What Are The Benefits of Technology in the Classroom?

You might be asking, what are the benefits of technology in the classroom? It’s fair to say that when I was in school, the use of technology in the classroom wasn’t widespread. There were no personal laptops for each student, no digital planners, no classes on coding or programming. I remember when the teacher would pull out the overhead projector for lectures. My school certainly wasn’t set up for the level of technology use that teachers were faced with recently.

It’s exciting to think back on how much has changed in the educational landscape since then! Since my high school graduation, social media use has skyrocketed, video conferencing has streamlined and improved greatly. Most students have personal laptops but also smartphones, iPads, watches, and Alexas provide any information they could possibly want to know.

Technology changes on a dime. As education continues to systemically evolve, we’re going to see the many benefits of educational technology come to fruition over the next few decades.

Read on!

Students are more engaged

“Bueller?” This scene from “Ferris Bueller” has to be the epitome of a bored, disinterested classroom. Whether out of a lack of interest in the topic or distraction, two things are happening here. They aren’t paying attention and they aren’t learning.

It’s been 35 years since that film came out and the classroom looks entirely different. Now teachers compete with a myriad of distractions that continues to evolve. So you may be wondering, how can teachers engage their students more effectively in the digital age? Well, I’m glad you asked! There are many ways to harness the positive power of technology and capture your student’s attention at the same time.

Meet them where they are – on devices, social media, websites, games – and bring this technology into your lessons, homework, projects. For example, their five-paragraph essay can become a blog. Now, not only are they more invested in what they’re learning but they’re building essential digital skills.

Part of increasing student engagement in any class is giving them an applicable reason for being there. Something they can relate to. Utilizing the interconnectivity of technology in the classroom helps you reap the benefits. Plus, your students are more likely to retain the information.

Incorporates different learning styles

There’s a big debate in education between the use of more personalized learning vs. a one-size-fits-all approach and it’s valid. When you have 30+ students in your class, it’s more difficult to create unique lesson plans that engage each student. Especially when you’re already overworked and underpaid as it is. We get it.

One of the many benefits of technology is that it provides an easier way to reach each student’s unique learning styles, playing to their various strengths and respond more intently to you.

  • If your student is more aural, it means they retain information better by hearing it. Some ideas for using technology to your advantage here:
    – Record your lessons! You can turn these into a private podcast that they can re-listen to as they study at home, use audiobooks. This helps you as well for any student that misses a class, they can be directed to your “podcast” and quickly get caught up.
    – Students can use an app like Me Book that allows them to listen to stories and record themselves reading.
    – Language teachers can make use of AI robots and chatbots to speak to students in different languages so they can practice as if talking to a real person.
  • Visual learners respond more to things they can see and are prone to retain more information if they can read/watch it rather than listen.
    – Try incorporating more graphic visuals aids to make the connection, or using more interactive videos in your lessons.
    – You can use technology like coding to allow student to visually code a website, or apps like Canva and Photoshop to create graphics that underline their classroom comprehension and level of engagement.\

Improves Collaboration

There are multiple benefits of technology is that it fosters a higher level of collaboration, not just within your classroom but on a global scale. It’s now easier than ever for students to work together with project management tools, video conference breakout rooms, social media, and even as simple as AirDropping files to someone in under a few minutes. This collaboration also works to the teachers’ benefit! If you’re grading papers, students can now see all of your notes and all communication can be kept in one space. Thus giving you more access to teaching students even outside of the school walls and time.

Embracing the global reach of the internet offers up exciting new possibilities for your students as well. Similar to pen-pals, maybe you have a sister school in a different country, and not only can the students communicate with each other as friends but they can also work remotely as teammates in completing a project. This would take a lot of planning of course, but the possibilities are endless!

Prepares Children for the Future

The single most important benefit of technology in the classroom is that it prepares students to be future-ready. We know that all students will need digital skills for their futures, but there are also many challenges when it comes to teaching digital skills.

