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Blended Learn<strong>in</strong>g <strong>in</strong> DC Public Schools:How One District Is Re<strong>in</strong>vent<strong>in</strong>g Its ClassroomsBy Daniel K. Lautzenheiser and Taryn HochleitnerIt is a crisp, bright day <strong>in</strong> early November <strong>in</strong> SoutheastWash<strong>in</strong>gton, DC. The sett<strong>in</strong>g is Anacostia HighSchool, a 697-student Title I school <strong>in</strong> DC’s Ward 8that has long been one of the district’s most chronicallyunderperform<strong>in</strong>g <strong>schools</strong>. After giv<strong>in</strong>g a brief <strong>in</strong>troductionto Japan’s geography and major cities, the socialstudies teacher we are observ<strong>in</strong>g asks her n<strong>in</strong>th-gradestudents to each pull out a netbook from a cart alongone of the classroom walls and log <strong>in</strong>to an onl<strong>in</strong>e portal.The portal is robust. Students can access an array ofmultimedia tools such as videos and <strong>in</strong>teractive maps farbeyond the scope of a pr<strong>in</strong>ted textbook. They can requestto hear passages read aloud and click on bolded termsto view their def<strong>in</strong>itions. Each student can log <strong>in</strong> with aunique password, allow<strong>in</strong>g them to customize their portalby tak<strong>in</strong>g notes and highlight<strong>in</strong>g, and they can takeassessments onl<strong>in</strong>e for immediate feedback. Students canaccess their portal from anywhere, <strong>in</strong>clud<strong>in</strong>g at home,and teachers can track <strong>in</strong>dividual student progress.Yet, as we watch, the students log <strong>in</strong> not withunique student-specific IDs but with generic ones.It takes one student almost five m<strong>in</strong>utes to correctlyenter the password required to log <strong>in</strong> to the computeritself. Despite the onl<strong>in</strong>e assessment capabilities, theteacher asks students to answer questions on a paperworksheet, mean<strong>in</strong>g she will have to review each oneby hand that night. And at one po<strong>in</strong>t a student hastrouble understand<strong>in</strong>g a word. With the entire scopeof human knowledge just a 0.21-second Google searchDaniel Lautzenheiser is the program manager <strong>in</strong> educationpolicy studies and Taryn Hochleitner is a research associate <strong>in</strong>education policy studies, both at AEI.away, the student gets out of her chair, walks over to abookshelf, picks up a dictionary, and starts slowly flipp<strong>in</strong>gthrough the pages.That particular anachronism—a 21st-centurystudent turn<strong>in</strong>g to Merriam-Webster <strong>in</strong>stead ofWikipedia—highlights both the massive potential andthe stark realities of digital <strong>learn<strong>in</strong>g</strong> <strong>in</strong> today’s classrooms.Digital <strong>learn<strong>in</strong>g</strong> uses new technologies such aslaptops, iPads, and onl<strong>in</strong>e content to enhance student<strong>learn<strong>in</strong>g</strong>. Many believe such practices have the potentialto dramatically improve the <strong>learn<strong>in</strong>g</strong> and teach<strong>in</strong>gexperience, and it seems every day heralds a new storyof school districts purchas<strong>in</strong>g iPads <strong>in</strong> bulk or enthusiasticaccounts of the next revolutionary onl<strong>in</strong>e tool.But <strong>in</strong>corporat<strong>in</strong>g new technologies <strong>in</strong>to school<strong>in</strong>g<strong>in</strong> a way that actually improves <strong>learn<strong>in</strong>g</strong> is not as simpleas dropp<strong>in</strong>g laptops <strong>in</strong>to a classroom and hop<strong>in</strong>g for thebest. It is hard work, requir<strong>in</strong>g a district or school to provideample tra<strong>in</strong><strong>in</strong>g for teachers, make smart decisionson which products to use, and be sure any new technologicaltools help (and do not h<strong>in</strong>der) academic goals,among a host of other considerations.Many highly <strong>public</strong>ized accounts of successful digital<strong>learn<strong>in</strong>g</strong> efforts tend to spotlight the bold vision ofa pioneer<strong>in</strong>g school or district leader, leav<strong>in</strong>g less roomfor a description of what central office and school staffmust do beh<strong>in</strong>d the scenes to make those visions a reality.Such stories also tend to focus either on charterschool networks (such as the San Jose–based RocketshipEducation) or on smaller traditional school districts(such as Mooresville Graded School District<strong>in</strong> North Carol<strong>in</strong>a, whose one-to-one computer-to-​student <strong>in</strong>itiative has attracted national attention and a1

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