Dylan Wiliam shared an incredibly important piece on Twitter explaining how Districts screw-up adopting materials, including technology.
To start off with, here are a couple of tweets:
Because they tend to be bad? https://t.co/qCKr6UZrGK
— Larry Ferlazzo (@Larryferlazzo) December 31, 2019
Really, monumentally bad.
— Tom Rademacher (@MrTomRad) December 31, 2019
Why aren’t teachers using the resources companies sell to their districts? is the title of the report by Thomas Arnett. It’s from The American Enterprise Institute, which is not my favorite “think tank.”
But it nails how districts mess-up their district materials decisions (see excerpt at the top of this post).
It even pinpoints how surveys and typical teacher “input” doesn’t work, because then teachers tend to say what district staff wants to hear.
It’s definitely worth reading the entire report, including his recommendations about what districts should do, instead.
Here are some previous posts that are related to the points raised in the report, and support them:
Is Any Teacher Surprised That New Study Finds Textbooks Not Key To Student Learning?
The Best Resources For Adapting Your Textbook So It Doesn’t Bore Students To Death
What Advice Would you Offer to Textbook Publishers? is from my Education Week Teacher column.
The Best Posts & Articles Highlighting Why We Need To Be Very Careful Around Ed Tech
Recent Comments