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As an initiative of The
Education Alliance, the Education Policy Research Institute conducts
scholarly research, analysis and evaluation regarding issues affecting
the quality of public education in West Virginia. The research
studies produced by the Education Policy Research Institute have
received significant attention and acclaim over the years for
their unbiased approach and choice of research topics that reflect
national trends and the current public and political concerns
about public education in our state.
The Education Alliance Research Summaries are presented in
PDF format. To view the summaries you must have Adobe Acrobat® Reader®
software. If you do not have Adobe Acrobat® software on your computer,
click here to go to Adobe's web site for a free download.
Achievement Gap Research
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Gender Differences in Reading Achievement: Policy Implications and
Best Practices
This piece is a compilation of the field’s most relevant research related
to the learning differences between boys and girls. It addresses the
psychological strengths and challenges of males and females and what we, as
advocates, can do to better understand different learning styles and
utilize different instructional strategies to best serve our students’
needs. Gender Differences discusses such ideas as single-sex classrooms and
varied reading opportunities for boys.
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Gender Differences in Reading Achievement: Policy Implications and
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Through Different Lenses: West Virginia School Staff and Students
React to School Climate
This school climate study sampled 2,931 West Virginia students and 371
staff persons from 19 middle and high schools. Researchers found that
impoverished and African-American students rated their schools
significantly lower than teachers and school officials on measures of
academic expectations, instruction, course-taking, counseling about
education options, respect, mentoring and fairness.
Students attending high-poverty schools were more likely to report poor
relationships with peers, while students in rural schools perceived their
schools most positively.
The Education Alliance issued
two major recommendations in conjunction with this research report. The recommendations include placing
greater focus on equity amongst students as part of future school reform
efforts, and investigating the characteristics of schools that generate
positive student experiences in order to replicate practices within
lower-performing West Virginia schools.
The Education Alliance further recommended that schools and school
systems address equity within their formalized plans and professional
development in order to improve school climate. Forums and study groups on
race, achievement and poverty were also recommended to help education
officials, communities, and students better recognize and address the issue.
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Through Different Lenses: West Virginia School Staff and Students
React to School Climate |
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Closing the
Achievement Gap:
Best Practices
in Teaching Mathematics
Recent national test results provide continuing documentation of the need
to increase the focus on improving student achievement in mathematics. The
National Assessment of Educational Progress (NAEP) recently released the
2005 math scores, which reflected student achievement in the areas of
measurement, geometry, data analysis, probability and algebra. Nationally,
only 30% of eighth graders were deemed proficient. Although this reflected
an increase from previous assessments, only 69% of the eighth graders
nationally demonstrated a basic skills level on the NAEP assessment (Olson,
2005).
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Closing the
Achievement Gap: Best Practices in Teaching Mathematics |
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Closing the
Achievement Gap: Providing High-Quality Teachers for Low-Performing
and At-Risk Schools
The impact of a highly qualified, caring teacher in every classroom has
become the focal point of the continuing evolution and implementation of
the No Child Left Behind Act (NCLB). The emerging research, coupled with
the legislative mandate, has made providing a highly qualified and caring
teacher in each classroom a national, state and local imperative. |

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Closing the
Achievement Gap: Providing High-Quality Teachers for Low-Performing
and At-Risk Schools |
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Integrating
Technology in the K-12 Classroom: Implications for Public Policy
West Virginia has been a leader in providing computers in the classroom and
recognizing that computers can provide specialized tutoring, create group
learning environments and provide enriched learning experiences for
students. A survey of over 1,300 high school teachers, conducted by The
Education Alliance in 2004, revealed that over 72% of the teachers felt
they had adequate technology resources.
Clearly, the inclusion of technology in K-12 classrooms is important to our
commitment to participate in a global economy. Having access to technology
is only the first step. Many other supports must be in place to maximize
the integration of computers and related technologies into student learning
experiences. |

