Persolized Lerning Article 1
Persolized Lerning Article 1
Persolized Lerning Article 1
by
Doctor of Education
University of Pittsburgh
2018
UNIVERSITY OF PITTSBURGH
SCHOOL OF EDUCATION
by
It was defended on
and approved by
Dr. R. Gerard Longo, Clinical Associate Professor, Administrative and Policy Studies
Dissertation Advisor: Dr. Cynthia Tananis, Associate Professor, Administrative and Policy
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Copyright © by Matthew Paul Thomas
2018
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PERSONALIZED LEARNING: A CASE STUDY OF SUPPORTING LITERATURE
APPLIED TO PRACTICE AND IMPLEMENTATION IN A HIGH SCHOOL
This mixed methods case study examined a high school claiming to use personalized learning
strategies. A review of literature revealed guiding supports that are used as a lens for data
collection and analysis. The purpose of the study was to explore personalized learning through
evidence, indicating the presence or absence of the guiding supports derived from the literature,
focused specifically on the beliefs and practices of both teachers and principals. The seven
guiding supports included (1) Professional Development for Teachers; (2) Readily Available
Technology for all Students; (3) Flexible Scheduling; (4) Diagnosis of Relevant Learner
Characteristics; (5) Emphasis on Learning to Mastery; (6) Interdisciplinary Approaches; and (7)
Collegial School Culture Influencing Systemic Change. The study used two questions: 1) How
(2) How does the concept of personalized learning in a school map onto seven guiding
supports of personalized learning strategies drawn from the literature? To illuminate and
understand the qualities of the case, the study was conducted in several phases of inquiry.
Participants from the high school participated in an online survey. Subsequently, the survey data
was used as a filter to identify interview questions with both a teacher and a principal to
understand better how their experiences related to various supports for implementation as
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defined in the literature review. Analysis of several documents provided a third exploration of
the literature lenses. The study revealed that while personalized learning is a high-interest topic
in professional practice, the term has not been adequately defined. The study further revealed
that educators might benefit from unified explanations of how personalized learning impacts
expectations of performance at the local, state and federal levels. Finally, the study revealed that
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TABLE OF CONTENTS
PREFACE ...................................................................................................................................XV
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2.2.5 Interdisciplinary approaches ..................................................................... 19
2.2.7 Personalized devices: Readily available technology for all students ...... 22
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5.1 DEMOGRAPHIC DATA.................................................................................. 53
POINTS 57
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5.8.1 Essential starting points ............................................................................. 84
104
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6.2 READILY AVAILABLE TECHNOLOGY FOR ALL STUDENTS
School 118
School 121
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6.6.2 Mapping of interdisciplinary approaches at Central York High School
6.7.1 Description of a collegial school culture at Central York High School 124
literature.................................................................................................................... 125
134
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LIST OF TABLES
Table 1. Seven Guiding Supports Reflected as Examples of Evidence from Literature ............... 39
Table 7. Provision of Shared Collaboration Time During the Work Week .................................. 58
Table 13. Frequency of Implementation of Engaging in and Sustaining a Collegial Culture ..... 71
Table 16. Essential Starting Points - Coding Associated to the Teacher’s Interview .................. 76
Table 17. Pacing and Pedagogy – Coding to the Teacher’s Interview ....................................... 79
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Table 19. Essential Starting Points – Coding to the Principal’s Interview .................................. 84
Table 20. Pacing and Pedagogy – Coding to the Principal’s Interview ...................................... 87
Table 23. CYSD Ideal Learning Experience Placard - Mapping to Guiding Supports................ 97
Table 24. Learner Agency Continuum - Mapping to Guiding Supports ..................................... 101
Table 25. Concept Mappings to Professional Development for Teachers (GS1) ....................... 106
Table 26. Concept Mappings to Readily Available Technology for ALL Students (GS2) .......... 109
Table 27. Central York Bell Schedule, 2017-2018 School Year ................................................. 110
Table 29. Concept Mappings to Diagnosis of Relevant Learner Characteristics (GS4)............ 117
Table 30. Concept Mappings to Emphasis on Learning to Mastery (GS5) ................................ 120
Table 32. Concept Mappings to Collegial School Culture Influencing Systemic Change (GS7)126
Table 33. Top Two Priorities of Guiding Supports of Teachers versus Principals .................... 127
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LIST OF FIGURES
Figure 11. Learner Agency Continuum, attributed to Mr. Ryan Caufman, High School Principal
....................................................................................................................................................... 99
Figure 12. Conceptual Framework of Personalized Learning (Original to Study) .................... 132
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PREFACE
In the course of writing a dissertation, there are many human supports that make the experience
possible. It would be impossible to list every single person, so I offer my thanks to some very
special individuals:
I would like to thank my wife, Heather, and my sons Owen and Simon for their constant
patience and love throughout the many years that I have spent as a graduate student at the
University of Pittsburgh. I would like to thank my parents, Millard and Jean Thomas, for
instilling a love for learning early in my life, and extend a thanks to my in-laws, William and
To my Dissertation Chair, Dr. Cynthia Tananis, I thank you for never giving up on me,
finding each opportunity to craft my thinking, redirect when necessary, and refine my written
language. I consider you my friend and hope to collaborate with you for many years to come. I
would also like to thank my entire Dissertation Committee for their expertise and insight as the
To my former colleague and dear lifelong friend, Dr. Susan Anderson, you have been a
guiding light of learning and willing thought partner through all of my professional work. My
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1.0 INTRODUCTION
1.1 BACKGROUND
prepare students for an evolving new economy. Parents often assert the notion that students are
bombarded with requirements to function in a twenty-first century world. For example, outside
of the classroom, students are constantly learning new content by engaging with social media,
faster than their teachers could possibly deliver within the confines of a traditional classroom
period.
In stark contrast, within many K-12 learning venues, the process of education has
remained largely unchanged, designed around fixed time structures, institutional traditions, and
value and belief principles ingrained into teachers who face a challenge to adapt their practice
appropriately. Teachers who were taught from kindergarten through high school in traditional
“one size fits all” classrooms may experience great challenge in adapting their learning
many teachers acquired their professional skills and knowledge as a result of instructional
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Some would argue that this static approach perpetuates a delay in the process of change
measurement of student achievement has uncovered specific deficiencies in the current design of
schooling as students are overwhelmed with content mismatched to their ability levels, rather
than being taught to a level of functional competence. To illustrate the case in which content and
experiences are not personalized on an individual level, Wright, Horn, and Sanders (1997)
describe a concern about academic gains decreasing as the average achievement levels of
students rise. They infer that “possible explanations include lack of opportunity for high-scoring
students to proceed at their own pace, lack of challenging materials, lack of accelerated course
offerings, and concentration of instruction on the average or below-average student” (p. 66).
There is an emerging revolution within the profession, where the redesign of “how we do
school” within schools may change with the opportunity of further exploration and enhanced
professional practice. Recently, the concept of Mass Customized Learning (McGarvey &
attainment (McGarvey & Schwan, 2012). Their proposal requires practitioners to suspend
traditional definitions of outcomes and to identify the processes that underlie and constitute deep
and authentic learning. Most often, their preferred learning environment strategically involves
the use of mobile or personalized devices, commonly in a one-to-one application. Such devices
permit educators to implement different pedagogical approaches and time flexibility for students
to learn at a mastery level - the core of the authors’ beliefs about personalized learning.
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In contrast to Mass Customized Learning, the term personalized learning is used for this
study to facilitate analysis and investigation of the body of literature assembled. It is intended to
encapsulate an approach to a learning relationship with a student, rather than a cliché or fad-like
name, such as Mass Customized Learning. The former part of the name, “personalized,” is
similar but not identical to mass customization of virtually anything. Paralleled examples of a
“customized” lifestyle in McGarvey and Schwan’s work (2012) are “customized” Amazon
shopping lists, tailor-made Starbucks coffee beverages, and preferred music choices within
iTunes playlists. The authors infer that learning environments could receive similar treatment.
In a hypothetical example, students would create topical “wish lists” to make a choice of content
to study, enact a pace of course progression of their own will, and seek outcomes that
The goal of this study was to investigate the implementation of personalized learning in a high
school setting and map the observed practices to a framework of concepts from the literature
related to and in support of personalized learning as a means to research promising practices for
influencing successful integration of personalized learning into innovative school operational and
scheduling formats and sought to understand the most promising areas where personalized
abandon the industrial, time-based approach to instruction and replace it with a contemporary
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learning-based system that fulfills every learner’s need at his/her present performance level.
Rickabaugh (2016) describes the industrial model of learning as an experience “to provide
substantially the same learning stimuli to everyone in the class at the same time” (p. 22).
most effective modality of learning, affording a learner a scenario in which to attain mastery-
level comprehension of skills. The description may include highlighting essential concepts in a
content area hoping to engage the student in content and activities that are relevant and exciting.
There are varied themes in the practice and the research that assume a similar linkage
conversations among practitioners, the terms are used interchangeably, often to the point of
confusion. The heart of the personalized approach is that instruction is intended to be different
for every student’s learning style and environmental needs to enable him or her to achieve
content and skill mastery. Rickabaugh (2016) refers to this as “learning that starts with the
learner” inferring that “any connections that students make will be based on their experiences,
interests, goals and needs” (p. 24). The root of the word “personalized” is “personal.” It is
necessary to distinguish between the concepts of personal and personalized, as they are not
identical.
There is diversity in the reasons why a high school would pursue personalized learning at
all. Toshalis and Nakkula (2012) indicate one possible reason, related to how high school
students seek greater independence, stating learning environments “that capitalize on the power
of self-determination can substantially increase achievement and motivation” (p. 32). One
impetus is the proliferation of mobile devices, which are now in the hands of teenagers, perhaps
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the country could be mapped on a continuum of purely traditional methods of instruction (e.g.,
The latter on the continuum are often schools that advertise and endeavor to offer personalized
learning.
My background in teaching various levels of Chemistry and Science in grades 9-12 and
learning; I have witnessed so many students contending with the academic content of today’s
school instruction in a half-hearted manner. Student ownership of the learning environment may
lead directly to meaningful student involvement (Fletcher, 2008). Many students lack a desire to
participate in educational content with depth, often because of the pacing of a course and
inadequate time allotted. Personalizing the learning experience for a student has the potential to
center educational practice on the goals of differentiating instruction, adapting pacing and
attainment of mastery is possible through highly meaningful and individualized learning. The
hope is to reveal the interconnections among the practices of personalized learning, as mapped
To clearly reiterate, the purpose of this study was to investigate the implementation of
personalized learning within a high school setting, mapping observed practices onto a framework
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1.3 RESEARCH QUESTIONS
observable practices as they relate to the literature underpinnings. The goal was to follow a case
study design with one high school; this effort was to better understand the school’s practices
regarding the personalized learning they advertise to their constituents, subsequently mapping
the findings onto a body of literature derived from similar instructional practices. There are two
‘personalized learning?’
2. How does the concept of personalized learning in a school map onto seven guiding
Personal learning involves an “intellectual intimacy” (Dewey, 1907) between the learner and the
content to be learned, perhaps as a method to uncover his or her personal interests in the world.
Personalized learning shifts the focus onto how the student receives an instructional experience,
and how the learning approach is tailored for individual competency and mastery, at a pace of
individual choice. John Dewey (1907) supported a notion of personalized learning over a
excerpt from The School and the Life of the Child: “I may have exaggerated somewhat in order to
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make plain the typical points of the old education: its passivity of attitude, its mechanical
Dewey (1907) further elaborates that the center of gravity is unfortunately outside the
child. In this notion, Dewey (1907) states “the center of gravity is in the teacher, the text-book,
anywhere and everywhere you please except in the immediate instincts and activities of the child
himself” (p. 51). Also, in his 1907 work, Dewey predicted a change which is coming into
education premised on this shifting of the center of gravity. Then Dewey (1970) describes this as
a change, a revolution, not unlike that introduced by Copernicus when the astronomical
center shifted from the earth to the sun. In this case, the child becomes the sun about
which the appliances of education revolve; he is the center about which they are
Some could argue that personal learning has promise, enabling a pathway to the ability
and interest levels of the student; the child attains mastery via the instructor’s facilitation of
strategies, devices, or tasks. The point is for children to answer their questions about the world,
gaining full comprehension of concepts with efficacy. With the advent of modern technology in
the form of personal, mobile devices, often referred to as 1:1 device programs, the action of
bringing personalized learning to schools, en masse, has the potential to become a vision
fulfilled. Zheng, Arada, Niiya, and Warschauer (2014) elaborated on the use of mobile devices
in schools by creatively listening to student voices, collecting perspective and opinions of how
students perceive their learning with the addition of mobile devices in classrooms. Albeit
specific to laptops, the study (Zheng et al., 2014) found that more than half of student comments
indicated that “laptops improved learning efficiency” and “creating activities that are made more
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efficient with laptops may be important in garnering and sustaining student support for the
Personalizing a learning environment is not new in K-12 education. The goal is not to
seek out how this is a nouveau approach to teaching and learning. It has become, however, a
more intriguing model of educating students as students have greater access to mobile devices.
An analogy to be applied is one of a garden and the tools associated with a garden. While
planting seeds and growing fruit has often been routine and purposeful, the soil of the garden
itself has become more fertile with improved tooling. Mobile devices (e.g., smartphones, iPads,
and laptops) with the addition of learning management systems (e.g., Schoology, Moodle,
Blackboard) have the potential to make the personalization more accessible for administrators
Peter Senge (1990) is responsible for seminal work on the concept of learning organizations
where interactive and interdependent learning predominates. The primary rationale for the
creation and existence of such organizations is that, given scenarios of accelerated change, only
those organizations that are flexible, adaptive, and productive may realize operational success.
While all people have the capacity to learn, the structures within which they are often required to
operate may restrict the type of reflection and commitment that is paramount to learning.
According to Senge, organizations expand their capacities to create their own futures through
interdependence, where each person recognizes his or her commitment to the learning of others.
Further, Senge (1990) found that, for many learners, truly exceptional learning experiences are
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deeply personal, meaningful, and memorable when the environment is engaging, enlightening
and optimally relevant. The classic bell curve may be the catalyst for a highly individualized
survival type of thinking about learning where one learner’s success is defined relative to all
Senge (1990) recognizes that survival learning, or what is more often termed “adaptive
“adaptive learning” and infuse “generative learning,” which is learning that enhances our
capacity to “create” (Senge, 1990, p. 14). The dimension that distinguishes learning
organizations from more traditional organizations is the shared responsibility for mastery of
content and the efficacy of a truly creative learning operation (Senge, 1990).
Senge (1990) identifies five disciplines that converge to provide the foundation for
innovative learning organizations. Senge (1990) further specifies that the disciplines are
itemized as systems thinking; personal mastery; mental models; building shared vision; and team
learning. He elaborates on the need for these disciplines to have a working functionality within
thinking. Senge (1990) writes that systems thinking is needed more than ever because we are
whereas effective learning organizations have advantages for capacity resulting in significant
adaptation and change; they transition from simply reacting to the current conditions and exhibit
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a true capacity to influence and shape the future. The author advocates that the best pathway to
truly meaningful and personalized learning is through social and interactive exchanges.
students to their institutions, in an effort to compete with non-traditional schools such as charter
schools and cyber-charter schools. Some may argue that awareness and cognition of learning
learners enrolled in K-12 education environments. With a new generation of students currently
enrolled in K-12 education dubbed “Generation Z,” educators may be surprised to observe that
personalized learning feels natural due to their often ‘made-to-order’ life environment. Seemiller
and Grace (2017) elaborated on this generation by stating “not only are they accustomed to
engaging in individual learning, our study found that these students prefer it because they can
focus, set their own pace, and make meaning of their learning before having to share that
meaning with others” (p. 23). The essential learning needs of our current K-12 students provide
us fertile ground for exploring the topic of personalized learning in high schools.
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2.0 REVIEW OF THE LITERATURE
The purpose of this chapter is to engage the reader in a multitude of literature lenses that support
levels and modes of learning when present in the same classroom (Stradling & Saunders, 1993;
Tomlinson, 2003). As Stradling and Saunders (1993) state, differentiated instruction is “the
process of matching learning targets, tasks, activities, resources, and learning support to
individual learners’ needs, styles, and rates of learning” (p. 129). In contrast to personalized
learning. Dewey’s (1907) “shifting center of gravity” now may be contemplated as a shift in the
locus of control from learning facilitator (i.e., teacher) to the learner. Tomlinson (1999) infers
that settings utilizing differentiated instruction are designed to deliver varied learning scenarios
for students that have a differing competency, modality/style of learning, and varied interests.
Tomlinson (1999) further suggests that, when differentiating instruction, teachers can challenge
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all learners by providing varied levels of difficulty, adapting the amount of scaffolding, and
modifying the way in which students demonstrate effort. Teachers using differentiated
instruction often have a goal to capitalize on the individual student’s growth and abilities by
delivering learning at the precise level of the student’s understanding, further maximizing their
learning experience.
This is slightly different from personalized learning, where teachers facilitate learning
activities and experiences, and in contrast, provide choice to their students in which path they
choose. According to Tomlinson (1999), differentiated classrooms have a core belief that
students of similar age differ in their readiness for learning and have unique life experiences and
circumstances. Tomlinson (1999) further asserts that differences in abilities and experience are
not negligible, but rather should be adapted for pacing and the level of intervention that they need
from their teacher. Tomlinson (1999) concludes, "for all its promise…effective differentiation is
complex to use and thus difficult to promote in schools. Moving toward differentiation is a long-
however, it is often teacher-chosen and teacher-driven. Another similarity between the two
One attribute of personalized learning is the self-directed, self-pacing of the learning experience.