At BSD Education, our goal is to prepare students for their undefined futures where artificial intelligence, augmented reality, and data privacy are all emerging topics with tremendous impacts on society. To accomplish this, we embed four approaches into our curriculum that have been identified as future proof and fundamental:

a) Computational Thinking
b) Design Thinking
c) Coding/Programming
d) Digital Citizenship

These are just a few of the many benefits to utilizing more technology in the classroom but I’d love to hear from you on how you use technology to boost student engagement or substantiate a lesson plan? Send me a message at bd@bsd.education or leave a comment below! We’d love to hear from you!

Maker Learning is a Mindset, Not a Space

I started volunteering in 2010 as a coach and officiator for local educational robotics competitions. Entering a world of deep and impactful learning, I soon realized it did not resemble any previous learning environments that I had been exposed to in my education. I began to wonder how we could inspire this learning to take place in classrooms. So, inspired by adult-oriented hackerspaces in Boston and San Francisco, I started a youth-focused Makerspace in San Antonio, Texas, outfitted with 3D printers, robots, laser cutters, and other equipment. We hosted maker learning summer camps and out-of-school activities, but teachers weren’t seeing the transformative classroom connections I was hoping for.

Maker Learning on the road

With some luck and a generous donation, I took the maker space on the road with a giant bus called the Geekbus. We took the maker space to schools instead of asking them to come to us, and it worked! We did workshops with students and teachers and shared new pedagogical approaches and interests in new technologies.

I have since continued to help schools all over the world start and grow educational maker spaces. I even host a virtual workshop series (Maker Educator Certificate) where I teach about the pedagogical foundations of Maker Learning as a mindset.

Changing your mindset

I have designed and expanded many maker spaces for schools over several years. In that time, I’ve also learned that the physical maker space is just a place where you keep “the stuff.”

When you keep all of the learning inside the maker space, it just creates another silo, where specific types of knowledge, tools, and materials are taught only to be used at certain times.

One approach to education is Transformative Maker Learning. The idea is that students can utilize various tools, materials, and equipment to facilitate learning. This way of learning spans across any subject and can take place anywhere.

What if students learned maths through the construction of playground equipment? What if they learned history through costume design and learned science through building models? This requires a mindset shift. It also necessitates high-quality professional development for teachers to feel comfortable and understand the impact of such types of learning.

To help teachers understand Maker Learning as a mindset, I have helped to develop four essential elements: 

  1. Purpose: Students have to be connected to “the why” of the ï»żçŠ€ćˆ©ćŁ« project and feel an authentic connection to it.
  2. Condition: A conducive learning environment must set the stage for curiosity, wonder, and occasional failure/struggle.
  3. Assessment: Students must be able to demonstrate what they know or have learned, but must be empowered to show their learning through the use of a variety of tools, methods, and modalities.
  4. Reflection: Students must be able to reflect on their work and ask “what have I learned from this experience?”

These four essential elements do not require any physical environment or specific space. Instead, students can use them anytime and anywhere with tools or materials, which allows Maker Learning to flourish as a mindset instead of being isolated into one particular space.

Want to explore further? Here are a few more articles to help you learn about Maker Learning!

Bring Technology Into Your Subject in Five Ways

Last year saw a heavy reliance on technology to provide education and continuity to the classroom experience. But, as life gradually returns to normalcy, you might wonder how technology fits into your school structure as schools return to in-person. In short? Schools are getting back to normal but technology isn’t going anywhere. Bringing technology in your subject area doesn’t mean that you need to be an expert in coding or designing websites as a side hustle. Instead, it’s about innovative thinking and putting yourself in your student’s shoes.

A few more questions for you:

How are your students already using technology to understand the world they live in?
How can you, as an educator, provide the context digitally?
What are some strategies to bring more technology into your subject area to engage students?

We’re here to help! We’ve asked our Co-Founder and Chief Technology Officer, Nickey Khemchandani, to share some of his favorite ideas to engage students with technology. Read on to see what he said!

Pick something your students don’t like.

