stimulating transformative change for student achievement

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Stimulating Transformative Change for Student Achievement September, 2011 Andy Calkins, Deputy Director Elina Alayeva, Program Officer

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Stimulating Transformative Change for Student Achievement. Andy Calkins, Deputy Director Elina Alayeva, Program Officer. September, 2011. A Unique Partnership. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Stimulating Transformative Change for Student Achievement

Stimulating Transformative Change for Student Achievement

September, 2011

Andy Calkins, Deputy DirectorElina Alayeva, Program Officer

Page 2: Stimulating Transformative Change for Student Achievement

A Unique Partnership

Page 3: Stimulating Transformative Change for Student Achievement

Our Mission: Dramatically improve college readiness and completion in the United States by tapping the potential of technology-enabled innovation.

Page 4: Stimulating Transformative Change for Student Achievement

Our Vision:

To leverage the power of technology to transform education to meet students’ and society’s needs in the 21st century

Commitment to seeking, finding, and supporting innovative working models

… Helping to catalyze a broad and fundamental transformation of education practices, policies, and structures

Page 5: Stimulating Transformative Change for Student Achievement

Invest in Innovation

Multiply Impact

Accelerate Adoption

Build an evidence base and create communities of practice.

What NGLC Does

Page 6: Stimulating Transformative Change for Student Achievement

Education should be learner-centered.

Active, situated, and experiential learning, best measured by mastery, improves engagement, problem solving, and achievement.

Information technology can enable learners, learning, and educational systems – but is not an end, in and of itself.

Evidence and data should drive decision-making.

Change requires that scale be built into innovation design.

We Believe

Page 7: Stimulating Transformative Change for Student Achievement

Today’s Reality:

• Depersonalized one-size-fits-all approaches• Lack of relevance to the real world• Lack of deeper learning skills• Focus on seat time, not competency• Inequity• Escalating costs• Innovation in silos

Page 8: Stimulating Transformative Change for Student Achievement

Where We’ve Been

Wave I: Scaling innovations in blended learning, deeper learning and engagement, learner analytics, and open core courseware.

Wave II: Development of interactive course modules to meet the Common Core and deeper learning competencies.

Page 9: Stimulating Transformative Change for Student Achievement
Page 10: Stimulating Transformative Change for Student Achievement

TO DATE:

$17 million distributed

48 grantees

280 partner institutions

Nearly 300,000 students being served at projects’ outset

Page 11: Stimulating Transformative Change for Student Achievement

Where We’ve Been

Read all the winner abstracts:

•Wave I: http://nextgenlearning.org/the-grants/wave-i-winners•Wave II: http://nextgenlearning.org/the-grants/wave-ii-winners

Page 12: Stimulating Transformative Change for Student Achievement

The Call: Accelerate the development of next generation school and college models that leverage technology to significantly increase student success at equal or lower costs than current norms.

Page 13: Stimulating Transformative Change for Student Achievement

Wave IIIa RFPThe call: Our vision for Wave IIIa is to identify and scale fundamentally redesigned, whole school models that combine the best aspects of brick and mortar and online learning and result in more personalized, mastery based learning.

Page 14: Stimulating Transformative Change for Student Achievement

Wave IIIb RFPThe call: To spotlight innovative delivery models that generate high-quality student outcomes at an affordable cost. Grants will stimulate the development of new, next generation online and blended programs that lead to associate's or bachelor’s degrees.

Page 15: Stimulating Transformative Change for Student Achievement

Convictions underlying Wave III:

• Personalized learning helps students learn more deeply and rapidly• Technology-enabled, interactive learning makes personalized, mastery-based learning possible• Blended models offer both personalization and other key scaffolding students may need • Starting schools from scratch provides maximum flexibility to create genuinely new models

Page 16: Stimulating Transformative Change for Student Achievement

Wave IIIa RFPOur goal: A strong and diverse portfolio of 20 funded projects that are on target to open new whole-school, breakthroughlearning models with sustainablebusiness plans in either fall 2012or fall 2013.

• $150,000 planning grant• Up to $300,000 in matching funds

Page 17: Stimulating Transformative Change for Student Achievement

Wave IIIa RFPWhat is a breakthrough model? Personalized, mastery-based school model that leverages technology to deliver high student outcomes and support rapid, effective scale-up.

• A new district school• A district turnaround school• A new charter school• A partnership between an

urban district and communitycollege

Page 18: Stimulating Transformative Change for Student Achievement

Design Parameters• Deeper learning competencies and the Common Core• At least 25% of learning time with high-quality digital content• Personalized learning• Mastery-based learning• At least 50% of instruction in brick-and-mortar setting• Financial sustainability by year 4

Page 19: Stimulating Transformative Change for Student Achievement

Intended Outcomes

• 1.5 years of growth on Common Core Standards• 90% cohort graduation rate for retained students• 80% postsecondary matriculation rate• Financial sustainability • Models that are intentional about preparing students for college andcareer success standards, such asdeeper learning competencies

Page 20: Stimulating Transformative Change for Student Achievement

Eligibility • District and charter • Only new models, starting fresh• School must open in Fall 2012 or Fall 2013• Must serve students in grades 6-12 • 40% of students eligible for Free and Reduced Lunch• Partnerships with vendors, higher ed institutions, agencies encouraged

Page 21: Stimulating Transformative Change for Student Achievement

Successful Applicants Will: • Be innovative – dramatically rethinking instructional strategies and content delivery• Be focused on driving college readiness and completion• Leverage technology to supportstudent mastery and interactivity• Focus on sustainability

Page 22: Stimulating Transformative Change for Student Achievement

Application Process• Initial applications accepted on a rolling basis• Selected finalists will be asked to submitfinal proposal materials

Proposal Cutoff Finalist Notification

Winner Notification

Models should open in:

Nov. 11, 2011 Nov. 23, 2011 February 2012 Fall 2012

Feb. 9, 2012 March 9, 2012 May 2012 Fall 2013

June 8, 2012 July 8, 2012 August 2012 Fall 2013

Page 23: Stimulating Transformative Change for Student Achievement

Application Process• Initially: • 2-minute video• Abbreviated financial model• Narrated slide deck • Finalists:• Questions from challenge panel• Financial model and budget• Opportunity to interact with

reviewers

Page 24: Stimulating Transformative Change for Student Achievement

Some Common Questions• What defines a “new” school model?• Are new programs within existing schools eligible?• Are school conversions allowed?• Who must be the lead applicant?• Can a district or charter network submit two applications?• What kinds of activities do grant funds support?

Page 25: Stimulating Transformative Change for Student Achievement

… and Some Answers• A “new” school is one that is opening its doors for the first time in Fall 2012 or Fall 2013 with a dedicated budget and new staff, leadership, academic and financial model• New programs within existing schools are not eligible• Turnaround schools that have complete autonomy to alter all aspects of the previous model, including staffing, are eligible.• Applicants may partner with one or more entities, but the district or charter must be the primary applicant.• One organization may submit two separate applications as long as each is for a different school model• Initial grant funds support all activities that lead to opening of school

Page 26: Stimulating Transformative Change for Student Achievement

Wave IIIa winners will have access to:• Up to $300,000 in 1:1 matching funds, available immediately until August 2013• Total pool of $3M in matching funds given on first-come, first-served basis until funds are spent• May be raised from public or private sources; cannot originate from applying organization• Must be newly committed and specifically earmarked for the new model and received after the announcement• Must be cash only (no in-kind)