Wells
Central School to join Harvard center on rural education
Cambridge,
MA (July 22, 2019)— Today, Wells Central School District joins 50 rural schools
as a part of the National Center for Rural Education Research Networks
(NCRERN), an initiative of the Center for Education Policy Research (CEPR) at
Harvard University. Funded by the Institute of Education Sciences at the U.S.
Department of Education, the district will have the opportunity to apply the
Proving Ground model of evidence-based improvement to address chronic
absenteeism, college readiness, and college enrollment.
“Students
who are chronically absent are at-risk for lacking the necessary skills and
ultimately failing” says Thomas Sincavage, Superintendent of Wells Central
Schools. “By being a part of the National Center for Rural Education Research
Networks, our district anticipates learning from and collaborating with other
rural districts in New York and Ohio. We
are hoping to share ideas from evidence-based research that will help students
from Wells Central School meet their full potential.”
NCRERN
will produce tools for identifying students most at risk for absenteeism and
being unprepared for college as well as change management resources designed to
guide rural schools in addressing chronic absenteeism, college readiness, and
college enrollment. Throughout the five years, the Center’s member districts
will collaborate on shared challenges, learning from each other to guide future
work on school improvement.
“The
network brings together our expertise in strategic management and analytics and
our partners’ expertise in supporting rural students,” says Bi Vuong, Proving
Ground director and NCRERN interim director. “We are excited to have the
opportunity to collaborate with districts committed to learning with us and
sharing their expertise with each other.”
Applicants
were chosen based on alignment between the district’s strategic goals and the
work of the Center, capacity to utilize data for decision making, commitment to
continuous improvement practices, and geographic distribution.
“The
districts selected to be part of the National Center for Rural Education
Research Network deserve congratulations,” said Capital Region BOCES District
Superintendent Anita Murphy. “Their selection represents a uniquely valuable
opportunity for them to bring the power of evidence and the Proving Ground
improvement model to bear on some of the most pressing issues facing rural
districts including chronic absenteeism and college readiness and
enrollment. I look forward to learning
alongside our districts as they work to improve student outcomes together.”
Funding:
The Institute of Education Sciences is awarding $10 million to support the
National Center for Rural Education Research Networks (NCRERN); it is being
cost shared by IES (91%) and the Center of Education Policy Research (CEPR) at
Harvard University and its partners, New York and Ohio (9%).
About
NCRERN leadership: Thomas J. Kane is an economist and Walter H. Gale Professor
of Education at the Harvard Graduate School of Education, as well as faculty
director of the Center for Education Policy Research (CEPR). Douglas O. Staiger
is the John French Professor in Economics at Dartmouth College. Christopher
Avery is the Roy E. Larsen Professor of Public Policy at the Harvard Kennedy
School. Bi Vuong, Proving Ground Director (CEPR), will act as interim director
of the Center.
About
the Center for Education Policy Research at Harvard University: The Center for
Education Policy Research at Harvard University seeks to transform education
through quality research and evidence. CEPR and its partners believe all
students will learn and thrive when education leaders make decisions using
facts and findings, rather than untested assumptions. Learn more at
cepr.harvard.edu.
About
Proving Ground: Proving Ground, a CEPR initiative, works to make
evidence-gathering and evidence-use an intuitive part of how education agencies
conduct their daily work. Proving Ground utilizes a continuous improvement
framework to help agencies rapidly identify and test solutions to specific
challenges. Learn more at provingground.cepr.harvard.edu
About
the Institute of Education Sciences: The Institute of Education Sciences (IES)
is the independent and non-partisan statistics, research, and evaluation arm of
the U.S. Department of Education. Their mission is to provide scientific
evidence on which to ground education practice and policy and to share this
information in formats that are useful and accessible to educators, parents,
policymakers, researchers, and the public. Learn more at https://ies.ed.gov.
No comments:
Post a Comment