For example, if students are disinterested in writing another five-paragraph essay, turn those essays into a classroom blog! They can share this not just with family/friends but in college portfolios and job applications, students can share. They’re building something that they can represent themselves with using a computer, but they’re also more engaged with homework.

Find an easy win that can be interactive.

Another great way of bringing technology in your subject is with math. Let’s say you’re teaching probability to your students – building a dice game online adds a layer of fun to the lesson while also teaching them critical mathematics and technology skills.

Look for a student who’s already an evangelist with technology.

You do not have to bear the burden of carrying all of the technology weight into your classroom. Usually, your students are already pushing for it. Find an evangelist in your classroom and have them bring technology into their assignments. For example, using technology to build a website instead of writing a paper will inform how to start implementing more tech across your subject.

Talk about social media in your classroom.

Your students are already involved and having conversations about it, so you should too! They’re using platforms like Tik Tok and Instagram, and how they potentially create social media posts around your subject areas will give you insight into their understanding of the subject. One of the best ways to interact with social media is to have them build a campaign, just like you see with Coca-Cola or Netflix, to get them to create a movement around your subject topic.

Build online portfolios

One of the best things a student can do in your subject is to represent your subject with technology. If they start taking pieces of the topic, they learn and add them into a shareable portfolio. So you can have essentially a handbook of all of the issues they’ve engaged with and can now share as notes for future students taking that class or (depending on the topics/skills) they can add to an online portfolio that prepares them for collegiate and professional futures.

What is Design Thinking and Why Is It Important

Design Thinking is a professional process that engineers and designers use to ideate, prototype, and test new inventions, ideas, and products, emerging in K-12 education as a strategy for use in the classroom as well as a tool used for total school improvement.

SparkTruck inspired me to later create my own mobile Design Thinking vehicle called the Geekbus. Since then, I have gone on to teach Design Thinking to students and educators all over the world.

So, what is Design Thinking? I highly recommend this quick video introduction to get acquainted.

There are 5 main steps to Design Thinking:

1. Empathy

2. Define

3. Ideate

4. Prototype

5. Test.

The first step is the most impactful because it requires designers/students to consider the needs of the customer/user. This allows for the development of crucially needed social-emotional skills.

In contrast, the Engineering Design Process does not include this step and goes straight to the ideation and the problem-solving stage without careful consideration of the needs of the people involved. 

There are many ways to gain empathy for the customers/users that you’re designing for, but the best way is to speak directly to them through interviews to ask about their needs, pain-points and to get advice about what they really want and not just what we think they want.

If interviewing customers/users isn’t a viable option, you can brainstorm through empathetic thinking to imagine scenarios where people would use your idea and how they might respond to it.

Design Thinking can be used to create and make products, processes, events, organizations, and even food! The process is adaptable to many situations and once you have some practice with it, it can become a culture-changing practice that can be transformative at whole-school levels.

While Design Thinking can be a useful and practical tool for many situations, it also has limits. One criticism of Design Thinking is that it becomes a crutch and doesn’t help to cultivate what the d.school is calling Design Abilities.

Their 8 Core Design Abilities are: 

  • Navigate Ambiguity
  • Learn from Others
  • Synthesize Information
  • Rapidly Experiment
  • Move Between Concrete and Abstract
  • Build and Craft Intentionally
  • Communicate Deliberately
  • Design your Design Work

If you want to read more about these 8 Core Design Abilities, I recommend that you read the d.school’s description of each ability and the need for an approach that moves beyond Design Thinking.
Design Thinking has left a lasting impact on me and my work, which continues to this day in my work as an ed-tech leader and curriculum designer at BSD Education.

At BSD, we use the Design Think process to develop a new curriculum and to build new features on our custom coding platform. If you want to learn more about our approach at BSD, check out our certified curriculum design process.

Technology in the Classroom: Best Questions to Ask Before Integration



There are so many developments in technology becoming a factor in how schools develop their curriculum. So it can be difficult to discern which technologies to implement and how effective they will be.

