University of Colorado Boulder's school of education.  
In a phone interview, Enyedy said he does not object to the use of  
technology. In fact, he calls himself "a critical friend" of education  
technology, 
evaluating his own use of it in the classroom and for research, and  
critiquing where educational technology is effective in general. 
Educators who use digital tools bear the responsibility of finding out what 
 works, he said, and policymakers would be well advised to make sure 
schools test  technology on a limited basis before buying on a large scale. It 
is, 
he  wrote, "unrealistic and irresponsible not  to figure out how to use 
technology well."  
He also says education technology an  expensive option for districts, 
especially considering that it produces uneven  results.  
Personalized Instruction vs. Personalized Learning 
Enyedy draws a distinction between what he describes as personalized  
instruction and personalized learning. 
Personalized instruction, he explains,  "focuses on tailoring the pace, 
order, location, and content of a lesson" for  each student. Most technology 
systems on the market today fall into this  category, which is why he focused 
his study on this aspect of computer-based  education. 
By contrast, the broader term "personalized learning" centers on the  
process of learning, rather than honing in on the delivery of content, Enyedy  
says. This approach refers to the way "teachers or learning environments can  
vary the resources, activities, and teaching techniques to effectively 
engage as  many students as possible," his report states. 
Based on his findings, Enyedy advises  district officials to take several 
steps when weighing the merits of  personalized instruction:  
    *   Invest incrementally in technology. Policymakers  should take a 
skeptical view of claims about what can be accomplished with  computerized 
learning, unless it is supported by research-based  evidence. 
    *   Conduct more research on the effects of personalized learning in  
K-12: Much of the evidence supporting technology's potentially  positive 
impact is based on research with undergraduates, who may be at  different 
stages 
of development and motivation than pre-college students. 
    *   Set clearer definitions about the features of technology, and  
expectations for personalized instruction in the  classroom. Shared definitions 
and ideas will help researchers  more concretely define best practices in 
personalized instruction. 
    *   Test and validate software and hardware tools. Ed-tech  developers 
should be encouraged to work with researchers and teachers in this  effort, 
because market forces alone cannot be trusted to sort out  which systems are 
effective. 
    *   Make professional development part of the  implementation. A 
substantial investment in helping teachers  learn how to use technology is a 
key 
component of working toward desired  educational outcomes, Enyedy argues.
Showing Promise 
Of all the approaches to using personalized instruction, those that  rely 
on "blended learning"—which combines tech-based and person-to-person  
instruction—show the greatest potential academic benefits, he found. But 
blended  
learning strategies also tend to carry the highest costs, while producing 
only  "moderate to mixed results." 
A _RAND  stud_ 
(http://www.edweek.org/ew/articles/2014/01/29/19el-math.h33.html) y, for 
instance, found that Cognitive Tutor Algebra I—which showed  
positive effects for students in the second year of implementation—was  
substantially more expensive than business-as-usual with standard textbooks, 
but  
that this cost premium was lower if the district already had strong  
technological infrastructure.  
Blended learning environments require  investing in the technological 
infrastructure, licensing fees, and professional  development for teachers and 
administrators on how to use the features, and how  to integrate them into 
daily classroom  practice

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