Giving Compass' Take:

•  Beth Hawkins, writing for The 74, discusses how the research on personalized learning does not provide clear results that prove effectiveness in classrooms, even though many philanthropic advocates support it.  

• Where do education donors stand on personalized learning instruction?  

•  Read more about the Teach to One program that did not show positive academic outcomes. 


Hear that? It’s the sound of personalized learning cracking under the pressure.

Exhibit A: Recent headlines concerning two hotly anticipated studies of the middle school math program Teach to One. The first study, a federally funded look at five schools using the personalized learning model in Elizabeth, New Jersey, found it had no significant impact.

The second, funded by the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, found strong growth in math in 14 schools throughout the country using the program but could not correlate the greater gains to Teach to One.

Given the hype — positive and negative — surrounding personalized learning, interest in anything that might validate or deflate the model’s potential is intense. And at first blush, the headlines that topped stories about the studies seemed to deliver verdicts: One “cast doubt” on Teach to One’s utility, while another declared it had “no effect” on math scores.

Read deeper, though, and it turns out that the studies did not in fact find the program ineffective. And that disconnect, say experts, illustrates a frustrating reality: Research on personalized learning is too scant, too new and too nuanced to provide the kind of thumbs-up, thumbs-down statements longed for by education watchers.

And yet, given the investments by major philanthropies, education advocacy organizations and technology pioneers, both for-profit and nonprofit, in personalized learning — not to mention the attendant buzz — the pressure for a definitive declaration about its effectiveness is relentless.

The public’s desire for broad, declarative conclusions notwithstanding, education research in general often results in narrow findings. Personalization — a combination of strategies that tailor instruction to individual students’ needs, aptitudes and interests, including online education, flexible approaches that allow students to work at different paces and project-based classes — adds layers of complexity.

Read the full article about personalized learning by Beth Hawkins at The 74