We’ve collected questions from our customers that are key when deciding whether or not to integrate technology into your school.

Will this help all students think and learn more deeply?

This is a great question! Not just because education is how students develop crucial critical thinking skills. But it also helps teachers differentiate instruction to help every student access that thinking instead of only some.

What student outcomes are you working towards?

You might ask this when you’re considering if an EdTech tool can and should be integrated into lessons. Ask yourself if that technology will help your students achieve specific curricular goals.

Is there ongoing support for this technology in the classroom?

Technology is constantly evolving, so we highly recommend that any tool you utilize is set up for ongoing support. No one wants to struggle to learn a new update without help!

How do you already use technology in the classroom?

This question depends on how you use technology with your students right now. The right EdTech tool has the potential to be a game-changer in digital skills learning. Consider how this technology will coexist alongside what you’re already using and how it will improve student learning outcomes.

How will this tech empower students to control their learning?

At BSD, we’ve designed our online platform to follow an experiential learning cycle that encourages them to explore, learn and create. As a result, students can apply the digital skills of coding, programming, and web development (among others), to what they are learning in the classroom and what they are interested in.

Is this a toy or a tool?

By definition, education technology should always be considered a learning tool, not something to entertain them digitally. So when asking this question, consider how this technology integrates understanding and real-world application. Is it based on a pedagogical foundation? How will you be able to teach your students with this technology? Is this preparing students to be future-ready? If the answer to any of these is no, then it’s likely that this platform should not be an EdTech tool for schools to consider.

Is this the best technology to prepare my students for the modern world?

Ah! This is one of the most essential questions because the reality is that your students are experiencing the modern world. Students have already been introduced to technology, and one day, they will soon be in jobs that likely don’t even exist. That means they need tech tools that teach them more digital skills.

What are some deciding factors for you when choosing an EdTech tool for your school? We’d like to hear from you. Please send us a message at info@bsd.education or leave a comment below!

How To Teach Adaptability In Your Classroom

Did you know as of 2021, 65% of our students will be in jobs that don’t even exist yet? At BSD Education, we talk a lot about preparing students for “the future of work”. But the reality is that many of us don’t know what that future necessarily looks like. So how can we prepare students?

By cultivating adaptability in the classroom.

Our students’ natural adaptability was put to the test during COVID as their education was hit by an evolution of technology overnight. While the unpredictability of education in the 2020/21 school year was often criticized, it’s also a reminder of the uncertainty our students are facing. Especially when they look ahead to their futures – from kindergarten to senior year.

Building more skills in adaptability while they are still in school will provide them with long-term benefits when the time comes that they need to pivot their skillsets and learn new technology at a moment’s notice.

This level of adaptability is an immeasurable resource for your student and teachers are uniquely placed to help build confidence in this area as a crucial skill they will need in the future.

Not only does it help them adapt to new situations and develop new skills more quickly, but adaptable students also are more likely to have higher self-confidence and satisfaction in their lives.

Teachers have a collective responsibility to prepare their students to embrace and adapt to challenge and change. To better prepare them for the future of work, we’ve collected a few of our favorite strategies for fostering adaptability in schools. 

Teach Resilience

Adaptability and resilience go hand in hand! Resilience is the ability to overcome challenges with a positive impact, but it’s also a mindset that should be developed early in life.

If something negatively impacts your student – whether it’s falling behind on grades or later on, not getting into the college they were hoping for – they always fall back on their resilience and find creative ways to push forward and improve. In a world where technology changes on a dime, this skill will be incredibly beneficial to your students.

As their teacher, you can help to foster this by encouraging them to find creative solutions to their problems and provide a safe environment to explore new ideas.

Promote Self-Regulation

Students as they grow into adulthood will need to learn how to manage their emotional thinking, especially when faced with challenges.

This is a teachable skill that gives them the ability to handle unexpected situations without obvious frustration. Teachers can reinforce this skill by educating students on how to set achievable goals, scaffolding, and other classroom activities. 

