Educators have much to choose from when they鈥檙e looking for adaptive digital curricula to personalize learning for math or English/language arts. But those who want high-quality, adaptive offerings for science and social studies have a limited menu of options. Those educators are increasingly searching for curricula that will allow them to personalize the learning experience for students and collect highly relevant data without having to build it from scratch themselves.
鈥淭here are some programs and software out there, but in general, nobody is addressing science and social studies,鈥 said Kwame Carr, the area executive director of schools for the 25,500-student Douglas County school system in Georgia. Educators 鈥渁re at a loss now. They鈥檙e scrambling.鈥
That doesn鈥檛 mean there aren鈥檛 a plethora of digital resources available in those subjects. Vast online repositories allow social studies teachers to find everything from interactive maps to history games, and science teachers might incorporate digital laboratory experiments into lessons. Digital textbooks provide another level of tools.
But the type of adaptive curricula that uses sophisticated algorithms allowing students to leap ahead, or review concepts they struggle with, and that provide teachers with in-depth data, is rare outside of reading and math, said Justin de Leon, a product manager for , a San Carlos, Calif.-based company working with districts on personalized-learning projects.
鈥淭here are a lot of modular content objects out there, but they鈥檙e not adaptive and prepackaged,鈥 he said. 鈥淭hey don鈥檛 get at the cumbersome nature of curating them. It鈥檚 certainly not making it easy for teachers.鈥
Testing Fuels Priorities
The Common Core State Standards in math and English/language arts and the testing associated with those standards, as well as the federal No Child Left Behind Act鈥檚 emphasis on them, have spurred vendors to create a steady flow of products in math and English/language arts and provided school districts with money to spend to personalize learning.
鈥淚f we鈥檙e testing on it, then people are looking for it,鈥 said Lurinda Ward, the director of learning services for the 10,000-student, K-8 Yuma School District One in Arizona. 鈥淭esting places more emphasis on those subjects.鈥
Even aside from testing, the calibration of educational standards across a large number of states also makes it significantly easier, and more cost-effective, for education companies to design products that will appeal to a wide range of schools, said Scott Ellis, the chief executive officer of , a nonprofit that seeks to expand blended learning in schools. The organization did an informal study several years ago of the state of the market for educational products for science and social studies, Ellis said. 鈥淭here鈥檚 the promise of a bigger, more standardized market, which improves economics for companies,鈥 he said.
As more states adopt the Next Generation Science Standards, or make moves to craft social studies standards around the and issued by the National Council for Social Studies, more companies may feel there is a wider audience for products in those areas.
But some educators caution that there are inherent differences in teaching science and social studies that don鈥檛 lend themselves to prepackaged, adaptive curricula. In social studies, there isn鈥檛 always an agreed-on progression鈥攁kin to math concepts that build on each other鈥攁nd much of the early-elementary-grade curricula often focus on local issues such as a student鈥檚 family and community or state history, said Jaraun Dennis, the chief technology officer for the 2,800-student Uinta County School District 1 in Evanston, Wyo. 鈥淚s a software company going to develop something for every community? I don鈥檛 think so,鈥 he said.
Science instruction is moving toward more open-ended questions, exploration, and hands-on learning, which may not mesh with an online curriculum, even one that is adaptive, said Al Byers, the associate executive director of services for the .
鈥淚t鈥檚 true that these adaptive systems are not out there in science,鈥 he said. But science instruction should be 鈥減ractice-based. There鈥檚 a strong need to talk and to do hands-on science where deeper and more flexible learning occurs.鈥
In fact, said Marty Creel, the chief academic officer for Silver Spring, Md.-based Discovery Education, which , 鈥渋n science, when you鈥檙e trying to develop a student鈥檚 sense of wonder, an adaptive model can be prohibitive to that. It can be counter-intuitive in developing good thinkers in science and social studies.鈥
鈥楲abor Intensive鈥
But without the same resources as other subjects and with an increased emphasis on personalizing learning, some science and social studies educators find themselves at a disadvantage.
Teachers 鈥渉ave to piecemeal it,鈥 Ward said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 a lot more labor-intensive.鈥
Teachers are using individual digital resources they find online and fitting them into their own lessons, but that can make it difficult to tailor learning to each student, she said. Some products go part way, allowing teachers to adjust reading levels, for example, on articles that pertain to social studies or science content, or to provide options for text, graphics, or video, she said.
In subjects outside math and English/language arts, teachers often have to 鈥渃obble this together themselves,鈥 said Alice Reilly, the social studies coordinator for the 167,000-student Fairfax County, Va., schools. That is why, Reilly said, professional development must play a significant role, so teachers can share the lessons they鈥檝e created, as well as learn to use the existing digital resources.
Kala Compton, a middle school instructional coach for the Yuma district, said she advocates for teacher paid time off from regular teaching duties to collaborate and share their lessons. But this reliance on individual teachers to be repositories of lessons and data can be a problem in a district that has significant teacher turnover, she said. Teachers leave and take their resources with them. With digital curricula, teachers don鈥檛 have to worry as much about losing institutional knowledge, she said.
鈥淭hat鈥檚 a lot of work upfront that would not be sustained if some of the teachers left and we鈥檇 have to start with new people,鈥 she said.
The same issue can be a problem for students. In districts with a transitory student population, those that are using an adaptive digital curriculum in math, for example, can switch schools within districts and pick up right where they left off, Ward said.
鈥淵our content is saved for you personally. You can withdraw on Friday from one school and move to another school within our district and pick up on Monday with the same program,鈥 she said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 pretty seamless, 鈥 unless it鈥檚 social studies or science.鈥
But some think a shift is on the horizon.
, which began with math in 2007, then English/language arts in 2013, launched both elementary-grade social studies and science products in November.
Jeremy Murphy, a senior product analyst for science content at IXL, said science and social studies are tricky when it comes to creating adaptive curricula. That kind of learning 鈥渜uickly gets complex and messy,鈥 he said.
But company officials said school and district customers were clamoring for new subjects.
Even though developing adaptive-learning systems for science and social studies was 鈥渁 challenge for our team,鈥 Murphy said, 鈥渋t鈥檚 really going to surprise the market in terms of what you can do.鈥
With standards for both science and social studies spreading, the marketplace is likely to catch up, said Ellis of the Learning Accelerator. 鈥淲e think market forces are working, and vendors are trying to solve this problem. It鈥檚 happening and it鈥檚 coming.鈥