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Integrating Technology in the K-12 Classroom: Implications
for Public Policy |
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Bridging the Achievement Gap: The Role of Professional
Development for Teachers Improving student achievement has always been at the forefront of major
educational reform movements (Dilworth & Imig, 1995; Goals 2000, 2001). The
academic success of students can be significantly affected by teachers’ access
and participation in quality professional development activities
(Darling-Hammond, 1990; Gurskey, 2002). This
summary provides an overview of the importance of professional
development. |

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Bridging the Achievement Gap: The Role of Professional
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State-Level Policy Implications for Secondary Schools
The current education climate with its focus on reform offers yet a new
opportunity to transform secondary education. States must assume a major role
for this transformation effort to be successful. Preliminary results from
initiatives in several states suggest that states can make a difference. This
summary provides an overview of these challenges and lists some policy
implications.
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State-Level Policy Implications for Secondary Schools |
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A Summary of Research on Using Student Voice
in School Improvement Planning Who are the most important people left out of the
education process? Students! We are not talking about students’ involvement
in helping select lunch menu items or to determine what should be sold in
the school’s bookstore. Instead, we are looking at how the voice of
students’ can help educators, legislators, parents and communities
understand the complexities of our education system and help explain, in
the student’s view, why we have achievement gaps. This is a precursor
research summary to The Education Alliance’s proactive initiative in the
student voice pilot research project
to illustrate why the Alliance’s student voice research project is so
critical and important to West Virginia. |

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A Summary of Research on Using Student Voice
in School Improvement Planning |
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A Focus on Rural Schools Despite the national attention on improving student
achievement emerging from the No Child Left Behind Act, many rural schools
continue to face a host of challenges. Poverty, insufficient financing,
isolation, an inadequate pool of qualified teachers, and high turnover among
teachers and administrators continue to be major issues (Arnold 2000). Given
this context, Beeson and Strange (2003) rank West Virginia’s status on rural
education issues as being crucially important to its children’s education. |

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A Focus on Rural Schools |
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Policy Implications for Teacher Quality,
Curriculum and Teacher Expectations A day rarely passes without media exposure to some
aspect of what is generally referred to as the “achievement gap,” a
loosely-used term referring to differences in achievement among different
racial, ethnic and socioeconomic student subgroups. The passage of the No
Child Left Behind (NCLB) legislation and the rise to prominence of the
standards-based reform movement, with their inherent accountability and
testing requirements, have raised the public discussion and concern about
achievement gap issues to a new high. In reality, concern for the achievement
gap has a long history. Today, policy leaders have access to more than 30
years of data that can be used to educate and inform themselves, as well as
education’s stakeholders, about the issue. |

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Policy Implications for Teacher Quality,
Curriculum and Teacher Expectations |
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Middle
Childhood Education: Policy Implications and Best PracticesThis piece is a compilation of the field's most
relevant research related to the standards-based reform and reinvention of
middle level education in the United States. Middle Childhood Education findings
support the importance of an academically rigorous curriculum focused on higher
order thinking and problem solving skills in an effort to make middle grades
students more successful in high school, college and the 21st century workplace.
It also offers strategies for improving professional development, educator
preparation and the organizational structure of the middle grades.
The Education Alliance hopes this piece, stocked with recommendations for
education leaders, will serve you in your endeavors to make public education in
West Virginia the best it can be.
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Middle Childhood Education:
Policy Implications and Best Practices |
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Early Childhood Education:
Policy Implications and Guidelines
"In recent years, the intersection of two significant
developments has dramatically changed the national context for raising children,
providing related services and the development of early education policy. The
Education Alliance
is providing you with this research summary. Early Childhood Education: Policy
Implications and Guidelines is a 2007 research publication of The Education
Alliance, West Virginia’s statewide public education fund. Funding for this
initiative is provided by the Claude Worthington Benedum Foundation, Pittsburgh,
Pa. |

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Early
Childhood Education: Policy Implications and Guidelines
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