Dispel the Fear of Failure

No one likes to fail and for many people, the idea of failure is absolutely devastating and debilitating for students and adults alike. There is always the risk of failing when a situation starts to change. It’s really a fear of the unknown and not wanting to do something that won’t be as successful as keeping the status quo.

But it’s important to remember – and teach students from a young age – that success comes from failing and learning from it. This can be taught through recognizing effort, building community among peers, asking questions, taking risks, and self-reflection.

By not being afraid of failure, students will be more motivated to learn and find interesting solutions to changes in an uncertain future.

Encourage Continuous Learning

Learning and developing new skills is something we experience throughout our lives, but when applied to a future workspace where change is rampant, this willingness to learn is what keeps you a few steps ahead.

Teachers can build this excitement for education with their students by indulging their curiosity and even displaying their own enthusiasm in a subject. Taking the metrics of education out of it can often encourage students to see a lesson in a new light.

This is something that they will carry with them throughout their lives and help foster critical thinking and creative problem-solving. 

It’s impossible to prepare students for every eventuality. However, educators can foster adaptive skills and teach students how to respond to challenging, changing situations in positive ways. With this skill, students will grow into adulthood able to keep pace with unexpected situations and be more successful in future careers.

Learning Acceleration through Summer and After-school Programs

Making up for Learning Loss During the Pandemic

With classroom seats to be filled with students once again this fall, there is a sense we’re turning a corner. Although schools aren’t “normal,” reopening is upon us. And the opportunities to recover from learning loss due to the pandemic are now possible.

Learning acceleration is vital in recovering what learning that was lost during the pandemic. A task that will require schools to innovate in their approach to students. According to research by McKinsey & Company, students “lost the equivalent of three months of learning in mathematics and reading,” according to research by McKinsey & Company. Brittany Jenkins, the founder of We Are Tech, argues the impact of learning loss is more profound for communities of color. See this post where she outlines three ways to address the growing divide. 


On average, students “lost the equivalent of three months of learning in mathematics and one-and-a-half months of learning in reading.”

McKinsey & Company

Simply put, students are behind, and now comes the time to help them recover. So how do we create environments for successful learning acceleration? 

The After-school Solution to Learning Loss

This year, schools have limited resources to address learning loss, especially when summer and after-school programs significantly impact learning. Currently, K-12 students spend more than 80 percent of their waking hours learning outside of school. In contrast, according to the Afterschool Alliance, more than 10 million students nationwide rely on after-school programs. 

The number of students and hours spent in after-school programs presents an opportunity, with research highlighting their effectiveness. This research reveals how critical they can be in accelerating learning for students. According to the Expanded Learning and Afterschool Project, regular after-school program attendance can  lower dropout rates and increase attendance, close achievement gaps for low-income students, improve performance in the classroom, and increase social, emotional well-being

Build Meaningful Programs through Tech Education

While the general value of after-school programs is hard to argue, the quality of such programs is critical. Schools that integrate coding and digital skills learning can ensure learning loss is effectively addressed.

Digital skills are part of the solution. Digital skills like web, game, and app development are fun and engaging ways to reinforce core subjects through real-world application.

Another benefit of digital skills is enhancing skills like computational thinking, which can lift students’ abilities across subjects. This is an important benefit after an unconventional school year.

Addressing Learning Loss through Future-Proof Skills

Enhancing learning acceleration in core subjects allows schools to emphasize STEM careers and TechEd through OST programming. However, according to a recent iD Tech survey, 65% of parents with children in online or hybrid schools don’t believe the STEM offerings their child received during the pandemic meet their standards of quality, engaging activities. 


65% of parents with children in online or hybrid school don’t believe the STEM offerings their child received during the pandemic meet their standards of quality, engaging activities.

iD Tech

Recognizing the need to future-proof their students, the Elementary Institute of Science (EIS) partnered with BSD Education. This partnership aims to integrate digital skills in their Steps-2-STEM after-school program

One aspect will be expanding access to high-quality tech education, which will be made available through the partnership with BSD. Additionally, EIS provides STEM experiences that foster critical thinking and technical skills that encourage students to pursue STEM careers.

