The Edvocate

Top Menu

Main Menu

  • Start Here
    • Our Brands
    • Governance
      • Lynch Education Consulting, LLC.
      • Dr. Lynch’s Personal Website
      • Careers
    • Write For Us
    • Books
    • The Tech Edvocate Product Guide
    • Contact Us
    • The Edvocate Podcast
    • Edupedia
    • Pedagogue
    • Terms and Conditions
    • Privacy Policy
  • PreK-12
    • Assessment
    • Assistive Technology
    • Best PreK-12 Schools in America
    • Child Development
    • Classroom Management
    • Early Childhood
    • EdTech & Innovation
    • Education Leadership
    • Equity
    • First Year Teachers
    • Gifted and Talented Education
    • Special Education
    • Parental Involvement
    • Policy & Reform
    • Teachers
  • Higher Ed
    • Best Colleges and Universities
    • Best College and University Programs
    • HBCU’s
    • Diversity
    • Higher Education EdTech
    • Higher Education
    • International Education
  • Advertise
  • The Tech Edvocate Awards
    • The Awards Process
    • Finalists and Winners of The 2025 Tech Edvocate Awards
    • Finalists and Winners of The 2024 Tech Edvocate Awards
    • Finalists and Winners of The 2023 Tech Edvocate Awards
    • Finalists and Winners of The 2021 Tech Edvocate Awards
    • Finalists and Winners of The 2022 Tech Edvocate Awards
    • Finalists and Winners of The 2020 Tech Edvocate Awards
    • Finalists and Winners of The 2019 Tech Edvocate Awards
    • Finalists and Winners of The 2018 Tech Edvocate Awards
    • Finalists and Winners of The 2017 Tech Edvocate Awards
    • Award Seals
  • Apps
    • GPA Calculator for College
    • GPA Calculator for High School
    • Cumulative GPA Calculator
    • Grade Calculator
    • Weighted Grade Calculator
    • Final Grade Calculator
  • The Tech Edvocate
  • Post a Job
  • AI Powered Personal Tutor

logo

The Edvocate

  • Start Here
    • Our Brands
    • Governance
      • Lynch Education Consulting, LLC.
      • Dr. Lynch’s Personal Website
        • My Speaking Page
      • Careers
    • Write For Us
    • Books
    • The Tech Edvocate Product Guide
    • Contact Us
    • The Edvocate Podcast
    • Edupedia
    • Pedagogue
    • Terms and Conditions
    • Privacy Policy
  • PreK-12
    • Assessment
    • Assistive Technology
    • Best PreK-12 Schools in America
    • Child Development
    • Classroom Management
    • Early Childhood
    • EdTech & Innovation
    • Education Leadership
    • Equity
    • First Year Teachers
    • Gifted and Talented Education
    • Special Education
    • Parental Involvement
    • Policy & Reform
    • Teachers
  • Higher Ed
    • Best Colleges and Universities
    • Best College and University Programs
    • HBCU’s
    • Diversity
    • Higher Education EdTech
    • Higher Education
    • International Education
  • Advertise
  • The Tech Edvocate Awards
    • The Awards Process
    • Finalists and Winners of The 2025 Tech Edvocate Awards
    • Finalists and Winners of The 2024 Tech Edvocate Awards
    • Finalists and Winners of The 2023 Tech Edvocate Awards
    • Finalists and Winners of The 2021 Tech Edvocate Awards
    • Finalists and Winners of The 2022 Tech Edvocate Awards
    • Finalists and Winners of The 2020 Tech Edvocate Awards
    • Finalists and Winners of The 2019 Tech Edvocate Awards
    • Finalists and Winners of The 2018 Tech Edvocate Awards
    • Finalists and Winners of The 2017 Tech Edvocate Awards
    • Award Seals
  • Apps
    • GPA Calculator for College
    • GPA Calculator for High School
    • Cumulative GPA Calculator
    • Grade Calculator
    • Weighted Grade Calculator
    • Final Grade Calculator
  • The Tech Edvocate
  • Post a Job
  • AI Powered Personal Tutor
  • How To Manage Non-Renewed Teachers As a School Leader

  • 9 Things Parents Should Never Say in an Email to Teachers

  • Print This Free Kindness Activity Guide for Your Classroom

  • Classroom Posters: Supporting English Language Learners

  • The Ultimate Guide to College Scholarships

  • These Hilarious Quotes From Students Will Have You Rolling

  • Easy Classroom Activities You Can Rinse and Repeat Using Adobe Express for Educators

  • Project-Based Learning Transforms Classroom Dynamics

  • Free Smithsonian Science Activity Guide

  • Should I Switch School Districts for More Money

Early Childhood & K-12 EdTechEdTech NewsUncategorized
Home›Early Childhood & K-12 EdTech›How technology helped deliver a taste of victory to a struggling Newark School

How technology helped deliver a taste of victory to a struggling Newark School

By Matthew Lynch
December 4, 2016
0
Spread the love

This article was written by JACKIE PUGH

Erskine Glover wants to see Quitman in demand like Newark’s top charter schools. (Amanda Brown / NJ Spotlight)

Erskine Glover wants to see Quitman in demand like Newark’s top charter schools. Photo: Amanda Brown / NJ Spotlight

When Sara Neufeld wrote in The Hechinger Report last year that Newark’s Quitman Street Renew School had the greatest test score gains in reading of all 45 elementary and middle schools in Newark the prior spring, we at Education Elements saw it as triumph.