Self-paced instruction is an arrangement in which individual students set a personal schedule for
learning and monitor their self-progress (Good, 1973). Most importantly, students progress at
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their own rates through the curriculum. Various forms of self-paced instruction have been used
sporadically in classrooms throughout the United States since the mid-nineteenth-century (Kulik,
1982); thus, self-paced learning exists in some facets of contemporary school culture, most likely
materials, perhaps generated by B. F. Skinner’s earlier position paper The Science of Learning
and the Art of Teaching (1954). Skinner’s work was written in part from the vantage point of
parental frustration with the pedagogy observed through his daughter’s mathematics classroom.
One of the issues that Skinner (1954) noted in his paper was “the lack of a skillful program
which moves forward through a series of progressive approximations to the final complex
behavior desired” (p. 91). His perspective prompted discourse on how any learning could
implemented at all levels of education (Gagne & Briggs, 1979). Systems such as Individually
Prescribed Instruction (IPI) and the Personalized System of Instruction (PSI) relied on self-paced
methods. These methods have since been incorporated into the development of Computer-
Assisted Instruction (CAI) via the emergence of the personal computer in the 1980s, and most
recently, the mobile device in the first decade of the twenty-first century. According to a 2015
Pew Research Center study, approximately 88 percent of United States teenagers (e.g., ages 13 to
17) possess or have access to a mobile phone, and a majority of teens (i.e., 73%) have
collaboration opportunities, and time-variable courses liberate learning away from an exclusively
group-paced format. This means that various forms of self-paced learning may differ from one
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another in important instructional aspects. Self-paced instruction is a fundamentally embedded
ideal within personalized learning environments where the learner accepts responsibility for
Since the educational landscape has changed with the advent of charter schools and competition,
I have observed that the culture has shifted to one of rapid change in practice, perhaps best
served by imaginative leadership. The emergence of mobile devices in students’ hands has
caused a disruptive shift whereby educators are challenged by learning environments and
strategies that are not yet fully vetted. Darling-Hammond (1993) stresses the need for all
students to learn at high levels and views the task of instruction as that of enabling diverse
learners to construct their knowledge and to develop their talents in useful and meaningful ways.
She proffers that effective educators should be skilled at improvising and adapting their own
teaching practices to address varying ability levels and diverse individual interests. Perhaps the
most salient examples of effective educator practice are those that evidence significant flexibility
converging themes of research and educational practice, evident within the current educational
landscape: the concept of mastery learning; the practice of diagnosing salient learning
characteristics; an increasingly collegial school culture influencing systemic change; the practice
development for teachers, and readily available technology for all students. These literature
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items are provided here for analysis as “guiding supports” of personalized learning practices in
Perhaps the most lacking area of contemporary instruction of the masses is the notion of
such as eligible content and pace but tend not to specify the degree to which students should be
able to demonstrate their learning of a given concept. Moreover, logistical constraints (e.g., bell
schedules, school years) may end up being the final determiners of how much instructional time
is given to all concepts. These constraints have the potential to stifle flexibility for teachers to
accelerate and to modify learning experiences for advanced learners or to decelerate and expand
remediation and re-teaching for learners who experience difficulty. It is important to note that
both acceleration and deceleration should require rigor and struggle with content.
In United States schools, the term “Generation Y or GenY-ers” has been used to describe
current school students, defined as children born after 1995. These individuals have been
brought into a culture of frequent gratification on many social and experiential levels, perhaps
caused by the influx of handheld technology and consistent access to the Internet. While one-to-
one mobile computing implementations have brought about changes in teacher pedagogy, these
initiatives have also affected student motivation and engagement (Bebell, 2005; Silvernail &
Lane, 2004; Swan, van’t Hooft, & Kratcoski, 2005). Another confounding feature of mobile
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learning is how instructors assess the work of learners. Some classrooms achieve minimum
learning towards mastery, but may result in at least a passing grade for the student. In other
words, in some classrooms, it would be easier for a learner to just pass a test than to demonstrate
mastery knowledge of individual concepts. Some could argue that instructional technique
required to result in student skill mastery is contrary and divergent from the learning pathway
that constructed the instructor’s learning, potentially causing an unfortunate rift in expectations
Educators regularly make decisions about the children whom they teach to assess their readiness
learning for a particular age or grade level. The assessment of group readiness is a traditional
However, if educators are to meet the needs of every student in the classroom, the challenge then
becomes ‘how’ to personalize learning in a way that attends to the learning readiness of the
In the text Thought and Language, Vygotsky (1986) established the expression “zone of
proximal development” or ZPD. This statement descriptively serves as a working definition for
a student’s intellectual readiness for attaining a learning task or concept. ZPD is one way to
conceptualize the notion of learner readiness, but it is used very finitely to describe a discrepancy
between what a student may accomplish independently as opposed to what the student would
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Perhaps instructors would postulate that the precise area of personalized learning is on a
continuum of learner readiness from ‘monotony’ to ‘apprehension’ of the content being learned
in which every learner is unique and different. Readiness levels across a classroom of students
differ; therefore, the levels of challenge provided would need to vary as well (Tomlinson, 2003;
Vygotsky, 1986).
To further the notion of learner readiness, it is important to note the discrepancy between
readiness and student motivation. Csikszentmihalyi, Rathunde, and Whalen (1993) evidenced a
strategic correlation distinctly between these two variables. Their study, involving over two
hundred students, queried why some adolescents appear to attach to the development of
perceived talents while others in their peer group disengage and neglect the same. Their
conclusions portray a strong correlation between the complexity of the learning task(s) and the
low involvement in the learning task with a corresponding decrease in concentration and focus.
In contrast, those learners who entered the learning task with minimal skill related to the actual
task demonstrated low involvement, low achievement, and declining self-confidence. The
personal perceptions of their individual competence and confidence. The ideal learning
experience is one of adequate skill and challenge. Further, the researchers found that instructors
who effectively develop students’ talents plan and design instructional activities that are
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2.2.3 Collegial school culture influencing systemic change
The literature on the topic of Collegial School Culture seems to be organized around three major
themes: change, culture, and curriculum. Educators hoping to create an environment of learning
that is personalized to the student may view it as an opportunity to expand their own professional
practice; however, this is a shift in culture that may be perceived as intimidating for teachers to
implement. The discussion of a collegial school culture in support of personalized learning must
ensue to empower educators to study personalized learning. For this reason, cultural change and
A focus on systemic change across the United States is currently guiding professional
measures of both students and educators. The catalysts for the reform efforts are often complex.
Fullan (2000) summarizes his belief into a formula: E =MCA2. The variable E refers to the rate
of Efficacy of the system; M refers to the Motivation for reform (i.e., will, purpose, commitment)
while C refers to the Capacity for reform (i.e., available resources, know-how, skills). A2 refers
With the complexity of establishing “who” is responsible for exhibiting the reform in
schools, Fullan’s formula holds true today, as professional development is intimately associated
with all tenets of this computation (2000). Expanding on the reform effort, the “who” also
becomes of paramount importance influencing how educators measure the scope and scale of
conceptual change or enacted pedagogical principles than to record and quantify the presence or
measure the spread of “norms of interaction” than the number of teachers or schools involved in
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an initiative (Coburn, 2003, p. 9). The scale of data collection when considered in the context of
the moniker “school reform” has social and political implications, as public policy is driven by
multitudes of data collected across schools, districts, intermediate units, states, and national
regions.
Most secondary schools design a “bell schedule” for students of four to eight periods of equal
length; a typical student schedule specifies a time for travel between classes and provides time
for serving and eating lunch. The concept of a bell schedule is premised on the factory-model of
nineteenth and twentieth centuries. Innovative notions, such as open education and non-graded
schools, have inspired school leaders to implement flexible options for both students and
teachers.
In addition to the innovation of flexible time schedules, interdisciplinary teaming was also
brought into planning discussions as a catalyst to teach concepts that span multiple academic
conveyed as a “sense of respect for what is important to students and supports them as they make
responsible decisions” (p. 68). He further recognizes the notion of “anytime, anywhere learning”
where educators may “support student learning…under a wide range of circumstances” inclusive
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What is more fascinating is that the concept of interdisciplinary teaming is not a new
concept. During the 1960s and 1970s, this approach toward an interdisciplinary teaming was
dubbed the Pontoon Transitional Design (PTD), an integral component of the NASSP Model
Schools Project. PTD had a goal of developing a temporary “pontoon bridge” of time during the
school day during which teachers gather in interdisciplinary groups with a goal of spanning the
gap between educating mass numbers of students while personalizing education. It further
making, scheduling, grouping, and cross-integration of academic content with teachers during
the time afforded to the “pontoon” component of a school day (Georgiades, 1969).
The process of establishing school culture where all stakeholders, especially educators, possess
ownership and are motivated to receive professional development is a continuously evolving lens
within the literature. Sociologist Dan C. Lortie (1975) in his book Schoolteacher: A Sociological
Study expressed the complexity of schools and the educators that teach students within their
walls. Specifically, he defined educators as possessing three characteristics which would have a
significant impact on how they approach professional development. The first, “presentism,” is a
short-term perspective that prevents educators from envisioning or planning collaboratively for
long-term, systemic change. The second, “conservatism,” is a mistrust of reform initiatives and a
reluctance to change everyday classroom practices, even in the face of research findings and
pupil learning outcomes suggesting that better approaches are needed. The third,
“individualism,” is identified as teachers closing their classroom doors and working in isolation
from colleagues and administrators, which has been linked to weak teamwork, lower levels of
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teacher efficacy and self-efficacy, less relational trust, failed innovations and reforms, and lower
Social cognitivist Albert Bandura (1986) identified four sources of self-efficacy: enactive
school culture, and specifically to teacher professional development, is enactive mastery, which
is a condition whereby educators rely on perceptions of past mastery to produce information that
is used to make judgments about present capabilities (Bray-Clark & Bates, 2003). Educators
may appreciate an opportunity to participate in professional development that will lead them to
mastery of new teaching strategies and exposure to curriculum content before any leadership
expectation for classroom implementation. When teachers are challenged to use their learning
from professional development, and can do so successfully, they are more likely to use that
learning when they return to a classroom setting (Bray-Clark & Bates, 2003).
structures in school, particularly when used in a specified content area. Penuel, Fishman,
“a) There must be a good ‘fit’ between the curriculum and the local context, shaped
shaped by the ability of the professional development providers to meet the training
needs of the teachers; and c) The coherence of the professional development is most
effective when aligned to educators’ professional goals and the goals for their students’
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Thus, meaningful professional learning has the potential to enhance positive school
In a quantitative study, Cwikla (2003) found that educator training focused on the
National Council for the Teaching of Mathematics (NCTM) Standards had not yet explicitly
described professional development activities related to teacher learning goals, nor did it specify
curriculum innovation could not be defined with fidelity until individual teacher learning goals
were explicit. Subsequent empirical research on the methods to support teacher development
and their respective learning environments could not accumulate until explicit goals were
Each study within the body of literature reviewed here offers a contextual lens within the
research that is presented. In whole, these findings are quite varied. It is fascinating to see,
within the literature, a significant focus on the attributes of the human psyche when considering
individual human needs of teachers as adult learners. Not surprisingly, the educator becomes the
learner when in the setting of professional development activities, and thereby, requires
While one-to-one mobile computing implementations have brought about changes in teacher
pedagogy, these initiatives have also affected student motivation and engagement (Bebell, 2005;
Silvernail & Lane, 2004; Swan et al., 2005). Bebell (2005) surveyed over four hundred seventh
grade students and thirty-five teachers during the first six months of a one-to-one laptop program
22
in six schools in New Hampshire. The survey questions focused on access to, and use of,
technology. He found that students almost doubled their use of the laptops during the
implementation period across all the main subject areas. The teachers reported improvement in
student participation, motivation, attendance, and their ability to work independently and in
groups. Additionally, over ninety percent of teachers reported an increase in student engagement
for both traditional and at-risk students. Students also displayed more effort in the quality of
products they produced, were more willing to complete new drafts when assigned writing
Silvernail and Lane (2004) found similar results for student engagement when they
evaluated the initial phase of the Maine Learning Technology Initiative (MLTI). The study used
a mixed-method approach and analyzed over twenty-six thousand student surveys regarding the
use of laptops to support instruction. It also included one thousand seven hundred parent
surveys, along with site visits, observations, and document analysis. The researchers found that
almost seventy percent of the students reported being “more involved in school and with their
classmates” and that the laptops “made school more interesting” (Silvernail & Lane, 2004, p. 17).
predict that a learning device such as an iPad or Chromebook has the potential to enhance the
learning experience; technology, however, brings a new and evolving set of leadership
challenges. Implementing a one-to-one program can bring about several challenges for teachers
and administrators working at a school. The issues that arise from these problems may cause
teachers to become frustrated. These factors include time constraints, the amount of staff
development required, problems with student behavior, and the lack of technical support (The
23
Abell Foundation, 2008; Brodzik, 2012; Rousseau, 2007). Classroom management is an
Teachers with strong classroom management skills will have a higher chance of being
able to change their curriculum to coincide with the introduction of technology (Brodzik, 2012).
Researchers have found that even with clear discipline procedures, laptops in every student’s
hands can be a forum for a variety of challenges. Rousseau (2007) compared student discipline
during one-to-one laptop programs in low- and high-socioeconomic (SES) schools in Maine.
She collected qualitative data through observations and interviews and found significant behavior
issues related to the laptops mainly in the low SES school. Students were intentionally damaging
their laptops. Participants in the study reported abuses ranging from liquids being poured on the
laptop to students “trying to round the edges by dragging it on the street out a moving car”
These distractions also occurred in the classroom setting. During an unstructured time,
students were observed listening to music, accessing inappropriate websites, and instant
messaging (Rousseau, 2007). Tasgold (2012) found similar results from an analysis of
experiences with one-to-one computing among teachers and students in a high school in North
Carolina. She conducted interviews with sixteen students and three teachers and observed six
classrooms. She found students using proxies to bypass Internet filters meant to keep them from
accessing inappropriate websites. Students in the study also admitted that having the laptop
encouraged off-task behaviors such as checking their emails or accessing social networking sites
(Tasgold, 2012).
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2.3 ALIGNMENTS TO CASE STUDY DESIGN
In case study design, research questions guide decisions regarding the subject to be studied, as
well as help to craft a “blueprint” of how the case study will be conducted. Yin (2014) notes that
“research design is much more than a work plan” (p. 29) and encourages researchers to avoid
situations in which the evidence and outcomes do not correspond to the initially proposed
research questions. He adds that an excellent research design should evolve to deal with a
logical problem to be resolved. The actual design of a case study should not be viewed as a
checklist or work plan. Yin encourages researchers to place whole focus on how the design
Yin (2014) creates a framework for a case study research design, placing emphasis in five
areas: (a) study questions, (b) study propositions, (c) unit of analysis – “the case,” (d) a logic that
links data to propositions, and (e) criteria for interpreting the findings of the case study (p. 36).
The first three components of the framework lead the researcher to identify data that are to be
collected, whereas the lattermost two elements infer “what is to be done after the data have been
When in the design phase of a case study, theory development is highly recommended.
Yin (2014) encourages a straightforward theoretical statement from the outset of the initial
research design and deliberation, to manifest strong fidelity and identifiable linkages to all five
desired areas in the research design. Theory development is supported by a review of the
literature surrounding the theory, those that are similar to the theory, and those that are divergent
or are disadvantageous to the research design, as a way to eliminate those options for further
study. Yin (2014) also employs the use of theory to generalize from other case studies, in an
effort to build capacity for a depth of understanding of a researcher’s own case study. He refers
25
to “analytic generalization” and “statistical generalization,” both serving as strategies to compare
and contrast the current case study design with lessons learned from other research projects.
Analytic generalization refers to the role of a theory within a research design. In contrast,
statistical generalization refers to how a researcher could comparatively simplify empirical data
gleaned from other research, such as making an inference across an entire population, as
compared to an individual sampling (Yin, 2014, p. 40). Researchers need to know the
confidence in which they may extrapolate a theory’s functionality from a small sampling of data,
as compared to a large population of data. Yin (2014) denotes a “fatal flaw” when a case has a
minimal sample size, which nullifies the ability for the sample to represent any larger population
of data.
Well-reviewed descriptive case studies, often in a narrative format, enable the researcher to
engage complex projects and make them accessible in an attractive fashion for, at times, a non-
researcher audience. The scope of the case study design is flexible and broad, ranging from brief
summaries to annotated accounts. Case study enables a “storytelling” approach, whereas the
researcher can propose the beginning of ideas, an exploration of what was observed, and
sometimes “why,” restate the goals of the research, delve into particular phenomena, and often
present outcomes in their original complexity. The latitude to obtain varied forms of data gives
the case study researcher an ability to explore new research ideas and discuss the evolving
characteristics of a project.
