Published: Sept. 14, 2016

In this Ed-Talk, William Penuel, professor of learning sciences and human development, describes what he and fellow researchers found when they returned to schools that had recently implemented aĀ research-proven math tool as part of a successful,Ā largeĀ randomized study.

ā€œThe program had big impacts on all students ā€” on Latino students, white students, low-income students, more economically advantaged students, boys and girls alike,ā€ he said. ā€œSo when we went in the year after to see who was using the program, we expected a lot of teachers to still be using Simcalc Mathworlds.

ā€œBut only half were still using the program, and who were those teachers? They were the teachers of the highest achieving students.ā€

Penuel argues that the current U.S. research model ā€“ one where research funding ends and researchers leave ā€“ inadvertently perpetuates inequity in teaching and learning. Yet, he offers a different model, one that is based on partnerships between researchers and schools, teacher ownership and buy-in, and curriculum that connects with young peopleā€™s interests, experiences, and cultural lives.

In under six minutes, Penuel boils down promisingĀ Research-Practice Partnerships, long-term collaborations between practitioners and researchers working together to investigate problems of practice and solutions for improving schools and school districts.

The video is one of only 31 featuring the nationā€™s leading education scholars discussing cutting-edge research inĀ the Ed-Talk series from the . Ed-Talks were gathered during AERAā€™s Centennial Celebration, and the videos are designed to convey key research findings crisply, quickly, and compellingly.Ā 


Related Faculty: William Penuel