Current:Home > reviewsHow a rural Alabama school system outdid the country with gains in math -VitalWealth Strategies
How a rural Alabama school system outdid the country with gains in math
View
Date:2025-04-12 04:32:04
PIEDMONT, Ala. (AP) — While the rest of the country’s schools were losing ground in math during the COVID pandemic, student performance in a rural Alabama school district was soaring.
Piedmont City schools notched significant improvement in math, landing in the top spot among school districts across the country in a comparison of scores from before and during the pandemic. Nationwide, students on average fell half a year behind in math, researchers say.
Piedmont, a 1,100-student district where seven out of 10 qualify for free or reduced-prince lunch, has stuck with an approach it adopted before the pandemic: It gave teachers more time to dig into data on students’ scores and lengthened classes to help them focus on specific skills.
“We made a total transformation about five years ago,” Superintendent Mike Hayes said. “We decided that we were going to let data make every decision.”
In other words, Piedmont teachers use test scores to see where kids are struggling and then target teaching to each kid. And then repeat.
___
The Education Reporting Collaborative, a coalition of eight newsrooms, is documenting the math crisis facing schools and highlighting progress. Members of the Collaborative are AL.com, The Associated Press, The Christian Science Monitor, The Dallas Morning News, The Hechinger Report, Idaho Education News, The Post and Courier in South Carolina, and The Seattle Times.
___
Targeted instruction for small groups of students has years of research and evidence to back it up, said Rebecca Dreyfus of TNTP, a national nonprofit devoted to helping schools improve student learning. Pinpointing what skills need shoring up — and using systematic and explicit instruction, as backed by the “science of math” — makes it even more effective, she said.
“The short answer is that using data effectively and efficiently to plan and monitor instruction is always going to make instruction better for kids,” Dreyfus said.
Piedmont students ranked 35th in the state in math proficiency in 2017, when Hayes took over as superintendent. By spring 2022, the district ranked twelfth in the state on math proficiency, with 57% of students reaching proficiency. Statewide, 30% of students scored proficient in math.
“Once we made that decision and stuck to it and made changes and allowed our teachers time to look at the data and dive into the data, it paid off,” Hayes said.
TEACHERS GO DEEP ON ‘DATA DAYS’
To encourage teachers to dig deeper on student data, the Piedmont system made the school day longer and freed up time every four weeks for “data days,” when educators get together to analyze the numbers.
The data days help teachers see where the weaknesses are and adjust instruction, said Cassie Holbrooks, who teaches fourth grade math.
Sixth grade teacher Lisa Hayes said she was surprised to see how hard teachers worked during the data sessions when when she joined the district five years ago.
“When I came here and we had a workday,” she said, “you don’t sit in your room. You’re in here (the media center) most of the day, digging through test scores.”
Teachers then use the analysis to decide how to divide the students into small groups for targeted instruction on particular skills.
Grouping two to six students together to work on a specific skill has long been used for reading instruction and in younger grades. There is less research on the use of targeted small group instruction in math and in middle grades. But researchers like Dreyfus say it involves the same principle of identifying students who need extra help on certain skills, rather than simply pulling out children who are “behind.”
At the state level, math specialist Keri Richburg has been working to help more middle grade educators use small group instruction effectively. She oversees training for middle school math teachers through the Alabama Math Science and Technology Initiative.
Research supports the use of regular testing, called formative assessments, to help teachers figure out which students need personalized help, Richburg said.
“The idea is that we’re using evidence of student learning and making in-the-moment decisions about our instruction for each of our students within those small groups,” she said.
BALANCING SMALL GROUPS AND INDEPENDENT WORK
While math teachers in Piedmont’s elementary and middle schools work with small groups, the other students write in math journals, play learning games, or use iPads to work on their Individualized Learning Path, created from assessments of what a student needs or wants to learn.
One day in August in Holbrooks’ class, she worked with a group of four students on how to subtract 278 from 4,000, borrowing from the “0” in each place. Holbrooks modeled the steps, working with each student who needed additional attention.
At first, when Piedmont expanded small group instruction beyond reading in elementary grades, teachers said they didn’t have enough time in a regular class to do it well, Hayes said. So the district expanded math and English language arts to 80 minutes every day in the middle school and 120 minutes each day in the elementary school.
The longer math classes made a big difference, teacher Landon Pruitt said.
“In a 52- or 53-minute class,” Pruitt said, “there’s no way you can consistently do (small groups) and work on getting through the standards that you have to cover.”
The school also had to help teachers adjust classroom management techniques to accommodate small groups and independent work simultaneously. Hayes said one solution was to give teachers a program to monitor each students’ screen.
The district wants to make sure teachers have the support and resources to do the job well, Hayes said.
“I’m not sure we have a secret sauce or anything earth shattering,” Hayes said, “but we do have teachers and administrators committed to being intentional with data and letting that data drive small group instruction. Changing instruction in real time to meet our students where they are may be the most important step in our data-driven instructional process.”
___
The Associated Press education team receives support from the Carnegie Corporation of New York. The AP is solely responsible for all content.
veryGood! (6146)
Related
- Are Instagram, Facebook and WhatsApp down? Meta says most issues resolved after outages
- Texas pastor fired after church describes 'pattern of predatory manipulation' with minor, men
- How Hollywood art directors are working to keep their sets out of the landfill
- Hiker kills coyote with his bare hands after attack; tests confirm the animal had rabies
- Video shows dog chewing cellphone battery pack, igniting fire in Oklahoma home
- Fired Northwestern coach wants to move up trial, return to football soon
- Gen Zers are recording themselves getting fired in growing TikTok trend
- Father fatally shot after fight with ex-girlfriend's fiancé during child custody exchange, Colorado police say
- Beware of giant spiders: Thousands of tarantulas to emerge in 3 states for mating season
- Dakota Johnson Bares All in Sheer Crystal Dress for Madame Web Premiere
Ranking
- Macy's says employee who allegedly hid $150 million in expenses had no major 'impact'
- Channing Tatum Steps Out for Rare Red Carpet Appearance With Daughter Everly
- Meghan Markle Inks New Podcast Deal Less Than One Year After Parting Ways With Spotify
- My Big Fat Fabolous Life's Whitney Way Thore Reveals 100-Pound Weight Loss Transformation
- Illinois governor calls for resignation of sheriff whose deputy fatally shot Black woman in her home
- 1 dead, 5 injured in shooting at New York City subway station; suspect remains at large
- 'I Love You So Much It's Killing Us Both' is a rare, genuinely successful rock novel
- Officials are looking into why an American Airlines jetliner ran off the end of a Texas runway
Recommendation
Why we love Bear Pond Books, a ski town bookstore with a French bulldog 'Staff Pup'
San Francisco Giants add veteran slugger Jorge Soler on 3-year, $42M deal
Wreckage of merchant ship that sank in 1940 found in Lake Superior: See photos
The best and worst Super Bowl commercials of 2024: Watch this year's outlier ads
'Stranger Things' prequel 'The First Shadow' is headed to Broadway
Migrants in Mexico have used CBP One app 64 million times to request entry into U.S.
Katy Perry is leaving 'American Idol' amid 'very exciting year'
Flight attendants are holding airport rallies to protest the lack of new contracts and pay raises