26
Despite their advantages, case studies have received criticisms. Yin (2014) discusses
three types of arguments against case study research. First, case studies are often accused of lack
of rigor. Yin (2014) notes that, “Too many times, the case study investigator has been sloppy,
and has allowed equivocal evidence or biased views to influence the direction of the findings and
conclusions” (p. 20). Some critics note that case studies establish a minimal basis for scientific
generalization since they use a small number of subjects. The question raised by Yin (2014) is
“how can you generalize from a single case?” (p. 20). Tellis (1997) also explored a dependency
Case studies are often identified as being too long, difficult to conduct and producing a
massive amount of documentation (Yin, 2014). If analyzing a sampling of students over several
years, a single researcher would be facing a monumental task of handling copious amounts of
data in that timeframe. Data that are not managed and organized systematically become
sampling cases. Yin, however, believes that establishing parameters and an appropriate research
context are of paramount importance when compared to designing for a large sample size. The
establishment of parameters, a well-organized plan for data collection, and clarity of context will
In recent years, an increasing number of K-12 institutions are boasting the strategy of
personalized learning, appearing to address individualized needs of students who have multiple
27
learning styles. From John Dewey’s (1907) “shift in the center of gravity” to the present-day
shift in the locus of control from teacher to student, described by Peter Senge as the “discipline
learning have persisted from initial iterations of programmed learning to the present-day Mass
Although well-grounded in the belief that personalized learning is, and ought to be the
goal, practical issues such as scheduling constraints, shortage of time, and limited resources have
impeded attempts to implement a sustainable model to the fullest extent. Additional studies are
needed to understand the full potential of personalized learning with twenty-first century
During 2015, the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation engaged the RAND Corporation to
committed to participate in this study (Pane, Steiner, Baird, & Hamilton, 2015). According to
the report, student achievement was the focus of the study, providing a quantitative measurement
different systems, a multitude of practices and varied learning environments, all three of which
What has not been studied as intently are the perceptions and beliefs of administrators
and teachers that are working within schools that ‘advertise’ a personalized learning approach to
their constituents, but are not following a prescribed organizational approach or research-tested
methodology. These are the schools, particularly at the secondary-level, that interest me because
there is a distinct possibility that the presence and notion of personalized learning in schools will
28
grow in popularity during the next decade. The business of schools is evolving, perhaps due to
the competition of other learning environments, such as charter schools, cyber charter schools,
learning centers (e.g., Sylvan and Huntingdon Learning Centers), all in concert with new devices
instruction.
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3.0 METHOD
3.1 INTRODUCTION
This case study examined a high school claiming to use personalized learning strategies. It
focused specifically on the beliefs and practices of both teachers and principals. I will use the
conceptual framework of guiding supports discussed in Chapter 2 as a lens for data collection
and analysis. To illuminate and understand the qualities of the case, the study was conducted in
two phases of inquiry. Participants from the high school participated in an online survey.
Subsequently, the survey data was used as a filter to identify interview questions with both a
teacher and a principal to understand better how their experiences related to various supports for
implementation as defined in the literature review (See Section 2.2). The sections that follow
serve to describe the case study design, identify the participants, and describe the methods used
This case study focused on a proposed conceptual framework derived from the literature sources
found in Chapter 2. As the literature review revealed, seven guiding supports have the potential
30
learning within schools: (a) emphasis on learning to mastery, (b) diagnosis of relevant learner
characteristics, (c) collegial school culture supporting systemic change, (d) flexible scheduling,
(e) interdisciplinary approaches, (f) professional development for teachers, and (g) readily
The purpose of the study was to explore personalized learning through evidence
indicating the presence or absence of these guiding supports derived from the literature. This
case study examined a high school claiming to implement personalized learning practices. The
students.
Sources of evidence used for the purpose of this study include survey data from teachers
and principals as well as two follow-up interviews. Data types included perceptions of
flexible scheduling within the master schedule, including teacher discretionary options for the
use of instructional time; and documentation indicating availability and ease of access of mobile
devices for all students. These descriptors of data sources align to the seven guiding supports
31
Figure 1: Conceptual Framework of Personalized Learning
that personalized learning strategies are in place in the high school of study. Further, the
conceptual framework served as a common reference between the researcher and the
participants, to lead discussions and facilitate data collection related to personalized learning
Contrary to Yin (2014), who would most likely recommend a narrow and regimented design for
case study method, Stake (2005) argues for a flexible design, which would allow researchers to
make major changes even after they proceed from their initially proposed design to the research
itself. Merriam and Tisdell (2016) posit, “the single most defining characteristic of case study
research lies in delimiting the object of study: the case” (p. 38). The “what” is a single entity
32
around which there are boundaries, able to “fence in what you are going to study” (p. 38). A
broader and more flexible definition of cross-case analysis came from Miles, Huberman, and
Saldaña (2014) when they described it as “a phenomenon of some sort occurring in a bounded
strategy within education settings remains a question, perhaps due to its nebulous interpretation
across constituencies. The study of what others perceive as “personalized learning,” as well as
how they juxtapose their own beliefs about pedagogy therein, served as the underpinning for a
case analysis of the high school in this study. I chose case study methodology for this study due
to its flexible design, its capacity to enable focus on a single entity, and its application to a
“bounded context.”
‘personalized learning?’
2. How does the concept of personalized learning in a school map onto seven guiding
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3.5 SETTING AND PARTICIPANTS
Teachers and administrators working in the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania was the baseline
condition for establishing the participants of this study. The research was conducted in one such
high school in the Central York School District, York County, Pennsylvania. I discussed this
study with Dr. Michael Snell, Superintendent of the Central York School District and obtained
his agreement for official participation in this study. There were two reasons for the selection of
this school district. First, the school indicated that it markets personalized learning practices to
its local constituency, encouraging several learning options within coursework at the school.
The survey data initially collected served as a springboard into follow-up interviews to probe for
nuances and uncover distinctive features of the school via coding in personal interviews. As
recommended by Saldaña (2016), the plan for analysis of the participants’ responses was to
conduct coding as a “cyclical act” (p. 9). Saldaña elaborates that the first cycle of coding data is
rarely, perfectly attempted: “the second cycle (and possibly the third and fourth, etc.) or
recoding further manages, filters, highlights, and focuses the salient features of the qualitative
data records for generating categories, themes and concepts, grasping meaning, and/or building
theory” (p. 9). Second, Central York High School appeared to have created an energetic and
novel academic experience for students, as guided by individual teachers. The goal was to draw
from the experiences of both teachers and principals in their planning and delivery of their
courses to date, in an associative examination with the seven guiding supports. I focused
squarely on the practical work of teachers and principals who have chosen to provide their
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3.6 DESCRIPTION OF CENTRAL YORK HIGH SCHOOL
Central York High School (CYHS) houses approximately 1836 students in grades nine through
twelve. CYHS is located in York, Pennsylvania, situated within York County in southcentral
Profile, 2016), economically disadvantaged students represent 29% of the overall enrollment,
with approximately 8% receiving special education services. The school is a near 50-50
composition of female and male students. Academic offerings include thirteen Advanced
Placement courses, College in High School courses, and an intensive scheduling model (e.g.,
“block” scheduling), whereas students engage in learning periods of seventy-five minutes each.
CYHS indicates that it offers personalized learning for students referenced within the Course
“Self-paced: Learners can move through the course at their optimal learning pace while
receiving timely instruction from their teacher. Self-paced courses will have scheduled in
and out of the classroom times with the teacher being available to the learners each day.
Online Course: CYHS will offer online courses that mirror the courses provided in the
traditional in-class course. These courses will be run through Schoology and are different
from the Odysseyware online courses offered through the Central York Cyber School.
Project Based Learning: These courses will focus on assessing learners through the use
Apollo: Courses associated with the Apollo Program will have interconnected
curriculums that allow for learner voice and choice in the development of their projects.
Additionally, this program focuses on the development of thinking skills and soft skills in
35
an effort to increase a learner’s critical thinking skills.” (CYHS Course Selection Guide,
p. 10)
CYHS additionally offers flexibility in scheduling where students have a “5th Block”
option. If a student chooses to take five courses per semester instead of the typical four courses,
this is possible across the day. If a student wishes to flexibly schedule his or her typical four
courses earlier or later in the school day, this is possible as well. The school provides an
embedded 45-minute flex period, for remediation and homework support, situated between
Block 4 and Block 5 in the afternoon. Students are required to use web-based software as a
catalyst to pairing up their learning needs with (a) the availability of a teacher as well as (b) the
availability of peer tutors within the content area of need. Finally, all students are provided with
Teachers and principals were invited to engage via an email invitation letter which was
distributed throughout the high school by central office administration. This letter provided
specific details about their involvement in the study. The survey was hosted by Qualtrics, an
institutionally purchased resource for graduate student research at the University of Pittsburgh.
Quick Response Code (QR code), directing participant electronic devices to the Qualtrics survey
URL to be used in an Internet web browser. The web-based survey portal included a copy of the
directions for the survey to ensure clear procedures and to minimize incorrect user interpretations
36
3.8 DATA COLLECTION AND ANALYSIS
Case study methodology was employed for the purposes of this research. I chose case study
methodology to support data collection and analysis. Succinctly defined by researcher Robert
Yin, case study research method is “an empirical inquiry that investigates a contemporary
phenomenon within its real-life context; when the boundaries between phenomenon and context
are not clearly evident; and in which multiple sources of evidence are used” (Yin, 1994, p. 23).
Yin explains that in the experimentation world, scientists often look to explain phenomena in at
least one of three schemes: by exploration, by description, or by explanation. Case studies are a
form of social science research, often used when research questions are framed to examine
“how” or “why” phenomena occur. Thoughtful data collection enhances case studies. For this
reason, a case study is a practical method for completing evaluative work. Yin (2014) also
insists that proper execution of case study research requires the investigators to elevate the
process with rigor, as case study research “has classically been considered a ‘soft’ form of
research” (p. 3). I applied Yin’s approach to study the implementation of personalized learning
strategies within Central York High School. This study included both survey data of teachers
and principals and semi-structured follow-up interviews to further probe and extract additional
I designed a survey instrument for this study, entitled Survey of Personalized Learning Strategies
in Secondary Schools (see Appendix A). The instrument included questions that facilitated my
collection of evidence across the seven guiding supports found in the literature in Chapter 2,
37
strategically aligning the conceptual framework to the data collection. The survey was
constructed in Qualtrics, a web-based tool used to conduct survey research, that provides both
To determine the adequacy and thoroughness of survey questions, a pilot survey was
administered to a sampling of teachers and principals at a neutral high school, one that is not
included in the actual research process. The goal of this effort was to effectively vet the survey
questions for clarity, assess expectations for participant responses, and predict the utility of the
overall survey design for ease of use. All pilot survey participants were derived from public
school teachers and administrators at the secondary level (e.g., grades 9-12) to maintain
consistency within the high school being studied. The process of piloting the survey was
intended to ensure clarity and user-friendliness, define nomenclature, and direct participants to
explanative areas of the instrument. Feedback obtained prompted revision and restructuring of
The survey was constructed around the emergent evidence of the seven guiding supports,
as outlined in Table 1. The examples of evidence were posed as questions within the survey,
coding to record information from interviews. For example, Learning to Mastery was coded as
38
Table 1. Seven Guiding Supports Reflected as Examples of Evidence from Literature
Conceptual Framework
Readily Available Technology for ALL Students 5. Have personal mobile devices (or 1:1 device programs)
(Code: GS2) 6. Have technology available for students in classrooms
7. Provide devices for students to take home on a regular
basis
8. Use technology to individualize instruction
Diagnosis of Relevant Learning Characteristics 11. Plan and design for instructional activities that are
commensurate with the student’s readiness
(Code: GS4)
12. Use developmentally appropriate presentations for
small groups
13. Ensure intellectual readiness of the learner
14. Ensure that every learner has appropriately challenging
material for his/her skill level that is not the same as
every other student
15. Adjust tasks for students’ varying interest levels
39
Table 1 (continued)
Emphasis on Learning to Mastery 16. Customize instruction to the needs of the learner
(Code: GS5) 17. Differentiate delivery of instruction for various
learning styles
18. Use differentiated pacing for groups of students within
a classroom
19. Use learning contracts to provide for self-pacing and
targeted independent practice
20. Use formative assessment
21. Alternative means for students to demonstrate mastery
(e.g., use of projects, presentations)
22. Use of multiple assessments to ensure mastery
OPTIMIZED TARGETS
Interdisciplinary Approaches 23. Have time for interdisciplinary teaming and planning
for instruction across curricular areas
(Code: GS6)
24. Teach concepts through projects that span multiple
academic disciplines
25. Have scheduled time or available time during the
school day for collaboration, decision-making,
scheduling, grouping, and cross-integration of
academic content
Collegial School Culture Influencing Systemic 26. Engage in collegial support to empower and enhance
Change individual classroom practice
(Code: GS7) 27. Plan with colleagues and administration for long-term
systemic change
28. Engage in teamwork with colleagues
29. Have a shared vision among teachers and
administrators regarding professional goals for present
and future
The survey instrument was designed to gather data on perceptions and beliefs of both
principals and teachers regarding personalized learning strategies and to reveal evidence of
Framework of Personalized Learning (see Figure 1). Using the conceptual framework, I sought
to examine evidence of the presence of seven guiding supports, as well as explore the frequency
40
and intensity of their application in the participating high school. A summary of the alignments
of Research Questions 1 and 2 to data sources, survey items, and literature concepts is presented
in Table 2 along with a description of relevance and plans for data analysis.
41
Table 2. Alignments to Research Questions 1-2
Alignments
Study Questions Data Sources Survey Items Relevance Means of Data Relevant Literature
Analysis
42
Relationships between the seven guiding supports identified in the literature-derived
Conceptual Framework of Personalized Learning were key to examining and analyzing the high
school. I was interested in examining perceptions and beliefs of both teachers and principals,
related to how they infer personalized learning is happening in their school, in juxtaposition to
strategies in practice and compare them with concepts from the literature. The survey was
intended to engage with quantitative data, collected in a tabular form, to examine the frequency
of self-reported behaviors and perceptions. These data were collected from the participants via
Frequency tables were used to disaggregate the data across seven guiding supports of
personalized learning strategies. Cross-tabulation was used to compare and analyze the
categorical alignments (e.g., seven guiding supports of personalized learning) across the survey
responses.
A second planned data collection activity was presented as an option on the survey for a follow-
interview with these individuals, which indicated discrepant views regarding their school’s
The responses were analyzed regarding emergent patterns, and those will be compared to the
43
concepts from the literature. The interviews were structured with seven main questions, as listed
below:
INTERVIEWER: “On survey question #6, you ranked your school’s progress toward the
goal of achieving full implementation of personalized learning strategies for all students
as ____ percent. I will now ask you a series of seven (7) questions related to that
response.”
to date?”
2. “What are the tasks yet to be addressed to achieve satisfaction with total
implementation?
3. “As a school, what have teachers done to achieve this level of success?”
4. “As a school, what have administrators done to achieve this level of success?”
7. “What advice would you give to another high school in light of all that you have
transcription and enabled me to extract patterns of responses that are coded in Chapter 5.
44
3.8.3 Document analysis
A third data source was relevant documentation from Central York High School. Specifically, I
examined three documents that refer to personalized learning strategies found in the Central
York High School or published by Central York School District. This included a mission
statement, a marketing document, and a theoretical framework designed by the principal of the
school. These documents served to exemplify patterns in the school’s efforts related to
personalized learning strategies in the literature. Specifically, these documents served a purpose
to describe further the phenomena supporting the personalized learning conceptual framework in
the school.
The data sources, a survey, interviews, and documentation provided by principals, were used to
collect information from teachers and principals employed by Central York High School. Many
teachers at the high school chose not to participate and ignored several requests for survey
format (i.e., less than fifteen minutes to complete) and (b) explaining the research project via
email in advance of administering the survey. Through the survey, I queried participants for
was to probe any recurrent themes in the survey data, engaging participants in a professional
were limited to thirty minutes or less. Only two individuals agreed to an interview.
45
An additional limitation was the potential of participants not responding with fidelity or
to offer candid answers as survey participants may want to respond in a way that is deemed to be
“correct” or preferable to what I may want to receive in the survey. To avoid this limitation, the
introductory prompt of any data collection activities (e.g., survey, interview) included specific
language that encouraged participants to reflect on their professional experience(s) to date, rather
The “Invitation to Participate in the Study” document explicitly stated that all data will
remain confidential, will not be shared with any supervisory personnel, and will be used only for
the context of this case study. The same disclaimer was verbally stated at the outset of individual
interviews. I also chose to boost the confidence of the participant by explaining how the
outcomes of this study will assist and inform other schools with future implementations of
learning strategies is thorough and measurable when no standard may be able to gauge the
effectiveness or efficacy of their strategies. For this reason, it was possible for participants
believe that their strategies supersede those that are identified within the body of literature.
These occurrences were highlighted and noted during the exposition and analysis of data from
46
3.10 ETHICAL ASSURANCES
Ethical assurance to all constituencies within the scope of this study was of paramount
importance to me. I established survey and interview protocols that posed minimal risk to all
participants involved. It was my intention to performing this study with dignity and honor to all
participants.
Survey participants were not anonymous to the researcher for the sole purpose of
arranging the follow-up interviews. Accordingly, participants were assured in the introductory
meeting and in writing at the beginning of the survey that no personally identifiable data as a
result of the survey and the interview will be reported in study outcomes or published findings.
