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REACH & IMPACT: Survey Results

Student Benefits

How students benefit when teachers take WIDE World courses

Introduction | Engagement | Confidence |

Seeing and steering their course | Enhanced learning |

Introduction

In May 2007, 222 teachers completed a WIDE World final course evaluation. The survey was designed to help WIDE World understand the impact of its six-session 2007 courses on the participating teachers as well as their students. Below, we have included our findings, which suggest that WIDE World courses provide teachers with strategies to enhance student engagement, increase student confidence, boost student motivation, and ultimately improve the overall quality of student learning. These findings are illustrated with quotes from this and past semesters.

Engagement

Of the 222 classroom teachers completing a WIDE World end-of-course evaluation in May 2007, 85% agreed or strongly agreed that their course resulted in greater student engagement in class, and 70% felt that students had become more interested in their learning.

'[Students are] understanding history is alive and not dead but relevant. Their approach to studying history has changed. They now understand the need to study history and have developed a love for the subject.'
-- high school history teacher, Uttar Pradesh, India

'My students have become so much more engaged in their work. For those students that were reluctant to participate in many assignments, they now volunteer to participate!!'
-- middle school teacher, Louisiana, USA

'Giving attention to each student's understanding vs. just covering material seems to be noticed and appreciated, being signified by the added active participation of previously more peripheral/spectator students.'
-- teacher from Mississippi, USA

Confidence

70% of survey respondents felt that the course had already resulted in more confident students.

'My students learned a great deal about themselves as learners and as co-operative builders in a big undertaking. They have the confidence to present a piece of history to a public audience.'
-- history teacher, Saskatchewan, Canada

'[...] They are invested, and excited, and working in a realm that feels right for them. A beautiful thing to watch!'
-- teacher from Massachusetts, USA

"They are not as afraid to try their ideas as they used to be."
-- Niclas Sjoberg, high school math and religion teacher, Stockholm, Sweden

"'I could read it FOR MYSELF.' I was surprised, actually. I had thought they could read it for themselves! Had taken it for granted, really. But they had been insecure about their skills, had waited for the usual teacher-explanation of what the text meant, and they had had to adjust to the teacher not 'telling.' [... And] they had a new attitude about the value of English itself, about coming to class. Some said 'I liked not dreading it.' Others said, 'Dreading it? I loved it! I looked forward to English.'
-- Sylvia Sarrett, English teacher, Miami, Florida, USA

'In teaching the unit on poetry that was the focus of our team's differentiation project, we realized how much we had changed students' perceptions about poetry. Where they began the unit cringing at the thought that they would have to analyze poems, they ended with a lot more confidence in approaching poems. Many can even be said to have ended up enjoying the poetry unit.'
-- Carla Guedes, high school special education teacher, American International School of Johannesburg, South Africa

Seeing and steering their course

Teachers have reported that WIDE World courses give them tools to boost student motivation. On the May 2007 survey, 74% felt that it had increased student motivation to take on challenging work. Coupled with this increased motivation is often a greater sense among students that they understand the goals of their courses. Teachers' application of Teaching for Understanding tends to help students see why they are studying what they are, and where their work will lead them next. Teachers have told us,

'Students seem to better understand the level of my expectations and ask more specific, relevant questions while working.'
-- high school teacher, Saskatchewan, Canada

"The changes in peer assessment and the addition of more rubrics have the students more engaged in their learning. With all of the new and clear directions, the students are secure about how to get the grade they want. They know HOW now to create more quality work"
-- Jeri Cocchi, teacher from Sarasota, Florida, USA

'My students feel like more a part of the learning process. They like helping to set up and understand unit goals. It has increased student ownership of their own education.'
-- Julia Holden, high school teacher, Hialeah, Florida, USA


Students may respond to this enhanced perspective on learning by taking greater responsibility for that learning. Along these lines, teachers have reported:

"They now make recommendations for what we might do to reach our understanding goals.'
-- Caroline Carr, literacy and photography teacher, West Oakland, California, USA

'When I assessed their progress I realized that the strategy was extremely effective. Thanks to the course my students are enjoying the class more. Many of my students have blossomed into independent learners and those who need help are now brave enough to seek it in either from me, their peers or the resources that are made available. This strategy has revealed and developed a lot of talent in my class!'
-- teacher from New York State, USA

'The students are telling me why we're learning something. They're telling me why they need to know this information and how they're going to use it.'
-- K-2 teacher, Saskatchewan, Canada

Enhanced learning

Engagement, interest, confidence, motivation, and responsibility are all prerequisites to learning; what about the quality of student learning itself? Again, just three months into their WIDE World experience, 64% of educators reported that because of the course students were producing higher quality work. And 95% found that the course had in one respect or another led to improvements in student learning and understanding.

Teachers reported these benefits regardless of their level of teaching experience, as the following graph demonstrates:

 Benefits by Teaching Experience
In fact, across the range of courses that we offer, and in a variety of countries in six continents, we have obtained similarly favorable results. This is clear in the following chart:

 Benefits by Country and Course

We close with a selection of quotes, from teachers in a variety of countries, subjects, and grade levels, in which they described the benefits they observed for student learning.

'Definitely it has made a difference in student understanding.'
-- K-2 teacher, Saskatchewan, Canada

'[Students] were better able to understand the concept of a history developing decision-by-decision and action-by-action, and to begin asking more sophisticated hypothetical questions [...] Instead of learning facts they might have considered boring or irrelevant, my students became deeply and personally involved in a period of history. They developed an understanding of historical perspective and used the knowledge they acquired as a tool towards a new and original end.'
-- Anna Siegal, elementary teacher, Mexico City

[...] Last semester I taught a class of students who had all failed Pre-Calculus the Semester before. In the begining when I asked them to discuss their understanding of each topic and procedures. They were very reluctant to reveal their lack of knowledge. As we explored why the math worked the way it did, they began to give opinions and try new ways to solve problem. Many said 'no one had ever asked them their opinion of math'. One student in particular began to read on her own and try new ideas. At the end to the semester she mastered the topic and achieved A. She wrote me a note saying no one had ever gone into her brain and helped her find thoughts she did not know she could have [...]"
-- Cheryl Foreman, high school teacher/administrator, Kingston, Jamaica

'[Students have demonstrated] a clearer understanding of the topics discussed.'
-- high school English teacher, Australian Capital Territory, Australia

"The children learned better than previous years and are applying their knowledge daily when making healthy food choices. REAL LEARNING! My daughter was studying the same material in grade 7--all paper and pencil material, tests etc. and my grade two students knew more about nutrition than she did and she is an average student."
-- Therese Durston, 2nd grade teacher, St. Olivier School, Radville, Saskatchewan, Canada

'Students tend to ask more critical questions [...] They are able to synthesize what they have learned inside and outside school.'
-- Marliana Bte Md Ramli, foreign language teacher, Victoria School, Singapore

'[...] More kids have: 1. turned in their work. 2. received higher grades for their final drawings. 3. a deeper understanding of quality work. Otherwise, fewer kids would have turned in their work.'
-- middle school art teacher, Maine, USA



RBS, September 21, 2007
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