Students at the Secondary School for Journalism in Brooklyn, New York
walked out of class to protest it. Another New York City public school
dumped it. And in Cheshire, Connecticut, the superintendent
eliminated
a “personalized learning” program after families complained that users
received limited attention from teachers, gamed the system, faced data
privacy violations, and experienced increased levels of anxiety.
These approaches rely on
software to lead each student through lessons deemed appropriate for
that student at that time, thus assisting or supplementing teachers who
are feared to have a lesser capacity to individualize. “Individualized”
instruction may be a better name for these approaches, but advocates
have popularized the “personalized instruction” name, and we thus use it
here.
All three of the above
cases involved the Summit Learning Platform, which is currently used in
more than 380 schools. Summit was built with assistance from Facebook
engineers and promoted financial backing from company founder Mark
Zuckerberg. As such, they are arguably impacted by the
recent backlash
against Facebook, which was sparked by revelations that the social
media giant improperly shared data and permitted election meddling. (The
National Education Policy Center
deleted its Facebook account in March over these and other concerns.)
But is personalized learning more broadly facing a backlash?
Maybe. In October, for example,
The New York Times ran a
series of articles about efforts by affluent parents (including those in
Silicon Valley)
to limit students’ use of screens not only at home—where they are often
used for entertainment—but at school. For example, the private Waldorf
School of the Peninsula
has attracted families of executives of tech companies such as eBay, Google, Apple and Yahoo with its computer-free approach.
In a
policy brief
for NEPC, Vanderbilt professor Noel Enyedy writes that “recent studies
show little evidence for the effectiveness” of personalized learning
programs that aim to use computers to tailor digital instruction to
individual students. Such programs often merely translate problematic
features of traditional learning into the digital context. For instance,
Enyedy writes:
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