Interview participants were voluntary, as solicited from a specific participation question (Q21)
on the survey instrument. Since all participants used their own time and effort to participate in
this study, my goal is to distribute a summary of findings to the administration and faculty at
Central York High School, with a courtesy copy of the findings provided to whoever expresses
interest in the findings. The study design and instruments were approved through the University
Through the collection of survey, interview, and documentation data, I planned to better
understand the perceptions and beliefs of educators in a high school, concerning the school’s
methods and practice with personalized learning strategies. While this study aimed to investigate
47
serves to test a conceptual framework of personalized learning, as constructed from literature.
The knowledge gleaned from this study can potentially be used to build a thorough
During the investigation, the goal was to examine how personalized learning strategies
are in evidence within the high school professing to offer a personalized learning approach. The
framework, as a lens for me to use to explore the alignment of the guiding supports with the
practices in effect at the school. Subsequent chapters will help to describe phenomena collected
48
4.0 DEVELOPMENT OF A CONCEPTUAL HEURISTIC
The term heuristic is often related to the study of mathematics and science, which according to
(Merriam-Webster, 2018, online). This study by strategic design applies literature concepts to
practices observed in a high school. The process of developing the heuristic is a focal point of
The process through which to develop a heuristic on the topic of personalized learning is
premised on a flexible design, pushing me to think beyond my initial ideas and allow for the
development of multiple design scenarios. Morville (2017) is a known lecturer on the topic of
social media, and websites. Morville uses a heuristic to establish experiential relationships,
similar to the description and map features used in this study. A visual representation of
49
Figure 2. Morville’s User Experience Honeycomb (2017)
Morville’s heuristic is used to indicate value (valuable) in the user experience, in which
descriptors (useful, useable, desirable, findable, accessible, credible) encircle the main concept of
value. It serves a purpose to engage practitioners in thinking about the topic. Specifically, he
states, “It’s a great tool for advancing the conversation beyond usability and for helping people
https://semanticstudios.com/user_experience_design, 2017).
conceptual framework to design this study’s terms and conditions and subsequently engage in
data analysis. I believe that while the framework serves this study of a school district, the ability
to provide a heuristic has the potential to initiate further thinking and discussion on this topic. It
also has the potential to energize an ongoing conversation about defining personalized learning.
Use of a heuristic could allow researchers and practitioners to reorder priorities, discuss
relationships across features, and seek practical understanding of sequencing. The Central York
High School highlighted in this study could use the conceptual framework to engage in their own
50
future deliberations on the topic. However, a conceptual heuristic, one that is malleable and
flexible to initiate multiple scholarly and practitioner perspectives and has the potential to guide
and 3 can be reordered. It is also possible that these same supports could vary in their intensity
of use and priority of implementation when situated within an educational setting. In order to
liberate discussion, participants within the educational setting would agree that, dependent on the
context of implementation, the details and design of the heuristic would be fluid and adaptable.
If there is to be any central focal point of the heuristic, it could be the definition and discussions
surrounding personalized learning. The hope is that conversations further inform the design of
the heuristic, making it flexible, expandable, and variable in relationship to deliberations among
Chapter 5 analyzes the data used to describe and map concepts focused on a definition of
personalized learning. The literature-based concepts held firmly in support of actual practice,
based on the observation of the data. This further indicates potential for a heuristic to help
institutional goals and also identify opportunities and processes that assist in ongoing evaluation
practices. A heuristic could address the specific needs of institutional learning practices, in the
setting and context of a particular entity, further addressing the needs of the practitioners in a
way that a “model” could not. It is necessary to anticipate that analysis and synthesis of this
study’s data could further support the use of a heuristic, potentially as a finding to this study.
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5.0 DATA ANALYSIS
This chapter examines the survey data collected during this study, which is reported using
frequency distribution tables for the survey data, and descriptive narrative for the qualitative
identified. The population for this study was the faculty members and administrators currently
employed at Central York High School. These individuals were provided with a hyperlink to
participate in the survey. Of those who responded to the survey (n=35), four participants
indicated an interest on the survey to participate in follow-up interviews. After several attempts
to contact all the interested interviewees, only two individuals responded affirmatively to
schedule and subsequently complete an interview. Interview data are presented in Chapter 5.
For a visual representation that outlines this study’s population and sample, see Figure 3.
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5.1 DEMOGRAPHIC DATA
Chapter 5 begins with a description of the demographic data collected. As previously stated, 35
participants started and completed the survey for this study, constructing the bulk of the data set
used for analysis purposes. In order to complete a comprehensive view of the data, interviews
were also conducted (n=2) and are presented in Chapter 5. Demographic information is reported
for both the survey participants and the participants of the interviews.
Survey question one (Q1) asked participants to identify their current position of
employment. Teachers represented 85.7% of respondents (n=30), with the remainder of the
sample consisting of administrators (14.3%, n=5). Survey question 2 (Q2) asked participants to
53
Table 3. Content Areas of Current Teaching Assignment
Administrative 4 (11.4%)
Mathematics 3 (8.6%)
Art 1 (2.9%)
Science 1 (2.9%)
Survey question three (Q3) asked participants to indicate their highest level of
education, to date. Twenty percent of respondents (n=7) have a Bachelor’s degree, 77.1% of
participants have a Master’s degree (n=27), and 2.9% have a Doctoral degree (n=1). Survey
questions 4 and 5 asked participants to indicate their total number of years of experience in
education and their total number of years worked at Central York High School, respectively.
strategies in practice and compare them with concepts from the literature. The survey was
intended to engage with quantitative data, collected in a tabular form, to examine the frequency
54
of self-reported behaviors and perceptions. These data were collected from the participants via
the Qualtrics survey engine and has been analyzed for descriptive features and statistics.
According to response to survey question one (Q1), thirty (30) teachers and five (5)
administrators participated in the study for a total of thirty-five (35) participants. This represents
a response rate of 35.5%, which is derived by dividing the participant sample from a total
Several frequency distributions outline the demographic attributes of the participant sampling
Conceptual Framework of Personalized Learning are key to examining the high school
undergoing study. I examined the perceptions and beliefs of both teachers and administrators,
related to how they believe personalized learning is happening in their schools, in juxtaposition
Level of Education
Bachelor’s Degree Master’s Degree Doctoral Degree
Attained (Q3)
7 27 1
n=35
20.0% 77.1% 2.9%
As indicated in Table 4, the predominant level of the education across the survey
6 show the total number of years worked in education as well as the total number of years
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Table 5. Total Number of Years Worked in Education
Total
Number of
Years 0-5 6-10 11-15 16-20 21-25 26-30 31-35 36+
Worked in Years Years Years Years Years Years Years Years
Education
(Q4)
4 8 8 6 5 2 1 1
n=35
11.4% 22.9% 22.9% 17.1% 14.3% 5.7% 2.9% 2.9%
Table 5 indicates the greatest mode of participants exists at the categories of 6-10 years
and 11-15 years. Assuming a 35-year career in education, the data infers that participants are
Total
Number of
Years 0-5 6-10 11-15 16-20 21-25 26-30 31-35 36+
Worked at Years Years Years Years Years Years Years Years
CYHS
(Q5)
9 9 10 6 1 0 0 0
n=35
25.7% 25.7% 28.6% 17.1% 2.9% 0.0% 0.0% 0.0%
Table 6 indicates the greatest mode of participants exists at the category of 11-15 years.
For question six (Q6), participants were asked this opening question to the survey:
“Personalized Learning is described as ‘a vision where learning systems may abandon the
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system that fulfills every learner’s need at his/her present performance level.’ Using this
implementation, how close is your school to achieving the goal of implementing personalized
learning for all students?” Figure 4 displays numbers of respondents per response choice.
Of the 35 participants, the mean aggregated response choice was 61.7, indicating a
perception of implementation slightly beyond the midpoint. The highest mode of participant
Subsequent to the demographic data section (Q1 through Q6), the survey queries made a
distinctive shift to prompt data reflections directly related to the Conceptual Framework of
Personalized Learning outlined in Chapter 3. It is important to note that the survey questions in
these sections are not sequential. The question number is provided as a data reference for
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appendices at the end of this dissertation document. Section 4.2 examines a section of Essential
Four (4) survey questions were included to gather perception data regarding professional
development practices. This section includes questions 9, 10, 11 and 16. Question nine (Q9)
asked participants: “My District provides time in the work week for shared collaboration (e.g.,
Professional Learning Community, common planning time).” There were 29 responses to this
question (n=29), slightly less than the overall participant sample (n=35). Table 7 displays the
distribution of responses.
19 10
n=29
65.5% 34.5%
Question ten (Q10) asked participants “How much time is provided on a weekly basis to
you intended for collaboration with colleagues?” There were 28 responses to this question
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Table 8. Amount of Weekly Collaboration Time Provided
Weekly
Collaboration 1-20 21-40 41-60 61-80 81-100 101-120 121+
None
Time minutes minutes minutes minutes minutes minutes minutes
Provided
7 3 5 6 1 1 1 4
n=35
25.0% 10.7% 17.9% 21.4% 3.6% 3.6% 3.6% 14.3%
Table 8 indicates the greatest mode of participants exists in the category of “none.”
There appears to be differing perceptions of how much time is provided, or perhaps differing
Question eleven (Q11) asked participants to rate their satisfaction with collaboration
time. Specifically, the question was stated as, “With zero representing no collaborative time and
100 representing complete satisfaction with collaborative time, to what extent do you think that
the collaborative time provided with colleagues is adequate?” Responses are displayed in Figure
5.
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Of the 35 participants to Question 11, the mean aggregated response choice was 55
Question sixteen (Q16) asked participants to “assess to what extent you engage with
professional development activities as defined in the descriptions below.” Table 9 outlines the
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Table 9. Frequency of Implementation of Professional Development
Q16.1 Engage
in intra-district
professional 7 17 0 2
development to 26
support 26.9% 65.4% 0.0% 7.7%
personalized
learning
Q16.2 Engage
in professional
development
for new
teaching
strategies and 7 16 2 1
new 26
curriculum 26.9% 61.5% 7.7% 3.9%
content prior to
any
expectation of
classroom
implementation
Q16.3 Engage
in professional 8 11 4 3
development 26
specific to my 30.8% 42.3% 15.4% 11.5%
content area
Q16.4
Participate in
professional
development 5 13 6 2
aligned to my 26
own 19.2% 50.0% 23.1% 7.7%
professional
goals and
interests
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The data indicate that professional development activities predominantly occur at least a
once per month. A few participants indicate a higher frequency of occurrence, but no pattern
Four (4) survey questions were included to gather perception data regarding student technology
access. This section includes questions 17, 18, 19, and 20.
Question seventeen (Q17) asked participants, “Does each student has access to a mobile
device (e.g., laptop, iPad, Chromebook) in their classroom for daily use?” Of 28 participants,
100.0% (n=28) answered YES. Question seventeen (Q18) asked participants, “May students
take their mobile device home on a regular basis?” Of 28 participants, 100.0% (n=28) answered
YES. Question nineteen (Q19) asked participants, “Do students have access to a learning
management system (e.g., Moodle, Schoology, etc.) to engage with academic content?” Of 28
participants, 100.0% (n=28) answered YES. The three questions support Central York’s claim
instruction and 100 representing complete satisfaction with student individualized instruction, to
what extent do you think that the individualized instruction as a result of technology usage is
adequate?” Figure 6 displays the response data reflecting participant perceptions of adequacy in
technology usage.
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Figure 6. Adequacy of Technology Usage
Of the 28 participants to question twenty (Q20), the mean aggregated response choice
The highest mode of participant response is at both 50% (n=10) and 75% (n=10) choice
designations, respectively.
Whereas professional development for teachers and access for students to mobile devices are
arguably necessary starting points, there are other supports identified in the literature from
Chapter 2 that have the potential to support personalized learning. The survey was designed to
collect data related to practices around (a) Flexible Scheduling, the (b) Diagnosis of Learner
Characteristics, and the (c) Learning to Mastery. Subsections of this section outline collected
data.
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5.3.1 Flexible scheduling
Question thirteen (Q13) asked participants, “With zero representing no control and 100
representing complete satisfaction with your current level of control, to what extent do you have
control over time devoted to teaching lessons and providing individualized pacing for students,
as opposed to the boundaries of the bell schedule?” Figure 7 provides a graphical representation
Of the 28 participants to question twenty (Q20), the mean aggregated response choice
was 52.68%, indicating a perception of approximately half of the sample. The highest mode of
schedule flexibility and 100 representing complete satisfaction with student schedule flexibility,
to what extent do you think that the flexibility in student scheduling is adequate?” Figure 8
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Figure 8. Adequacy of Student Scheduling Flexibility
Of the 26 participants to question twenty (Q20), the mean aggregated response choice
was 48.08%, indicating a perception of approximately half of the sample. The highest mode of
Question eight (Q8) asked participants, “Assess to what extent you diagnose relevant learner
characteristics as defined in the descriptions below. Table 10 displays the response data.
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Table 10. Frequency of Diagnosing Relevant Learner Characteristics
Q8.2 Use
developmentally 3 6 9 9
appropriate 27
presentations for 11.1% 22.2% 33.3% 33.3%
small groups
Q8.3 Ensure 4 3 10 9
intellectual readiness 26
15.4% 11.5% 38.5% 34.6%
The highest frequency (mode) of each categorical response indicates the most frequent
trend of the responses. Three of the five areas (i.e., Q8.3, Q8.4, and Q8.5) indicate a
predominant implementation of practice of at least once per week. In contrast, category Q8.1
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(i.e., “Plan and design instructional activities that are commensurate with the students’
readiness”) and category Q8.2 (i.e., “Use developmentally appropriate presentations for small
groups”) indicates frequency equally distributed between once per week and once per day,
representing that the latter categories would be observed more frequently in the school, as
Question seven (Q7) asked participants to “assess to what extent you implement students
learning to mastery as defined in the descriptions.” Table 11 displays the response data.
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Table 11. Frequency of Implementation for Student Learning to Mastery
Q7.1 Customize 0 3 13 13
instruction to the 29
needs of the learner 0.0% 10.3% 44.8% 44.8%
Q7.2 Differentiate
delivery of 0 5 13 11
instruction for 29
various learning 0.0% 17.2% 44.8% 37.9%
styles
Q7.3 Use
differentiated pacing 1 11 7 9
for groups of 28
students within your 3.6% 39.3% 25.0% 32.1%
classroom
Q7.6 Offer
alternative means for
students to 4 6 11 7
demonstrate 28
mastery, such as 14.3% 21.4% 39.3% 25.0%
projects or
presentations
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Related to Student Learning to Mastery, participants report similarity in frequency of
response data across more than one category. Participants report practices of once per week for
Q7.2 (i.e., “Differentiate delivery of instruction for various learning styles”), Q7.6 (i.e., “Offer
alternative means for students to demonstrate mastery, such as projects or presentations”), and
Q7.7 (i.e., “Use multiple assessments to ensure mastery”). Participants report that Q7.1 (i.e.,
“Customize instruction to the needs of the learner”) indicates frequency at least once per week to
once per day, and Q7.5 (i.e., “Use formative assessment”) is the most frequently reported
practice, with nearly half of participants implementing this practice at least once per day. In
contrast, Q7.3 (i.e., “Use differentiated pacing for groups of students within your classroom”)
and Q7.4 (i.e., “Use learning contracts to provide for self-pacing and targeted independent
A final set of targets derived from literature in Chapter 2 provides an optimized target for
personalized learning to be described in a school. Several questions on the survey were designed
Sustaining a Collegial Culture. The following subsections outline the collected data.
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5.4.1 Interdisciplinary approaches
Question fifteen (Q15) asked participants to “assess to what extent you engage in the practice of
response data.
Q15.3 Have
scheduled time during
the school day for
collaboration, 9 9 5 4
27
decision-making, 33.3% 33.3% 18.5% 14.8%
scheduling, grouping,
and cross-integration
of academic content
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Most respondents report using interdisciplinary practice once per month. Approximately
one fourth of the participants indicate never implementing interdisciplinary approaches in their
Question twelve (Q12) asked participants to “Assess to what extent you engage in the practice
of sustaining a collegial school culture as defined in the descriptions below.” Table 13 outlines
Q12.1 Engage in
collegial support to 2 7 12 6
27
empower and enhance 7.4% 25.9% 44.4% 22.2%
my classroom practice
Q12.3 Engage in 1 9 9 9
teamwork with 28
colleagues 3.6% 32.1% 32.1% 32.1%
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Participant responses related to collegial culture are mixed. While participants report
Q12.2 (i.e., “Plan with my colleagues and administration for long-term systemic change”) and
Q12.4 (i.e., “Have a shared vision among teachers and administrators regarding goals for the
present and future”) as occurring at least once per month, there are differing responses in the
remaining two categories. The data indicates that Q12.3 (i.e., “Engage in teamwork with
colleagues”) is reported as equally distributed from once per month to once per day, implying
that this practice may be inconsistently applied in practice among the participants.
Several concluding questions were posed in the survey to generate a generalized perspective
from all participants, to further probe the priority of guiding supports designed into the
conceptual framework. For Question 21 (Q21), participants were asked how they would rank
order the importance of the guiding supports for personalized learning. There were 22 responses
to this question (n=22). To enable further analysis in Chapter 6, this question will be presented
with data separated from teacher participants (n=17) and principal participants (n=5). Table 14
outlines the data. Note: boldface type indicates the highest frequency in the rank ordering.