Quitman Street is one of the schools that has used our blended learning models to help improve results. Our journey to personalized learning at Quitman Street Renew School began during the 2013-2014 school year. Because over 80 percent of their third and fourth graders were struggling readers, Principal Erskine Glover and other leaders at Quitman knew they needed to focus on early literacy skills, reading comprehension, and citing textual evidence. The plan was to use new instructional models to get better results.

With the focus set on reading, our recommendations around adaptive digital software that could fill that role took hold. In analyzing the school’s current offline curriculum, it was important to note the strengths of that program and where digital content could play a role in helping teachers quickly differentiate for their students. We wanted to supplement, not replace, what they were already doing.

Related: A three-year look at a school trying to turn around — and the kids depending on it

With our guidance, Quitman chose Lexia and Achieve3000, two strong options from our partner ecosystem, to account for the lack of early literacy skills among their struggling readers and to better adapt similar texts to each student’s’ instructional level to drive fluency and comprehension.

It was important to go with a layered approach for their digital content offerings in order for students to experience content in multiple ways. Students received direct, highly engaging and interactive tutorials through Lexia, while Achieve3000 allowed students to reflect, summarize and write down their reactions to articles outlining the current events happening today.

The instructional design, which we create with school leaders, accounts for the key components within a school day and reimagines how these components can be more personalized to better meet each students’ needs. We paired this design with the selected digital content and ensured there was sufficient time with their offline curriculum and a block to incorporate a blended in-class rotation model.

Related: A three-year look at a school trying to turn around — and the kids depending on it

This model provided the opportunities for teachers to go deeper with complex, grade level text for an hour and then break the class into differentiated groups that rotated to various stations, one being a digital station, while other stations included targeted small group time with the teacher and a chance for peer collaboration.

I know that these student gains and innovative classrooms are due to a thoughtful process, resilient and talented teaching staff and to the leaders who show up every day at the district office and at Quitman.

The team leading this work at Quitman, including Assistant Principal Evelyn Vargas and Data Coach Callie Franklin, closely monitored the implementation of the blended model by analyzing data to drive the support that teachers needed to be successful. With the rich data coming from the digital content providers on a daily basis, the teaching teams were able to quickly and decisively make instructional decisions as well.

The compilation of these actions certainly seems to have made a positive impact on Quitman’s student population and we’re excited to see the blended program grow to more grade levels and incorporate more digital content.

The school has come a long way given its long history of fluctuation in leadership and teaching quality, and its location as part of a district that is undergoing immense changes with heightened public scrutiny.

I know that these student gains and innovative classrooms are due to a thoughtful process, resilient and talented teaching staff and to the leaders who show up every day at the district office and at Quitman.

Jackie Pugh is former senior education consultant at Education Elements.

TagsEdtechedtechchatelearningSTEAMSTEM
Previous Article

My College Is Being Blackmailed

Next Article

Have You Hacked These Cognitive Tools?

Matthew Lynch

Related articles More from author

  • Policy & Reform

    Nutritional school lunches on the rise, study finds

    January 14, 2016
    By Matthew Lynch
  • Digital & Mobile TechnologyTrending Topics

    What cyber charter schools are and why their growth should worry us

    June 7, 2017
    By Matthew Lynch
  • STEMTrending Topics

    This science teacher says trust and hands-on lessons make all the difference for his middle-schoolers

    June 8, 2017
    By Matthew Lynch
  • DisabilitiesEdTech & InnovationSpecial Education

    Using Technology to Empower Students with Special Needs

    April 2, 2017
    By Matthew Lynch
  • Higher EducationK-12

    The A-Z of Education Blogs: Letters M-Q

    May 7, 2017
    By Matthew Lynch
  • Early Childhood & K-12 EdTechEdTech Startups & BusinessesHigher EducationHigher Education EdTech

    What Is the Best Time of the Year to Sell to Schools?

    June 21, 2018
    By Matthew Lynch

Search

Registration and Login

  • Register
  • Log in
  • Entries feed
  • Comments feed
  • WordPress.org

Newsletter

Signup for The Edvocate Newsletter and have the latest in P-20 education news and opinion delivered to your email address!

RSS Matthew on Education Week

  • Au Revoir from Education Futures November 20, 2018 Matthew Lynch
  • 6 Steps to Data-Driven Literacy Instruction October 17, 2018 Matthew Lynch
  • Four Keys to a Modern IT Approach in K-12 Schools October 2, 2018 Matthew Lynch
  • What's the Difference Between Burnout and Demoralization, and What Can Teachers Do About It? September 27, 2018 Matthew Lynch
  • Revisiting Using Edtech for Bullying and Suicide Prevention September 10, 2018 Matthew Lynch

About Us

The Edvocate was created in 2014 to argue for shifts in education policy and organization in order to enhance the quality of education and the opportunities for learning afforded to P-20 students in America. What we envisage may not be the most straightforward or the most conventional ideas. We call for a relatively radical and certainly quite comprehensive reorganization of America’s P-20 system.

That reorganization, though, and the underlying effort, will have much to do with reviving the American education system, and reviving a national love of learning.  The Edvocate plans to be one of key architects of this revival, as it continues to advocate for education reform, equity, and innovation.

Newsletter

Signup for The Edvocate Newsletter and have the latest in P-20 education news and opinion delivered to your email address!

Contact

The Edvocate
910 Goddin Street
Richmond, VA 23230
(601) 630-5238
[email protected]
  • situs togel online
  • dentoto
  • situs toto 4d
  • situs toto slot
  • toto slot 4d
Copyright (c) 2025 Matthew Lynch. All rights reserved.