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Education policy maven Rick Hess of the think tank offers straight talk on matters of policy, politics, research, and reform. Read more from this blog.

Federal Opinion

Is This the Key to Unlocking Breakthrough Education Research?

Education is different from the Department of Defense, so how will this research agency model transfer?
By Rick Hess 鈥 February 13, 2023 5 min read
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Dear readers,

I鈥檓 delighted to introduce an occasional new feature, 鈥淪traight Talk with Rick and Jal,鈥 which I鈥檒l be penning with my friend, Harvard University鈥檚 inimitable Jal Mehta (author of books like and ). The idea was sparked by our shared sense that, in education, vague buzzwords, happy-dappy constructs, and intimidating jargon can too often stand in for careful thought or rigorous design. We鈥檝e both been frustrated when we see sensible intuitions used to justify ham-handed mandates or dubious programs.

Now, we come at all this in different ways. Jal tends to see things through the lens of practice while I tend to think in terms of policy. And one place where Jal and I often part ways is how to address our concerns. I鈥檓 often inclined to just roll back programs and mandates and tell the consultants, hucksters, and buzzword artists to knock it off. Jal is marginally more optimistic, especially if we can appreciate context, respect on-the-ground expertise, and avoid the temptation of one-size-fits-all solutions.

In other words, while we鈥檙e both skeptics, our skepticism plays out differently鈥攂oth in terms of the policy/practice divide and across the left/right ideological divide. So, we鈥檒l be coming at things from different places. I鈥檓 hoping that readers might find the exercise useful, and even refreshing.

With that, I want to offer a couple of thoughts on one current enthusiasm in the world of education research鈥攖he 鈥淒ARPA for Education鈥 included in the $1.7 trillion omnibus bill that Congress recently passed. The long-discussed idea is modeled on the Department of Defense鈥檚 famed Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA), which has used a dynamic, fluid model to help birth innovations ranging from the internet to GPS to stealth technology. Well, Congress has delivered to the Institute of Education Sciences (IES) a chunk of money (an unspecified portion of $40 million) to foster 鈥渜uick-turnaround, high-reward鈥 learning solutions.

I have mixed feelings. On the one hand, I think DARPA is a national treasure, absolutely favor more nimble education research, and would love to see us actually start to understand which tutoring approaches deliver and how schools might make real use of virtual reality. On the other hand, I worry that just calling something DARPA doesn鈥檛 make it DARPA. I worry that IES is too bureaucratic, education too suffused with an odd admixture of top-heavy evaluation contractors and ideologically-motivated scholar-activists, and the infrastructure and expertise aren鈥檛 there to meaningfully emulate DARPA.

Jal: Glad to join you here, Rick. When I was a kid and realized that Santa couldn鈥檛 hit every house on earth in one night, my next thought was that Santa must operate in a kind of federated structure. My parents called the Baltimore City Santa Claus Department, told them what I wanted, they delivered it late the evening of Christmas Eve, and my parents put it under the tree. So while I鈥檓 as averse to bad bureaucracy as the next guy, my goal here is less to tear things down, and more to think about whether there might be better ways to replace it.

For today鈥檚 topic, DARPA-Ed is supposed to be the replacement for some of the problems with past education research and development鈥攏ot oriented enough towards practice; not interdisciplinary enough; too much of a disconnect between researchers, NGOs, and for-profit companies who might have larger reach to achieve greater scale. So, my first instinct is to say that we should give it a chance.

At the same time, before we start, we should think through the ways that education differs from defense. As Dave Snowden and Mary Boone , physical engineering is complicated; human beings are complex, meaning that they don鈥檛 follow simple cause and effect laws as physical science does. We have learned over and over again that context matters, that relationships matter, and that repertoires of ways to handle problems is better than one-size-fits-all solutions. Rick, is there a way we might organize DARPA-Ed that might take into account those features rather than repeating the mistakes of the techno-optimists of the past?

Rick: Love the Santa Claus story. I don鈥檛 think you鈥檇 ever told me that. Seems like you鈥檝e got an outline of a great Magic School Bus episode. But that鈥檚 a whole other topic. As for DARPA-Ed, I like the question鈥攂ut fear you鈥檝e just doubled my concerns. I was already unsure whether education has a critical mass of the skill and will to do this. Now you鈥檝e got me wondering whether the model itself translates.

After all, DARPA may be great at addressing technical design challenges. But DARPA isn鈥檛 expected to weigh in on how to best compensate military personnel, what constitutes an equitable allocation of military funds, or how to train unit leaders. Now, if DARPA-Ed were to focus on designing more effective tutoring technologies or tech-enabled phonics programs, I could see the analog. But that doesn鈥檛 seem to be what a lot of the proponents are promising.

Rather, it seems likely that DARPA-Ed will become a fancy label for some faster-paced research on instructional strategies, dropout prevention, teacher training, or whatnot. More research on all of that could certainly be useful. But I wouldn鈥檛 expect it to bring big change to education research or practice. Heck, I鈥檓 not convinced that those saying this could transform education research really have a clear vision of what it would take for that to be the case.

Jal: Yes. I think that if that鈥檚 what it became, that wouldn鈥檛 be a great use of the dollars. The things that DARPA is best known for鈥擥PS and the internet itself鈥攁re not immediate solutions to military problems. They are underlying infrastructure that took a long time to build and ended up having many different applications. Education research, particularly federally funded education research, already tends to focus on the short-term priorities that are hot in the policy environment. So if DARPA-Ed could resist that pull and look into some longer-term questions, I think that could be constructive.

On my list would be: How can we assess education beyond basic literacy and numeracy? How can artificial intelligence assist in helping education become more differentiated and responsive to individual needs and concerns? How could we build worldwide communities of educators interested in working together on fairly specific questions, like how best to teach Shakespeare or foster perspective-taking in their students? For any of these questions, I would begin with the assumption that there wasn鈥檛 going to be one answer to be implemented with fidelity by teachers. Instead, we want to nurture an ecosystem, build infrastructure, offer tools, and create opportunities for wise educators to do their best work.

Will this happen? We will see. But I think we both agree that a new name and a fancy analogue is no substitute for careful thinking about what it takes to make progress in the complex and very human world of education.

The opinions expressed in Rick Hess Straight Up are strictly those of the author(s) and do not reflect the opinions or endorsement of 澳门跑狗论坛, or any of its publications.

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