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Table 14. Teacher Ranking of Guiding Supports
Professional Development 3 4 2 1 2 3 2
for Teachers 17.7% 23.5% 11.8% 5.9% 11.8% 17.7% 11.8%
Readily Available 2 4 4 0 2 3 2
Technology for ALL
Students 11.8% 23.5% 23.5% 0.0% 11.8% 17.7% 11.8%
Flexible Scheduling 0 0 2 4 4 5 2
0.0% 0.0% 11.8% 23.5% 23.5% 29.4% 11.8%
Diagnosis of Relevant 4 4 1 4 1 1 2
Learner Characteristics
23.5% 23.5% 5.9% 23.5% 5.9% 5.9% 11.8%
Emphasis on Learning to 3 2 3 1 5 2 1
Mastery 17.7% 11.8% 17.7% 5.9% 29.4% 11.8% 5.9%
Interdisciplinary 1 2 2 3 2 2 5
Approaches 5.9% 11.8% 11.8% 17.7% 11.8% 11.8% 29.4%
By grouping the top two rank ordered selections, teachers indicate their highest priority in
two guiding support areas: Diagnosis of Relevant Learner Characteristics and Collegial School
Culture Influencing Systemic Change. Applying the same procedure to the bottom two rank
prioritized rank order of the guiding supports for personalized learning, as presented in Table 15.
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Table 15. Principal Ranking of Guiding Supports
Professional Development 2 2 0 1 0 0 0
for Teachers
40.0% 40.0% 0.0% 20.0% 0.0% 0.0% 0.0%
Readily Available 2 0 0 2 0 0 1
Technology for ALL
Students 40.0% 0.0% 0.0% 40.0% 0.0% 0.0% 20.0%
Flexible Scheduling 0 0 1 0 2 2 0
0.0% 0.0% 20.0% 0.0% 40.0% 40.0% 0.0%
Diagnosis of Relevant 0 1 1 1 2 0 0
Learner Characteristics 0.0% 20.0% 20.0% 20.0% 40.0% 0.0% 0.0%
Emphasis on Learning to 0 1 0 1 0 3 0
Mastery 0.0% 20.0% 0.0% 20.0% 0.0% 60.0% 0.0%
Interdisciplinary 0 0 0 0 1 0 4
Approaches 0.0% 0.0% 0.0% 0.0% 20.0% 0.0% 80.0%
By grouping the top two rank ordered selections, principals indicate their highest priority
in two guiding support areas: Professional Development for Teachers and Readily Available
Technology for ALL Students. Applying the same procedure to the bottom two rank ordered
Approaches as their least prioritized guiding supports. Analysis of the prioritization among
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5.6 LOOKING AHEAD
personalized learning at Central York High School. In addition, the next chapter analyzes
several document artifacts provided by the high school, in relation to the seven guiding supports
The teacher currently employed by Central York High School (CYHS) in a classroom setting.
On the survey, the teacher indicated that 21-25 years of total public school experience and that
they have been working at CYHS for the past 11-15 years. The teacher has earned a Masters’
degree.
It was interesting for me to note that the context of this section of the interview was primarily
access of mobile devices and a learning management system. Survey respondents had
overwhelmingly responded (i.e., 100%, n=28) that technology access for students is in place.
The focus with the teacher shifted to a discussion about professional development perceptions.
A visual representation of the data collected in the Essential Starting Points category for the
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Table 16. Essential Starting Points - Coding Associated to the Teacher’s Interview
The teacher described past history with professional development by stating, “I really feel our
faculty has sort of been thrown to the sharks to sort of figure it out for themselves.” She
indicated advantages and disadvantages to this process, in that individual teachers have the
advantage to implement their individual styles and decide how to handle personalized learning
from their own definition. She indicated that this approach to date is also a disadvantage at the
systems level by stating, “I think there are those that have struggled with it, or are not suited for
it [personalized learning], and I feel they are sort of treading water and no one is throwing them
a lifesaver.”
personalized learning, the teacher indicated a perception of lacking collegial credibility on the
subject matter.
“The people who were put in front of me to demonstrate it were colleagues that were
here in the building, and I’ll be honest that they are colleagues I do not respect, and I
don’t think they teach; so I kind of have a ‘rrr’ in the back of my throat over the whole
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thing. So the colleagues who were put in front of me as the epitome of what I should be
The teacher elaborated when asked about specific training opportunities provided by
experts outside of the school district. She did not recall any particular training from anyone
outside of the district, but rather encouragement from administrators to seek out and observe
different styles of instruction among her colleagues. The teacher inferred that the administrators
“felt they were the ones implementing these strategies really well in their classrooms” and she
did not see any evidence-based strategies provided via professional development. As a
conclusion to this theme, she did mention Chuck Schwahn, one of the authors of the book
Inevitable, is “supposed to come back to us” and indicated a planned upcoming meeting with
professional goals and interests.” This is best supported by her comments that teachers have
professional development was adequately described by the teacher to qualify further alignment in
The teacher used an interesting racehorse analogy to describe concerns about how to incentivize
learning for all students, related to differentiated pacing. I have chosen to open this section with
her quotation:
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“The winner crosses the line and goes to the winner’s circle, and that’s for all the
reporters and where the crowd goes. Where is the crowd when that last horse comes
across the line? Where is the cheer? The horse finished. Where are its accolades?”
She described an environment at CYHS where every learner is to proceed at his or her
own pace, but the reality is meeting that expectation, because of teachers’ concern about
allowing students to become behind in their work. Specifically, she stated, “I feel that we leave
that tiny percent of those kids behind, and they are not getting the same accolades.” She
expressed concern about kids finishing high school at this point in the conversation, ending with
concerns for the last students to complete their learning targets, and stated, “They didn’t have to,
but they finished; where are their accolades?” Finally, she shifted the conversation to elaborate
her concern for students who are not in the top 20% of academic achievement. She stated, “That
top 20 percent. . .will be successful regardless of anything that you do because it is driven; it is
Flexible Scheduling (GS3) and Diagnosis of Learner Characteristics (GS4) have become
the exclusive points of consideration under Pacing and Pedagogy, based on the interview data
collected for the teacher. Each guiding support is described in a subsection inclusive of the
teacher’s commentary. A visual representation of the data collected in the Essential Starting
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Table 17. Pacing and Pedagogy – Coding to the Teacher’s Interview
The teacher stated that she loved block scheduling. She stated so emphatically, “I would hate if
they ever took block scheduling away from me; I would probably die.” They further described
flexibility in the instructional day by referring to an additional block of time in which students
may start and end their day earlier (e.g., Block 1 through Block 4) or start their day later and end
their day later (e.g., Block 2 through Block 5). She stated that the same flexibility for instruction
is offered to teachers as well, with floating starting and ending times for the workday. The
purpose of the flexibility she described is two-fold: (a) availability of ‘extra’ courses to make
possible early graduation from high school and (b) flexibility around work schedules for students
that are employed at the same time they are going to school. She brought up one caution,
however, when she stated, “My hope is that they are going on to academic pursuits, not just
going home and going to sleep,” referring to students who may not fully engage in this
flexibility of time.
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She elaborated on her perspective of having an opportunity to engage with her students,
“I am actually one of those teachers who chose the fifth block, because when you have
students who choose to take that time, I would say 80 percent of them want to be there. If
it weren’t for the fifth block, I would not have had the opportunity to touch some of that
20 percent. So, it was really cool to be able to come in late and then stay a little later. I
was out of here by 4:30. . .I am not a morning person, but we don’t have to be here till
7:30, but you will find me at my desk at 6:15. Right now, I have kids in the room. It’s my
planning period, but there are six kids here. During my unassigned lunch time, you will
From the discussion on flexible scheduling, the teacher’s comments indicate perceptions
best described as GS3 #9 “Follow flexible time schedules with students” and GS3 #10 “Have
control over time devoted to lessons and pacing as opposed to being bound to a strict bell
schedule.” This is best supported by her description of having students present during differing
and optional times of the day to provide instruction and learning activities. She did not
elaborate, however, on the quality of effort that she experiences, but did describe several
Emerging from the interview were commentary alignments related to diagnosing learners. The
teacher often quantified learners in an 80/20 percent split, whereas as she described the most
motivated and highest achieving learners in “the top 20 percent” and all remaining students as
“the other 80 percent.” She elaborated on her perceptions of how CYHS is handling two
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“I sort of feel that our district is increasing the achievement gap. We have a program
here that I think caters to the top 20 percent of kids and excludes the other 80 percent,
and I feel that the 80 percent from the bottom to the middle are the ones that we really
need to focus on. The AP and honors-based will always find its way home so to speak,
but the middle of the road kid or the kid that finds education to be the vinegar, I find that
While her concern was expressed for “the other 80 percent” of students, the teacher did
indicate that she has observed changes. She stated her opinion that many teachers at CYHS have
really reflected on the profession, have looked at what they are teaching, and decided ‘how can I
individualize this for particular kids?’ She described hands-on projects that her colleagues have
chosen to create for students to undertake in lieu of research papers in an effort to “make
learning more meaningful and more relevant for the kid.” She stated, more than once, that she
was concerned about creating an achievement gap within CYHS and that teachers are doing their
best to eliminate areas where that could happen. Specifically, she stated, “Don’t increase the
achievement gap by creating that in your school, and then catering to it; cater to the kids who
comments indicate perceptions best described as GS4 #14 “Ensure that every learner has
appropriately challenging material for his/her skill level that is not the same as every other
student,” and GS4 #15 “Adjust tasks for students’ varying interest levels.” She described
processes that her colleagues have designed to adapt learning activities to the needs of cohorts of
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5.7.3 Optimized targets
From the context of the teacher’s interview, only one guiding support from the Optimized
Targets category emerged from the dialogue. There were no alignments to Interdisciplinary
Instruction (GS6), but rather an exclusive discussion on Collegial School Culture (GS7). The
subsection below will outline the teacher’s perceptions and descriptions of this particular guiding
support. A visual representation of the data collected in the Essential Starting Points for the
OPTIMIZED TARGETS
No data observed in 26. Engage in collegial support to empower and enhance individual
interview. classroom practice
29. Have a shared vision among teachers and administrators regarding
professional goals for present and future
Related to GS7 #29, “Have a shared vision among teachers and administrators regarding
professional goals for present and future,” the teacher described a concern about the professional
“I had a child yesterday who was concerned about a local placement test at the local
community college. She has not taken math in almost a year, and I said, ‘Well, what
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have you been doing to study?’ She said, ‘Well, I only have one class, [teacher]. I go
home, and I sleep!’ So what are you doing to that child? She’s not going to college. She
is going home. She is sleeping. She is not raising herself to the next level. Now, she is
probably going to have to take a remedial college course, which you know costs as much
as a regular college course. We have put her behind. We may have even pigeonholed
her by not holding her to a certain standard. Whereas on the assembly line, there is a
the students and the professional goals of CYHS. She elaborated on a need to create a shared
vision, as many of her colleagues are not buying into the current learning model that has been
presented. When asked how she perceives how the administrators have supported her, she
responded, “gotten out of the way; stayed out of the way; allowed teachers to do what they need
to do in their classrooms.” She went on to say that there is definite teacher authority in the
classroom. This comment supports GS7 #26, whereby the school would “engage in collegial
support to empower and enhance individual classroom practice.” She encouraged the notion that
some faculty members are engaged in superior practices in an effort to “give the district what
they want,” but are not getting the affirmation and merit that has been earned. In our next
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5.8 INTERVIEW #2: PRINCIPAL
The principal is currently employed by Central York High School (CYHS). On the survey, he
indicated that he has 16-20 years of total public-school experience and further indicated that he
has been working at CYHS for the past 6-10 years. He has earned a doctoral degree.
The focus with the principal includes extensive reflections on professional development and
opportunities for students to have access to technology via a learning management system. A
visual representation of the data collected in the Essential Starting Points for the principal is
The principal’s discussion of professional development was solely focused on what CYHS has
provided, rather than other sources of training. He spoke to “developing capacity” and providing
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internal meetings that scaffold learning for teachers possessing different levels of knowledge
with personalized learning practices. As he stated, “the idea is that they [teachers] can go back
after the day, talk to their colleagues, and then they can implement into their classrooms.
Developing capacity, again, is our biggest hurdle and challenge moving forward.” He
characterizes such meeting opportunities as professional learning spaces full of contestation and
When probed about how external influences impact professional development at CYHS,
“We have gone to different conferences where Mass Customized Learning is the focus.
Those, for us, have been more affirmation that we are already doing most of the things
that other school districts are; so, there have been other workshops, other conferences to
development around that, but not as robust as some other things that are out there.”
mandatory engagement, but specified that all of his colleagues have a choice in what they want
to study, or how they might serve via committee, while working in the district. The principal
explained that opportunities for colleagues to assemble and discuss personalized learning occur
approximately once per month, but a core group of building representatives then go to the district
to my own professional goals and interests.” The activities that he described construct an
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opportunity for collaboration and communication to occur among colleagues, even though the
professional development.
The principal elaborated on the online offerings that CYHS students access upon request. He
describes the platform as a “fully online, customizable curriculum library of over 300 courses”
(Odysseyware, 2018). In addition, teachers have the ability to use another platform to create and
develop their own online course, via use of Schoology. This learning management system is
described by the manufacturer as “aligned with the needs and learning style of education in the
The principal highlighted the presence of these two platform options as choice for both
faculty and students. He stated that teachers, at times, have opposed Odysseyware because of his
restatement of their feeling that “[Odysseyware] is not our curriculum; we have not blessed off
on it.” He quickly followed up to state that CYHS provides Schoology as a method for teachers
to then take their own curriculum and develop their own online courses so that, “We know that
the content is CYHS-approved. . .essentially what the kids are getting in their regular courses,
they are getting in the online courses.” It is apparent that forethought has driven the process for
faculty and students to have wide access to learning opportunities via a learning management
system.
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5.8.2 Pacing and pedagogy
The focus with the principa, includes perspectives related to flexible scheduling, diagnosis of
the data collected in the Essential Starting Points for the principal is displayed in Table 20.
11. Follow flexible time schedules 16. Ensure that every learner 21. Alternative means
with students has appropriately for students to
challenging material for demonstrate
12. Have control over time devoted
his/her skill level that is mastery (e.g., use
to lessons and pacing as
not the same as every of projects,
opposed to being bound to a
strict bell schedule other student presentations)
17. Adjust tasks for students’
varying interest levels
The principal identified that approximately 60%-80% of CYHS course scheduling follows a
traditional model, in alignment to a prescribed number of days of instruction and minutes per
day. He estimated that the remaining 20%-40% of courses are delivered in some form of
and a final approach that is best defined as 3) episodic instruction. As discussed in the previous
section, online learning is provided by the platforms Odysseywhere and Schoology, with the
latter giving teachers the advantage to take their traditional curriculum and offer the same
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learning in an online context. It also affords students an opportunity to self-pace their own
learning in an online context as the principal elaborated through several points in the interview.
What may be the most interesting of the scheduling approaches at CYHS is the concept of
episodic instruction, described as the principal illustrated, “For the next week, you can just dive
in deeply into that piece of curriculum you are really interested in.” The principal described
“Let’s say these are the ten units in your course: How will you allow more ‘voice and
choice’ time in your curriculum to allow kids to get into a piece of maybe the content that
they’re really interested in? How can we move kids forward in classes that they are
ready to go on? For example, I have an art teacher with about 4 weeks to go at the end
of the school year. They are finished with the content. My job as an administrator is to
help those kids and that teacher start the next course with four weeks remaining to go.
That’s hard to do because we’ve never done that before, but I’m working collaboratively
with that teacher to try to put a plan in place to allow those kids (to experience) what we
weeks to finish the course. It took me fourteen, and I’m ready to go.”
The principal elaborated extensively on the concept of “voice and choice.” It took me a
while to understand what he meant by this ideal, as he said it five separate times in the interview.
When probing, it appeared that “voice” is defined as ‘what’ content students desire to study
along with “choice” being ‘how much’ or ‘how long’ they wish to study the content, made
available to them by either face-to-face or online offerings. The notion of “voice and choice”
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seemed to mesh with the concepts aligned to flexible scheduling and diagnosis of learner
characteristics. The principal interview supports GS4 #14, “Ensure that every learner has
appropriately challenging material for his/her skill level that is not the same as every other
student.”
The principal discussed encouraging CYHS faculty to choose options with varied assessments of
content mastery. He adamantly stated, “There’s got to be other ways that kids can show mastery
of content rather than just by a test, a paper pencil test.” He encourages faculty members to
allow students to choose an assessment mode in which they can more thoroughly express and
define their own learning. Giving the example of concluding or assessing one unit of study, it is
fits-all assessment strategy by asking, “Can a child have the option of doing a project, doing a
presentation, doing something online?” He stated that this practice of offering alternative
The principal stated several viewpoints related to interdisciplinary approaches and a collegial
school culture influencing systemic change. A visual representation of the data collected in the
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Table 21. Optimized Targets – Coding to the Principal’s Interview
OPTIMIZED TARGETS
24. Teach concepts through projects that span 26. Engage in collegial support to empower
multiple academic disciplines and enhance individual classroom practice
25. Have scheduled time or available time 29. Have a shared vision among teachers and
during the school day for collaboration, administrators regarding professional goals for
decision-making, scheduling, grouping, and present and future
cross-integration of academic content
The principal described that CYHS has 21 classes that are offered as project-based, spanning
more than one academic content area. He stated that over three school years this has grown from
12 classes to the current 21 classes. The principal also discussed the Apollo Program at CYHS.
This program is an interdisciplinary elective for students in which 3 instructional blocks in their
day are designated exclusively for project-based learning in English, social studies, and art.
Three teachers are assigned as “learning facilitators” for this course, whereas students quickly
identify a concept that they would like to study, and the teachers subsequently guide students
along a pathway of learning related to their three respective areas: English, social studies, and
art. Finally, he mentioned that this program has become popular in recent years, with total
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5.8.3.2 Collegial school culture influencing systemic change (GS7)
The principal referred to creating a culture of a growth mindset, a goal likely attributed to the
book Mindset: The New Psychology of Success (Dweck, 2008). He referred to CYHS faculty
often asking him to summarize basic points of their personalized learning initiatives; he referred
to his summary as a “stump speech” which defines as “[instructional] rate, [learning] style, and
technology [access].” The principal described a culture at CYHS that was dictated to him from
the Superintendent.
“[He] gave me the book Inevitable to read and kind of said, ‘This is the vision; help us
get there.’ That’s kind of the training that I got, and it is a matter of like-minded
individuals having conversations about how we get there. And so that’s the challenge I
had as an administrator, when I first, five or six years ago, sat in that room with those
colleagues. He stated that there are no college programs explicitly teaching personalized
learning strategies, so CYHS administrators are required to engage new employees into the
building’s vision. He also spoke to the concept of “buy-in” for educators to acknowledge that
students “learn at different rates. . .have different learning styles.” He encourages fellow
colleagues to recognize that “technology has changed the game [of education],” for there are
many different options for learning experiences beyond the confines of the traditional classroom.
Finally, he stated, “relationships will always reign supreme,” referring to positive relationships
that should be fostered inside of the organizational culture to ensure that opportunities for
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The principal also spoke to developing a “shared vision” whereas faculty members are
required to develop a differentiated supervision plan in support of the CYHS vision, which he
did not present. However, he did refer to two documents (Learner Agency Continuum and
Learner Experience) that are discussed later in this chapter. Specific to empowering and
enhancing individual classroom practice, the principal stated, “We have tried to develop a culture
of ‘fail forward’” and continually assure faculty members that failure is not observed as a bad
Qualification of activities and attributes captured via survey and interviews at CYHS required an
principal provided three documentation artifacts that are presented here as further reference to
activities at CYHS. The artifacts were collected to help exemplify and describe personalized
learning practices and serve as a discussion opportunity to align and map attributes of these
Learning.
The Apollo Program at CYHS is designed to provide “a customizable fusion of Art, English, and
Social Studies,” quoted by the three instructors listed on the artifact (Grandi, Ward, Wimmer,
2018). Students from grades 9 through 12 are eligible to select this program as an elective,
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whereas 3 of the 4 blocks of the school day are designated to it. The program is advertised in
four descriptive categories: time, space, pace, and place. Figure 9 is a reduced-size copy of the
documentation artifact.
From the descriptors of each category, the guiding supports serve as attributed alignments
to the conceptual framework. They are grouped sequentially from left to right, exhibiting the
relevant guiding support categories in each column. Within each column, the literature-derived
descriptors of the guiding support are listed at the top with mapped evidence from the document
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Table 22. Apollo Program Brochure - Mapping to Guiding Supports
#1 Have personal #10 Have control #14 Ensure that #16 Customize #24 Teach
mobile devices over time every learner has instruction to the concepts
(or 1:1 device devoted to appropriately needs of the through projects
programs) lessons and challenging learner that span
pacing as material for multiple
#17 Differentiate
opposed to being his/her skill level academic
delivery of
bound to a strict that is not the disciplines
instruction for
bell schedule same as every various learning
other student
styles
#15 Adjust tasks #18 Use
for students’ differentiated
varying interest pacing for groups
levels
of students within
a classroom
#21 Alternative
means for students
to demonstrate
mastery (e.g., use
of projects,
presentations)
Mapped Evidence
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According to the principal, the Apollo Program is a prominent example of how teachers
collaborated and came to a conclusive product in the form of an innovative learning experience.
Interviews with both the principal and the teacher indicated that this program is of increasingly
popularity in the student body at CYHS, ostensibly due to the flexibility of time and learner-
5.9.2 Central York School District (CYSD) Ideal Learning Experience Classroom Placard
The Central York School District (CYSD) Ideal Learning Experience Classroom Placard was
designed to explicitly display expectations of all students and educators across the district.
According to the principal, this placard was designed by district administration, to express
operational expectations in each classroom. This placard is professionally printed and displayed
prominently in each classroom within all of the district’s eight school buildings. On the
document, note that the word ‘learner’ is used to refer to a ‘student.’ The expectations of a
CYSD learner are defined in terms of how the organization mandates itself to provide an “ideal
learning experience” for each learner. Figure 10 displays a reduced-size copy of the
documentation artifact.
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Figure 10. CYSD Ideal Learning Experience Placard
As in Figure 10, the guiding supports serve as evidence, which is mapped to the
Optimized Targets; all mapping is relevant only to the Pacing and Pedagogy category,
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Table 23. CYSD Ideal Learning Experience Placard - Mapping to Guiding Supports
#11 Plan and design for instructional activities that are commensurate with the student’s
readiness
#12 Use developmentally appropriate presentations for small groups
#13 Ensure intellectual readiness of the learner
#14 Ensure that every learner has appropriately challenging material for his/her skill level that
is not the same as every other student
#15 Adjust tasks for students’ varying interest levels
Mapped Evidence
No Applicable Evidence
Mr. Ryan Caufman, current Principal of Central York High School designed a “learner agency
continuum” document for the school. Mr. Caufman is currently on Active Military Leave and
deployed out of the country, therefore not providing an opportunity for an interview. The acting
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High School Principal provided the document for analysis. The document is presented in Figure
11.
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Figure 11. Learner Agency Continuum, attributed to Mr. Ryan Caufman, High School Principal
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From the descriptors of each category, the guiding supports serve as attributed alignments
to the conceptual framework. They are grouped sequentially from left to right, exhibiting the
relevant guiding support categories in each column. Within each column, the literature-derived
descriptors of the guiding support are listed at the top with mapped evidence from the document
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Table 24. Learner Agency Continuum - Mapping to Guiding Supports
#10 Have control over time #14 Ensure that every learner #16 Customize instruction to the needs
devoted to lessons and has appropriately challenging of the learner
pacing as opposed to being material for his/her skill level
#17 Differentiate delivery of
bound to a strict bell that is not the same as every
instruction for various learning styles
schedule other student
#18 Use differentiated pacing for
#15 Adjust tasks for students’
groups of students within a classroom
varying interest levels
#19 Use learning contracts to provide
for self-pacing and targeted
independent practice
#21 Alternative means for students to
demonstrate mastery (e.g., use of
projects, presentations)
#22 Use of multiple assessments to
ensure mastery
Mapped Evidence
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5.10 LOOKING AHEAD
In Chapter 5, I mapped survey data, interview data, and documentation artifacts to illuminate
personalized learning practices at Central York High School. In Chapter 6, I will analyze several
document artifacts provided by the high school, in relation to the seven guiding supports framed
in this study.
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6.0 ANSWERS TO THE RESEARCH QUESTIONS
This chapter is divided into several sections that include the discussion of seven guiding supports
derived from a base of literature that allowed the researcher to study the role of supports within a
school professing to offer personalized learning. During the data presentation phase in Chapters
4 and 5, the narratives written to describe three data sources are provided in preparation for
analysis in this chapter. The shared experiences of 35 participants in the survey delineate
perceptions around the guiding supports of personalized learning derived from the literature (see
Chapter 2). The deep and thoughtful experiences of two separate participants, captured from
interviews with both a teacher and an administrator, eloquently glean perceptions of personalized
learning in the high school. Finally, a review of documentation reveals priorities and focal
points of Central York High School’s journey into personalized learning and highlights priorities
within their efforts. This discussion of the guiding supports addresses two research questions
personalized learning?
2. How does the concept of personalized learning in a school map onto seven guiding
The seven guiding supports that will be discussed throughout this chapter are (a)
Professional Development for Teachers, (b) Readily Available Technology for ALL Students, (c)
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Flexible Scheduling, (d) Diagnosis of Relevant Learner Characteristics, (e) Emphasis on
Learning to Mastery, (f) Interdisciplinary Approaches, and (g) Collegial School Culture
Central York High School educators described professional development practices that are
internally generated. During interviews, both the teacher and the principal indicated that training
for professional development from outside sources is virtually absent, but training is organized
and presented to the faculty by other Central York teachers. The stated frame of reference for
teachers to learn about personalized learning practices is almost completely internal; although,
both interviews revealed evidence of consultations with Bea McGarvey and Chuck Schwan, the
authors of Inevitable (2013), and also opportunities to visit other schools. None of the data
indicated formally designed training brought to the district, but rather only organized
opportunities for classroom observation and trading of ideas around colleague practices, which
could be aligned to the conceptual framework for this study in a limited number of instances.
choice,” which he defined as affording students a choice in content and pace, versus the teacher’s
scheduled and organized among individual teachers. A large percentage of the respondents
indicated opportunities for professional development once a month, but no shared collaboration
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time (n=7, 25.0%). In the same sampling, satisfaction regarding adequacy of shared
collaboration time was also mixed, with the average choice of all respondents (n=35) is 55.8%
on a 0 to 100 range. Specific to the literature, Penuel et al. (2007) advocated that strong
interaction with curriculum structure required professional development providers to meet the
training needs of the teachers. This data does not indicate teacher satisfaction with either the
adequacy of collaboration time or the notion that expertise is found from within. It further
indicates that while the district engages teachers with implementation of personalized learning
strategies, it limits external learning opportunities with professional learning providers. The data
also reveals that high school is inconsistent with the teaching time devoted to collaboration.
Cwikla (2003) suggested the ideal that innovation in practice could not be enabled until
teacher learning goals were explicitly identified. The study found no evidence of teacher
learning goals, provided by the individual teachers, the high school principal, or the school
district administration. While there was demonstrable evidence of some collaboration time, the
goals of the professional learning to be provided during those opportunities were not discovered.
The study further revealed that there was a disconnect in ranking priority of professional
development among teachers and administrators. This is discussed in further detail at the end of
this chapter.
framework
Two of three data sources reveal evidence that map to the study’s Conceptual Framework of
observed, both the survey and the interviews revealed data that is organized in Table 25.
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Table 25. Concept Mappings to Professional Development for Teachers (GS1)
GS1-#1 Engage in intra- Once per month Teacher - Not observed Not observed
district professional (65.4% of all
Principal - Observed:
development to support respondents) with opportunity to engage
personalized learning several respondents in a “holistic”
never implementing conversation, K-12
this practice (26.9%)
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The table denotes the relevant evidence found within each data source, which is mapped
to literature. Data reveals that 1) professional development occurs mostly once per month, 2)
professional development opportunities generally occur once per month, and 3) professional
SUPPORT 2)
All three data sources revealed that Central York High School has extensive technology access
for their students. Not only are students provided with a mobile electronic device to gain access
to online resources, they are given two online learning platforms in which to engage in learning
opportunities. Both learning platforms are aligned to standards-aligned content areas, one of
which is exclusively designed and delivered by an online learning provider (Odysseyware) with
the other platform affording an opportunity for Central York High School teachers to transform
Each student has his or her own device, which is available for use inside and outside of
the school building; this includes usage twenty-four hours a day, seven days per week. Despite
ubiquitous evidence that students have access to electronic devices, when asked if technology
usage was adequate, the query yielded an average choice of all respondents (n=35) of 66.7% on a
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“adequacy,” the latter of which is a perception. The high school has proven that technology is
provided to every student; perhaps some students are not using it to full potential, or as
Interestingly, only the administrator interviewed (not the teacher) addressed online
learning, in an effort to illustrate that the technology provides an opportunity for learning beyond
the school day for the sake of flexibility. Quality of online instruction was not identified in this
study. Access to academic content was described as a utility, further promoting the availability
For the teacher, there was considerable commentary about the “top 20 percent of
students,” related to their academic achievement. Her assertion was that the school district is
placing much focus on academically motivated students and not doing enough for “the bottom 80
percent.” Arguably, this data could be similar to Bebell’s (2005) research finding that, when
provided a one-to-one environment of technology, some students display increased effort in the
quality of products produced. For the teacher, the remaining 80 percent of students may be
perceived as not “adequately” using the technology, as previously described in this section.
All three data sources reveal evidence that map to the study’s Conceptual Framework of
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Table 26. Concept Mappings to Readily Available Technology for ALL Students (GS2)
Guiding Support 2
(GS2):
Readily Available Data Sources/Evidence
Technology for ALL
Students
The table denotes the relevant evidence found within each mapping to literature. Data
reveal that (a) students have take-home access to mobile devices 24 hours a day, 97 days per
week; (b) students have access to an online learning management system (LMS); (c) teachers
have access to transform their courses into an online version via a LMS; and (d) a supermajority
of survey respondents feel that technology is being used to individualize instruction for students.
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The concept mappings do not align to the participants’ lower perception regarding
technology adequacy. This is a surprising finding for which I am unable to discover a rationale.
The high school may choose to investigate the reasons for this unusual finding of dissatisfaction
Central York High School designed its operational day with several supports of flexibility.
Students can schedule their days across five blocks of instruction, each consisting of 75 minutes,
*10:42-
7:45-9:00 9:04-9:19 9:23-10:38 12:42-1:57 2:01-2:46 2:50-4:05
12:38
*41 min for lunch included
It is important to highlight that one of the most novel features of this schedule is the
flexibility for students and staff alike to start early/end early (blocks 1-4) or start late/end late
(block 2-5). There is also an additional provision for students to receive additional learning
opportunities, access to teacher support, and clubs during the “flex-time” denoted on the
schedule.
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While the structure of the schedule appears to be flexible, it is still a “bell schedule”
where instruction starts and stops at the ding of a bell. Survey participants were asked to
Participants (n=35) indicated average satisfaction of 52.7% on a 0 to 100 range with their own
control over time devoting to teaching and pacing, as opposed to the boundaries of a bell
During the interviews, the teacher and the principal both indicated examples of how the
schedule strategically facilitated their work. The teacher referred to multiple opportunities for
students to access her when needing help or additional instruction while the principal referred to
the flexibility of learning via online courses at any time and even while at home. The separate
strategies reported in these interviews may be divergent from the school’s intention of flexible
scheduling for students; the teacher indicated an exclusive school day opportunity for access,
which is different to the online access and course availability that is advertised by the high
school. The survey data related to perceptions of flexible scheduling is mixed and is
inconclusive.
The principal referred to “episodic instruction” where CYHS extends an opportunity for
students to be self-paced through a course unimpeded by the bell schedule. This approach to
self-paced learning is fairly new at the school and is not offered building-wide to all students.
Rickabaugh (2016) spoke to flexible time structures when he inferred that educators could
Two of the three artifacts in the document analysis revealed school personnel having
control of time devoted to instruction and pacing, as opposed to adherence to the bell schedule.
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The Apollo Program brochure indicated a self-scheduled school day with one-on-one
appointments with the three teachers that teach in that program. The Learner Agency
Continuum, attributed to Ryan Caufman, Principal of CYHS, indicated that a student could
explore within the prescribed curriculum at designated times. While there are sincere approaches
to creating flexible time structures in the school, the average survey response data, when
juxtaposed with the interviews and documentations, indicates that flexibility of time for learning
remains a work in progress for the administrators and teachers in the school.
framework
Three of three data sources reveal evidence that map to the study’s Conceptual Framework of
Personalized Learning. Survey, interviews, and documentation revealed data that is organized in
Table 28.
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Table 28. Concept Mappings to Flexible Scheduling (GS3)
Guiding
Support 3
(GS3): Data Sources/Evidence
Flexible
Scheduling
Data sources reveal that while flexible scheduling is moderately accepted by the survey
participants, there are multiple and varied approaches to the actual scheduling and delivery of
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instructional opportunities. To qualify this, the school has shown evidence of (a) flexibility of
time, (b) online course access, (c) one-on-one appointments with teachers, (d) “episodic
instruction” used within a course with the intent of deeper learning, and (e) flexible work
schedules for teachers. There are differing perspectives, as stated in the previous description of
Flexible Scheduling, revealing unclear messages regarding the school’s flexibility in scheduling.
All three data sources indicate that flexible scheduling is possible; the degree of satisfaction
SUPPORT 4)
School
It is apparent that Central York High School evidences multiple examples of attention to relevant
learner characteristics across all three data sources. There is extensive activity reported at the
school related to the diagnosis of learner characteristics. Vygotsky (1986) speaks to a varied
level of readiness across a classroom of students, intimating the familiar Zone of Proximal
Development (ZPD). It is important to highlight and analyze the data that lead to themes on this
topic at CYHS.
The survey revealed that teachers frequently examine, a majority of respondents doing so
on no less than a weekly basis, the learner’s readiness and interest levels, perhaps similar to
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teachers can challenge all learners by providing varied levels of difficulty, adapting the amount
of scaffolding, and modifying the way in which students demonstrate effort. CYHS teachers
growth and abilities by delivering learning at the precise level of the student’s understanding,
During the interviews, the phrase “voice and choice” emanated from the principal
multiple times. It was apparent that this was a cliché strategy to encapsulate the ideal of
differentiated instruction, perhaps, as indicated through the interview, in a way to engage parents
and students in accepting ownership for their learning. In contrast, the teacher expressed a
concern about the “voice and choice” concept being used to “cater” to highest achieving
students, which she referred to as the “top 20%.” It is necessary to approach this scenario with
caution, as the potential exists for students to receive an unclear message about how much
ownership is actually afforded to them. When looking back to the survey data, teachers
indicated that they engaged in diagnosis of learner characteristics at least once-per-week. This
appeared as a disconnect to the teacher’s assertion that only the highest achieving students are
shape the documentation of the school. One predominant theme that perhaps appropriately
describes the school environment is the emphasis of a student being “met at his/her present level
of learning.” The CYSD Ideal Learner Experience placard clearly articulates this ideal, and it
seems to be a district message rather than one reserved for the high school. The Apollo Program,
offered only at the high school, articulates the encouragement of “passion-based” learning as
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well as promoting “readiness through accommodation.” An insistence on diagnosis of learner
into a smaller, or perhaps more specific component of the curriculum in which student has
expressed a high level of interest to study. The proposition of the school’s course structure being
ready and prepared to engage with individual interest serves as a novel characteristic of this high
school, a theme of willingness to adapt to different styles of learners that has emerged from this
Three of three data sources reveal evidence that map to the study’s Conceptual Framework of
Personalized Learning. Survey, interviews, and documentation revealed data that is organized in
Table 29.
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Table 29. Concept Mappings to Diagnosis of Relevant Learner Characteristics (GS4)
GS4-#11 Plan and design Once per week Teacher – Not observed CYSD Ideal Learning
for instructional activities (40.7%) to Experience Placard:
Principal – Not
that are commensurate
Once per day (40.7%) observed Is met at his/her level of
with the student’s
learning
readiness (81.4% of all
responses)
GS4-#12 Use Once per week Teacher – Not observed CYSD Ideal Learning
developmentally (33.3%) to Experience Placard:
Principal – Not
appropriate presentations
Once per day (33.3%) observed Is met at his/her level of
for small groups
learning
(66.6% of all
responses)
GS4-#13 Ensure Once per week Teacher – Not observed CYSD Ideal Learning
intellectual readiness of (38.5%) to Experience Placard:
Principal – Not
the learner
Once per day (34.6%) observed Is met at his/her level of
learning
(73.1% of all
responses)
GS4-#14 Ensure that Once per week Teacher - Observed: Apollo Program
every learner has (38.5%) Concerned about Brochure:
appropriately challenging leaving students behind
Readiness through
material for his/her skill due to focus on top 20%
accommodation
level that is not the same
Principal - Observed:
as every other student CYSD Ideal Learning
“Voice and choice”
Experience Placard:
Is using one of his/her
best learning styles
GS4-#15 Adjust tasks for Once per week Teacher - Observed: Apollo Program
students’ varying interest (46.4%) Indication adaptation of Brochure:
levels content to suit student
Passion based
interests
CYSD Ideal Learning
Principal - Observed:
Experience Placard:
“Episodic instruction”
Is learning skills and
concepts with content of
high interest to him/her
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6.5 EMPHASIS ON LEARNING TO MASTERY (GUIDING SUPPORT 5)
Data at Central York High School revealed several instances of how learning to mastery is
emphasized in the school. Survey evidence provided a look into how classroom teachers seek to
of ability. Strategies such as adapting for different learning styles and customizing instruction to
the needs of the learner were reported by the largest number of constituents, in the range of the
behaviors occurring once per week to once per day. Parallel to this trend, the use of formative
assessment was reported with similar frequency. Participants also reported the ability for
students to have both alternate forms and multiple iterations of assessment at least once per week
The interviews and documentation showed little evidence to support the survey data
relative to mastery learning. However, there is evidence that some classroom teachers are not
only shifting their instruction, but also modifying their assessment practices in support of
mastery learning. This is further supported by the principal’s statement that he encourages
teachers to mirror differentiated instruction with differentiated assessment practices. Both the
documentation from The Apollo Program and CYSD Ideal Learner Experience increase
confidence that teachers encourage students to learn to a mastery level, the frequency of which is
varied among classroom teachers, based on their own survey reporting. Diagnosis of learner
characteristics serves a prerequisite of mastery learning but does not guarantee its existence.
Nevertheless, evidence reveals that this goal of learning to mastery at the school is addressed to
some degree.
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6.5.2 Mapping of learning to mastery at Central York High School to Literature
All three data sources reveal evidence that map to the study’s Conceptual Framework of
Personalized Learning. Survey, interviews, and documentation revealed data that is organized in
Table 30.
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Table 30. Concept Mappings to Emphasis on Learning to Mastery (GS5)
GS5-#16 Customize Once per week Teacher – Not observed Apollo Program
instruction to the needs of (44.8%) to Brochure:
Principal – Not
the learner
Once per day (44.8%) observed Mini lessons
offered/requested
(89.2% of all
respondents) Learner Agency
Continuum:
Instruction/Established:
“Small group and
individual instruction
continues while others
proceed with their
learning.”
GS5-#17 Differentiated Once per week Teacher – Not observed Apollo Program
delivery of instruction for (44.8%) to Brochure:
Principal – Not
various learning styles
Once per day (37.9%) observed Mini lessons
offered/requested
(82.7% of all
respondents)
GS5-#18 Use Once per month Teacher – Not observed CYSD Ideal Learning
differentiated pacing for (39.3%) Experience Placard:
Principal – Not
groups of students within
observed Is met at his/her level of
a classroom
learning
GS5-#19 Use learning Inconclusive trend: Teacher – Not observed Not observed
contracts to provide for some using Once per
Principal – Not
self-pacing and targeted week (29.6%), Once
observed
independent practice per day (29.6%), to
Never Implemented
(29.6%)
GS5-#20 Use formative Once per day (42.9%) Teacher – Not observed Not observed
assessment
Principal – Not
observed
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Table 31 (continued)
GS5-#21 Alternative Once per week Teacher - Not observed Apollo Program
means for students to (39.3%) Brochure:
Principal – Encouraging
demonstrate mastery
faculty to increase usage Mastery Learning
(e.g., use of projects,
of alternative projects
presentations)
GS5-#22 Use of multiple Once per week Teacher – Not observed Not observed
assessments to ensure (46.4%)
Principal – Not
mastery
observed
Evidence of interdisciplinary learning at CYHS were limited. The survey revealed that while
some teachers participated with interdisciplinary learning, many have never experienced it. Both
the principal’s interview and the artifacts supported the presence of The Apollo Program, an
interdisciplinary course option for students, fusing together art, English, and social studies.
However, this course appeared to be the sole option for interdisciplinary learning in the school.
Interdisciplinary instruction appears to exist in limited course offerings of the school. This is
consistent with the sequential design of the Conceptual Framework of Personalized Learning,
several other guiding supports are implemented and have come to fruition within the school.
The survey data also supports that some interdisciplinary instruction is occurring in the
school, most likely in the form of singular lessons or units across academic areas. This was not
probed in the interviews or via documentation and would be subject to future research.
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Interdisciplinary instruction exists in part to inspire collaboration (Georgiades, 1969) and an
Learning. Interview and documentation data is less specific, with the latter two data sources
showing data specific to the Apollo Program at CYHS. All revealed data are organized in Table
31.
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Table 31. Concept Mappings to Interdisciplinary Approaches (GS6)
GS5-#16 Customize Once per week Teacher – Not observed Apollo Program
instruction to the needs of (44.8%) to Brochure:
Principal – Not
the learner
Once per day (44.8%) observed Mini lessons
offered/requested
(89.2% of all
respondents) Learner Agency
Continuum:
Instruction/Established:
“Small group and
individual instruction
continues while others
proceed with their
learning.”
GS5-#17 Differentiated Once per week Teacher – Not observed Apollo Program
delivery of instruction for (44.8%) to Brochure:
Principal – Not
various learning styles
Once per day (37.9%) observed Mini lessons
offered/requested
(82.7% of all
respondents)
GS5-#18 Use Once per month Teacher – Not observed CYSD Ideal Learning
differentiated pacing for (39.3%) Experience Placard:
Principal – Not
groups of students within
observed Is met at his/her level of
a classroom
learning
GS5-#19 Use learning Inconclusive trend: Teacher - Not observed Not observed
contracts to provide for some using Once per
Principal - Not observed
self-pacing and targeted week (29.6%), Once
independent practice per day (29.6%), to
Never Implemented
(29.6%)
GS5-#20 Use formative Once per day (42.9%) Teacher – Not observed Not observed
assessment
Principal – Not
observed
123
Table 31 (continued)
GS5-#21 Alternative Once per week Teacher – Not observed Apollo Program
means for students to (39.3%) Brochure:
Principal – Encouraging
demonstrate mastery
faculty to increase usage Mastery Learning
(e.g., use of projects,
of alternative projects
presentations)
GS5-#22 Use of multiple Once per week Teacher – Not observed Not observed
assessments to ensure (46.4%)
Principal – Not
mastery
observed
(GUIDING SUPPORT 7)
Feedback from data describes a mixed environment of perceptions and beliefs related to a
collegial school culture. Survey data indicated varied levels of teamwork with long-term
systemic planning and focus on visioning goals occurring most frequently once per month.
There was evidence that individual classroom practice and decision-making is well supported in
the building. Opportunities to engage in collegial support to enhance classroom practice is most
frequently occurring once per week. Interviews revealed a school culture with mixed
perceptions. The principal’s comments reveal his goal of empowerment for teachers to make
individual decisions related to planning and practice, further supported by the teacher’s statement
that teachers are given autonomy in their classrooms. While she did not elaborate on this topic,
the context of the conversation described an environment where lessons and pacing can be
124
create a school culture in which teachers need not be anxious about trying new approaches and
methods. Finally, there were no available mappings from the CYHS documentation related to
collegial activities from the survey and the interviews rather than attempt to measure an overall
conceptual change at Central York High School. The data facilitate the description of the school
although the goal is not fully realized at the time of this study.
6.7.2 Mapping of collegial school culture at Central York High School to literature
Two sources reveal data that are organized in Table 32. The data table maps both survey and
interview anecdotal information. Documentation did not present any concept mappings to
125
Table 32. Concept Mappings to Collegial School Culture Influencing Systemic Change (GS7)
Guiding Support 1
(GS7):
Collegial School Data Sources/Evidence
Culture Influencing
Systemic Change
GS7-#27 Plan with Once per month Teacher – Not Not observed
colleagues and (48.2% of all observed
administration for long- respondents) Principal – Not
term systemic change observed
GS7-#29 Have a shared Once per month Teacher - Observed: Not observed
vision among teachers (46.4% of all expressed concerns
and administrators respondents) about a disconnect
regarding professional between messages to
goals for present and students versus CYHS
future goals
Principal - Observed:
alignments of vision
to individual
differentiated
supervision plans
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6.8 PRIORITIZATION OF SUPPORTS
In Chapter 5 (Section 5.5), the study revealed a disconnect between ranked participants’
perceptions of guiding supports and their perceptions of how administration would rank the
guiding supports. This is an intriguing finding, as it has the potential to initiate dialogue on this
topic between the teachers and the principals. A summary of the top two prioritized guiding
Table 33. Top Two Priorities of Guiding Supports of Teachers versus Principals
Teacher Principal
Guiding Support Ranking Ranking
(Top 2) (Top 2)
The table indicates differences in the priorities of teachers versus principals. Teachers
highly prioritize Diagnosis of Relevant Learner Characteristics and Collegial School Culture
Influencing Systemic Change. Principals highly prioritize Readily Available Technology for
ALL Students and Professional Development for Teachers. As the survey was used to disclose
127
these priorities, interviews and documentation may serve as an additional lens into this particular
analysis.
In the interview, both the teacher and the principal indicated struggle with Guiding
Support (GS4), Diagnosis of Relevant Learner Characteristics, concept #14, “Ensure that every
learner has appropriately challenging material for his/her skill level that is not the same as every
other student.” All three documentation sources are mapped to concepts in GS4, inclusive of
concept #14. This may indicate a need for exploration and understanding of this concept among
teachers and principals. Teachers also highly prioritized Guiding Support 7 (GS7), Collegial
School Culture Influencing Systemic Change. Interviews indicate alignment to GS7 concept
#26, “Engage in collegial support to empower and enhance individual classroom practice” but
fall short of endorsement that this concept is in practice consistently. Both the teacher and the
principal interviews infer a need for collaboration, particularly to create a shared vision of the
high school. There is no documentation that aligns to concepts in GS7, indicating further need
for exploration.
Principals placed their highest priority on Guiding Support 2 (GS2) Readily Available
Technology for ALL Students. Survey responses, interviews, and documentation have extensive
mappings to GS2, particularly in the area of mobile device availability provided by the high
school for student use. One minor issue is that the teacher interview indicated no discussion
regarding GS2, concept #8, “Use technology to individualize instruction.” It may be possible
that this teacher is not using learning management software in her classroom. There appears to
be substantial focus on technology use in this school, supported by a high prioritization from the
principals. Principals indicated a high priority with Guiding Support 1 (GS1) Professional
128
Development for Teachers. It is important to note that teachers prioritized this as their third
highest priority.
Data collected on professional development appears to elaborate on this topic across all
three data sources. At the outset of this study, I proposed professional development in the
conceptual framework as an “essential starting point.” Further supporting the survey data, both
interview transcripts and artifacts revealed evidence of limited and inconsistent professional
development as a concern for Central York High School. There is a lack of consistency in time
and training, as well as “who” receives professional development. Perhaps most notably, the
educators inside of their school, excluding external sources of professional learning. Central
York High School encourages teachers to look to each other for best practices, rather than to
research sources of professional learning outside of the organization. Teachers perceive that
Within this chapter, I have addressed the synthesis of both quantitative and qualitative data
sources found in Chapters 4 and 5. It is important to note that concepts mapped from practice to
129
7.0 RECOMMENDATIONS AND IMPLICATIONS
As a prelude to this study, I reviewed literature revealing seven guiding supports that are
recommended for schools to effectively obtain a personalized learning model. Through the case
study, I examined a high school asserting that personalized learning happens for students in their
school. The literature helped me propose a conceptual framework comprised of seven guiding
During the data collection phase of this research, I conducted surveys and interviews of
teachers and administrators, and examined documentation produced by educators, and offered
‘personalized learning?’
2. How does the concept of personalized learning in a school map onto seven guiding
The data derived from surveys, interviews and documentation are presented in Chapters 4
and 5. In Chapter 6, I described the professional practices of the school and mapped those onto
the seven guiding supports of personalized learning proposed in the conceptual framework. This
chapter presents the recommendations and implications relative to the research questions. I also
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7.1 NEED FOR ENHANCED PROFESSIONAL LEARNING
documented shortcomings for many years (Darling-Hammond, Chung Wel, Andree, Richardson,
& Orphanos, 2009). Recall that two of three data sources implicated that professional
development was limited because it was confined within the school. Professional development
offerings for teachers were deemed inequitable. School leaders might offer flexibility and
expectations of teachers to create environments of learning that are personalized for students.
Central York High School would benefit by explicitly stating professional learning goals for the
teaching staff, specifying a baseline duration of time to engage in professional learning, and
Gomez, Grunow, & Lemahieu, 2015). The Carnegie Foundation for the Advancement of
Teaching proposes this strategy as an option for schools that seek to generate iterative
deliberation and to alleviate concerns of teachers through professional learning. This approach
organizes professionals around a common interest and then implements a cycle of examination,
131
A framework for educators to plan their own professional learning may help personalized
learning opportunities to blossom and grow within the school. Such a framework could serve
Central York High School well in school improvement efforts, furthering the school’s
progression toward an optimized target: a collegial school culture supporting systemic change.
Based on the review of literature in Chapter 2, I proposed a conceptual framework for this study.
While this framework served well as an operational feature for the study, results
challenge the original model. The framework does not aid in the determination of how a school
would practically go about designing or implementing personalized learning. For example, the
132
arrows in the conceptual framework were intended to show progression, however, data did not
support the notion of progression. Figure 13 offers a revised conceptual framework design.
In this figure, a sequential progression is inherent in the design, but vertical progression is
dependent on success in the foundation (i.e., Essential Starting Points). This high school may
through the pyramid. Essential starting points serve as a baseline of operational needs, to be
133
professional development and access to technology, data analysis from this case indicates limited
success in progressing to more innovative learning opportunities for students. Sinatra (2000)
This definition applies to the intentional process of professional learning, and subsequent
opportunities. Interdisciplinary approaches stretch as a band across the three guiding supports
below it (i.e., Flexible Scheduling, Emphasis on Learning to Mastery, and Diagnosis of Relevant
guiding supports. This is strategic to the redesign of my model. According to the Partnership for
21st Century Skills Framework Definitions document, educators are encouraged to “promote
interdisciplinary themes into core subjects” (P21, 2009, p. 2). At the pinnacle of the pyramid, a
collegial culture becomes the capstone or outcome brought to a school by the coalescence of all
other guiding supports. The revised conceptual framework may potentially illuminate
opportunities for enhanced professional learning. The framework may also facilitate consensus
This study serves as one case to explore, expand, and further define personalized learning in
educational settings. Since this dissertation represents a single case of a high school, additional
studies can better determine similarities and differences among cases, deepen understanding of
134
the one suggested in this study. Studies are needed where additional literature-based themes
could be further explored to refine a conceptual framework. Additional studies across multiple
cases may determine whether or not such a conceptual framework could serve as a roadmap to
implementation.
term has not been adequately defined. Educators might benefit from unified explanations of how
personalized learning impacts expectations of performance at the local, state and federal levels.
Research specific to personalized learning might help to provide clarified definitions that
promote further investigation. Eventually, additional research influences the creation of policies
that support further research and practice. Because personalized learning is a fairly new way of
thinking and organizing educational practice, and because there is limited research to date, it may
At the end of this study, I have found myself troubled by the conceptual rendering
discussed in this study. I thought I had come upon a new applicable model. I quickly noticed
that the graphic could be changeable, depending upon the conditions that exist within a school. I
engaged with colleagues during the defense of this dissertation, and together we came to realize
that a model does not work, but that a heuristic would be a better vehicle to inspire thinking. I
realized that the guiding supports have tremendous variety in terms of priority, emphasis,
135
Dr. Cindy Tananis and I discussed the heuristic approach at length (personal
communication, July 28, 2018). We think that educators could benefit from studying
deeper thinking about learning. Some say that personalized learning looks like this or that, but
we have wondered what it really looks like. The point here is that it could not possibly look like
any one thing. It is a malleable and flexible expression of learning, further differentiated by
The heuristic way of thinking is not a model to be followed or a precise set of steps to be
mastered. Much of what I observed in the guiding supports could be valid approaches, but they
are certainly not the sum total of instructional practices to be discovered or implemented. Dr.
Tananis shared that the complexity of this heuristic process is varied; it is dependent on the
“flavor” of an educational setting, the needs of its surrounding community, the desires of the
educators who work there, the school board that governs it, all of which would influence the
ways in which a group of leaders could deliberate on an issue, inclusive of multiple perspectives
Some educators will use the term “best practice,” a concept that guides practitioners to
follow a model. The work of this study has led me to think about Dr. Tananis’ assertion that
“better practices” are framed by a heuristic way of thinking, whereas differences in conditions
(i.e., context, setting, sequencing of guiding supports) allow the practitioner to show evidence in
justification of practice (personal communication, July 28, 2018). She further asserts that there
could not possibly be a “best practice” because the work of learning is too dependent on the
situation and context (personal communication, July 28, 2018). Mindful of the decision-making
136
context of schools, whereas school boards and school leaders are charged with the responsibility
of planning and preparation, we do not need adaptive and skilled leadership to follow a model
(C. Tananis, personal communication, July 28, 2018). However, school leaders could be
would need humility, deliberative skill, flexible thinking, and the capacity to resist suppression
of unfamiliar ideas.
From the perspective of an educational leader, the profession needs educators who are
willing to instill a thirst for learning; who will often respond to student inquires with, “I don’t
know the answer to your question, so let us investigate that issue together.” Our profession does
not need teachers to spew knowledge, for that work could be accomplished by a robot. We don’t
want a robot. We want the educators and leaders of educators to exemplify the capacity to solve
personal interest in this topic for me. While the study helped to provide insight into teacher and
principal perceptions of, and experiences with, personalized learning, it also uncovered several
unanswered questions and opportunities for future exploration. This inquiry inspired me to
continue my pursuit of how school leaders seek to improve teaching and learning in educational
settings.
137
Engagement in analytical thinking is requisite to the research journey. The dissertation
process served as a wonderful teacher, teaching me to value objectivity in data analysis and
attempt to describe nuances across professional experience. It also allowed me to engage with a
written narrative that plainly expresses how this study, and subsequent studies, could serve to
enhance the readiness of educators to provide personalized learning opportunities for students in
their classrooms, potentially guiding school-wide improvement initiatives. The research process
has the potential to serve others beyond the scope of this study.
I had a frequent epiphany to the concept of “tropes” from a course at the beginning of my
doctoral studies, specifically the University of Pittsburgh ADMPS Core 1 course. In a think
piece, Garman and Gunzenhauser (2011) introduce the concept of tropes, specifically designed to
stimulate discourse as “particular words that are crafted to construct language text for the
purpose of emergent knowledge, and, as such, they provide situations of struggle” (p. 3). The
struggle of analysis is real for a doctoral student. While navigating the struggles found in the
discourse of this study, I frequently found myself coming back to take a deeper dive into how the
literature supports this study’s conceptual framework of personalized learning. My intent is that
this study, along with the conceptual framework, may provide an impetus for future research and
deliberation. The dissertation caused me to further acknowledge and analyze my strengths and
138
APPENDIX A
SURVEY INSTRUMENT
Survey Flow
Block: Demographics (6 Questions)
Standard: Guiding Support 1: Learning to Mastery (GS1) (1 Question)
Standard: Guiding Support 2: Diagnosis of Relevant Learner Characteristics (GS2) (1 Question)
Standard: Guiding Support 3: Collegial Culture Supporting Systemic Change (GS3) (4 Questions)
Standard: Guiding Support 4: Flexible Scheduling (GS4) (2 Questions)
Standard: Guiding Support 5: Interdisciplinary Approaches (GS5) (1 Question)
Standard: Guiding Support 6: Coaching for Teachers and Students (GS6) (1 Question)
Standard: Guiding Support 7: Technology for All Students (GS7) (4 Questions)
Standard: Final Inputs (4 Questions)
Standard: Epilogue (3 Questions)
Page
Break
139
Start of Block: Demographics
o Teacher (1)
o Administrator (2)
Skip To: Q2 If Q1 = 1
Skip To: Q3 If Q1 = 2
140
Q2 Indicate the content area(s) in which you are currently teaching. Please select all
applicable.
▢ Art (1)
▢ Business, Computer and Information Technology (BCIT) (2)
▢ Driver Education (3)
▢ English/Language Arts (4)
▢ Family and Consumer Science (5)
▢ Health and Physical Education (6)
▢ Library Science (7)
▢ Licensed Social Worker (8)
▢ Mathematics (9)
▢ Music (10)
▢ School Counselor (11)
▢ School Nurse (12)
▢ Science (13)
▢ Special Education (14)
▢ Social Sciences (15)
▢ Technology Education (16)
▢ World Language(s) (17)
141
Q3 Indicate the highest degree that you have earned to date.
Q4 Please indicate the TOTAL number of years that you have worked in education.
142
Q5 Please indicate the TOTAL number of years that you have worked in education AT
YOUR CURRENT SCHOOL.
Page
Break
143
Q6 Personalized Learning is described as "a vision where learning systems may abandon
the industrial, time-based approach to instruction and replace it with a contemporary learning-
based system that fulfills every learner’s need at his/her present performance level."
Using this description, with zero representing no implementation and 100 representing complete
implementation, how close is your school to achieving the goal of implementing personalized
learning for all students?
0 2 5 7 1
5 0 5 00
Level of Implementation ()
144
Q7 Assess to what extent you implement students learning to mastery as defined in the
descriptions below.
I
I I
occasionally
I have never frequently regularly
implement this
implemented this implement this implement this
strategy (at least
strategy (1) strategy (at least strategy (at least
1x per month)
1x per week) (3) 1x per day) (4)
(2)
Q7.1 Customize
instruction to the
needs of the
learner (1)
o o o o
Q7.2
Differentiate
delivery of
instruction for
various learning
o o o o
styles (2)
Q7.3 Use
differentiated
pacing for
groups of
students within o o o o
your classroom
(3)
Q7.4 Use
learning
contracts to
provide for self-
pacing and
targeted
o o o o
independent
practice (4)
Q7.5 Use
formative
assessment (5) o o o o
Q7.6 Offer
alternative
means for
students to
demonstrate
o o o o
mastery, such as
145
projects or
presentations (6)
Q7.7 Use
multiple
assessments to
ensure mastery o o o o
(7)
146
Q8 Assess to what extent you diagnose relevant learner characteristics as defined in the
descriptions below.
I
I I
occasionally
I have never frequently regularly
implement this
implemented this implement this implement this
strategy (at least
strategy (1) strategy (at least strategy (at least
1x per month)
1x per week) (3) 1x per day) (4)
(2)
Q8.1 Plan and
design
instructional
activities that are
commensurate o o o o
with the student's
readiness (1)
Q8.2 Use
developmentally
appropriate
presentations for o o o o
small groups (2)
Q8.3 Ensure
intellectual
readiness (3) o o o o
Q8.4 Ensure that
every learner
receives
challenging
material
individually o o o o
matched to
his/her skill level
(4)
Q8.5 Adjust
tasks (e.g.,
assignments,
projects,
presentations)
for students'
o o o o
varying interest
levels (5)
147
Start of Block: Guiding Support 3: Collegial Culture Supporting Systemic Change (GS3)
Q9 My district provides time in the work week for shared collaboration (e.g.,
Professional Learning Community, common planning time)
o Yes (1)
o No (2)
Q10 How much time is provided on a weekly basis to you intended for collaboration with
colleagues?
Q11 With zero representing no collaborative time and 100 representing complete
satisfaction with collaborative time, to what extent do you think that the collaborative time
provided with colleagues is adequate?
0 2 5 7 1
5 0 5 00
Level of Adequacy ()
148
Q12 Assess to what extent you engage in the practice of sustaining a collegial school
culture as defined in the descriptions below.
I
I I
occasionally
I have never frequently regularly
implement this
implemented this implement this implement this
practice (at least
practice (1) practice (at least practice (at least
1x per month)
1x per week) (3) 1x per day) (4)
(2)
Q12.1 Engage in
collegial support
to empower and
enhance my
classroom
o o o o
practice (1)
Q12.2 Plan with
my colleagues
and
administration
for long-term o o o o
systemic change
(2)
Q12.3 Engage in
teamwork with
colleagues (3) o o o o
Q12.4 Have a
shared vision
among teachers
and
administrators
regarding goals
o o o o
for the present
and future (4)
End of Block: Guiding Support 3: Collegial Culture Supporting Systemic Change (GS3)
149
Q13 With zero representing no control and 100 representing complete satisfaction with
your current level of control, to what extent do you have control over time devoted to teaching
lessons and providing individualized pacing for students, as opposed to the boundaries of the bell
schedule?
0 2 5 7 1
5 0 5 00
Level of Control ()
Q14 With zero representing no student schedule flexibility and 100 representing
complete satisfaction with student schedule flexibility, to what extent do you think that the
flexibility in student scheduling is adequate?
0 2 5 7 1
5 0 5 00
Level of Flexibility ()
150
Q15 Assess to what extent you engage in the practice of interdisciplinary instruction as
defined in the descriptions below.
I
I I
occasionally
I have never frequently regularly
implement this
implemented this implement this implement this
practice (at least
practice (1) practice (at least practice (at least
1x per month)
1x per week) (3) 1x per day) (4)
(2)
Q15.1 Have time
for
interdisciplinary
teaming and
planning for
instruction
o o o o
across curricular
areas (1)
Q15.2 Teach
concepts through
projects that span
multiple
academic
o o o o
disciplines (2)
Q15.3 Have
scheduled time
during the school
day for
collaboration,
decision-making,
scheduling, o o o o
grouping, and
cross-integration
of academic
content (3)
Start of Block: Guiding Support 6: Coaching for Teachers and Students (GS6)
151
Q16 Assess to what extent you engage with professional development activities as
defined in the descriptions below.
I
I I
occasionally
I have never frequently regularly
implement this
implemented this implement this implement this
practice (at least
practice (1) practice (at least practice (at least
1x per month)
1x per week) (3) 1x per day) (4)
(2)
Q16.1 Engage in
intra-district
professional
development to
support o o o o
personalized
learning (1)
Q16.2 Engage in
professional
development for
new teaching
strategies and
new curriculum
content prior to o o o o
any expectation
of classroom
implementation
(2)
Q16.3 Engage in
professional
development
specific to my o o o o
content area (3)
Q16.4 Participate
in professional
development
aligned to my
own professional o o o o
goals and
interests (4)
End of Block: Guiding Support 6: Coaching for Teachers and Students (GS6)
152
Q17 Does each student have access to a mobile device (e.g., laptop, iPad, Chromebook)
in your classroom for daily use?
o Yes (1)
o No (2)
Q18 May students take their mobile device home on a regular basis?
o Yes (1)
o No (2)
Q19 Does each student have access to a learning management system (e.g., Moodle,
Schoology, etc.) to engage with academic content?
o Yes (1)
o No (2)
Q20 With zero representing no individualized instruction and 100 representing complete
satisfaction with student individualized instruction, to what extent do you think that the
individualized instruction as a result of technology usage is adequate?
0 2 5 7 1
5 0 5 00
153
Q21 How would you, individually, rank order the importance of the guiding supports for
personalized learning?
______ Collegial School Culture Influencing Systemic Change (1)
______ Diagnosis of Relevant Learning Characteristics (2)
______ Emphasis on Learning to Mastery (3)
______ Flexible Scheduling (4)
______ Interdisciplinary Approaches (5)
______ Professional Development for Teachers (6)
______ Readily Available Technology for ALL Students (7)
Q22 How do you perceive that school administration would rank order the importance of
the guiding supports for personalized learning?
______ Collegial School Culture Influencing Systemic Change (1)
______ Diagnosis of Relevant Learning Characteristics (2)
______ Emphasis on Learning to Mastery (3)
______ Flexible Scheduling (4)
______ Interdisciplinary Approaches (5)
______ Professional Development for Teachers (6)
______ Readily Available Technology for ALL Students (7)
Q23 What additional resources do you deem necessary to enhance personalized learning
in your school?
________________________________________________________________
________________________________________________________________
________________________________________________________________
________________________________________________________________
________________________________________________________________
Q24 Is there anything else that you would like to share about personalized learning
practices in your school?
________________________________________________________________
________________________________________________________________
154
________________________________________________________________
________________________________________________________________
________________________________________________________________
Q25 As a follow-up to this survey, I would like to have a brief conversation to more fully
understand personalized learning in your classroom or building. Interviews will be held once,
for a duration of approximately 10-15 each. Interviews would be scheduled as a mutually-agreed
upon date and time.
o YES (1)
o NO (2)
Skip To: Q26 If Q25(1) Is Displayed
Skip To: End of Block If Q25 = 2
Q26 Since you answer YES to the previous question, please indicate your First Name and
Last Name. Further, I also ask that you provide an email address and contact phone number so
that I may reach out to you for a personal interview.
155
EXIT Thank you for your participation this survey! We appreciate your investment of
time.
Regards,
156
APPENDIX B
157
APPENDIX C
Dear Teacher,
personalized learning in secondary school. This email is an invitation for you participate in this
brief survey. I am sending it to all teachers in your school, [insert name of school here.]
I know how busy you are as a teacher. It is strategically a brief survey to encourage a
high number of respondents from your school. Therefore, this survey should take you no more
than fifteen minutes to complete. This link below will take you to the survey: [insert Qualtrics
link here]
Please know that you will incur minimal risk through this study and may decline to
answer any questions during the survey. The primary potential risk is a breach of confidentiality,
but everything possible will be done to protect your privacy. All records pertaining to your
involvement in this study will be kept locked, and any data that includes your identity will be
158
stored in secured files. Your identity will not be revealed in any description or publication of the
research. Individual responses will not be shared with any supervisor at your school district.
One of the survey questions asks if you would be willing to participate in a follow-up
interview. This interview contains questions about when, how, and for what purpose you engage
in personalized learning with your students. I expect an interview conversation to last no longer
than thirty minutes, and we can arrange to conduct it over the phone. If you are willing to be
considered for an interview, please provide your contact information when prompted by the
survey.
Thank you for your consideration and assistance. If you have any questions, please feel
Sincerely,
Matt Thomas
Matthew P. Thomas
Email: [email protected]
Phone: 814-242-5531
159
160
APPENDIX D
Dear Principal,
personalized learning in secondary school. This email is an invitation for you participate in this
brief survey. I am sending it to all teachers in your school, [insert name of school here.]
encourage a high number of respondents from your school. Therefore, this survey should take
you no more than fifteen minutes to complete. This link below will take you to the survey:
Please know that you will incur minimal risk through this study and may decline to
answer any questions during the survey. The primary potential risk is a breach of confidentiality,
but everything possible will be done to protect your privacy. All records pertaining to your
involvement in this study will be kept locked, and any data that includes your identity will be
161
stored in secured files. Your identity will not be revealed in any description or publication of the
research. Individual responses will not be shared with any supervisor at your school district.
One of the survey questions asks if you would be willing to participate in a follow-up
interview. This interview contains questions about when, how, and for what purpose you engage
in personalized learning with your students. I expect an interview conversation to last no longer
than thirty minutes, and we can arrange to conduct it over the phone. If you are willing to be
considered for an interview, please provide your contact information when prompted by the
survey.
Thank you for your consideration and assistance. If you have any questions, please feel
Sincerely,
Matt Thomas
Matthew P, Thomas
Email: [email protected]
Phone: 814-242-5531
162
BIBLIOGRAPHY
Abell Foundation, The. (2008). One-to-one computing in public schools: Lessons from “laptops
for all” programs. Retrieved from http://files.eric.ed.gov/fulltext/ED505074.pdf
Bandura, A. (1986). Social foundations of thought and action: A social cognitive theory.
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