“This partnership with BSD will help level the playing field for many students who haven’t accessed these increasingly more important digital skills,” said Jim Stone, Executive Director at EIS. “Closing the digital divide is about more than hardware; it’s about creating digital literacy for everyone, and this partnership will help make this happen.”

A Partner for Learning Acceleration

Addressing learning loss due to the pandemic will take time and can’t be addressed through a single action or solution. However, quality summer and after-school programs will significantly reduce the impact of learning loss and helping students move forward. In addition, with the integration of tech education and digital skills, students can accelerate their progress. 

Coding and other digital skills seem daunting, but teachers don’t need any tech experience to get started with BSD’s curriculum. Instead, we allow educators with expertise to increase their capacity and continue to innovate. Contact us today to develop a partnership that will help your students reach further and be future-ready.

Meeting The Needs of Today’s Learners with Constructionism

If you have been around the ed-tech scene anytime in the past 10 years, you have probably encountered popular products like Lego Robotics, Scratch, App Inventor, or Pi-top. You have even seen the rise of educational makerspaces. All of these popular approaches to education have something in common. They all stem from a common root in an educational pedagogy called constructionism. If you are interested in the roots and history of constructionism, I recommend reading my three-part series on the topic.

If you have never heard of constructionism, it can best be described as a way of learning where “knowledge is not simply transmitted from teacher to student, but actively constructed by the mind of the learner. Children don’t get ideas; they make ideas. Moreover, it suggests that learners are particularly likely to make new ideas when actively engaged in making some type of external artifact, which they can reflect upon and share with others” (Kafai and Resnick 1996). In the 1960’s, Seymour Papert and his colleagues at MIT first developed and researched how constructionism can benefit children by learning to program digital turtles in the first programming language for children, Logo. This early work led to a democratic approach to education where students can lead their learning, tinker, and explore meaningful projects.

Pappert’s successor at MIT, Mitchel Resnick, is keeping constructionism alive and well today through his contribution to the 4 Ps: Projects, Passion, Peers, and Play. While rooted in constructionism, the 4 P’s continue to drive how students use Scratch and other similar tools. Constructionism has gone on to inspire many educators and school systems around the world, including us at BSD Education.

We were recently awarded a product certification from Digital Promise called the Research-Based Design Product Certification, where our pedagogy, theory of action, and methods were put under scrutiny to determine if our approach to using constructionism as a foundation for learning meets the rigor needed to help close the digital learning gap for today’s students. If you want to learn more about our pedagogical approach and methods, you can see and download our Curriculum Development Process to learn more.

Seymour Papert once said that constructionism “presents a grander vision of an educational system in which technology is used not in the form of machines for processing children, but as something the child himself will learn to manipulate, to extend, to apply to projects, thereby gaining a greater and more articulate mastery of the world, a sense of the power of applied knowledge and self-confidently realistic image of himself as an intelligent agent.” 

At BSD, we take this seriously and design projects that allow students to find meaning, explore new concepts and learn to code in HTML, CSS, and JavaScript. We value the opportunity for students to learn to use real code instead of using obfuscated technologies that leave the inner workings in a black box. This empowers students to know how the daily websites, games, and apps they use work and function. If you want to see how our projects are structured, try one of our Hour of Code Featured Projects.

For more on Constructionism, watch our BSD Learn webinar over on our YouTube channel today

How Online EdTech Platforms Can Strengthen Formative Assessments

Incorporating formative assessments in your classroom to see how students learn in real-time can often feel like an impossible challenge. While understanding your student’s comprehension is necessary, a teacher has many questions and concerns when implementing formative assessments. 

  • How do you find the time to incorporate these assessments?
  • Do you truly know your students understand the key topics?
  • Which students are ready to move on and which ones are not?
  • Are these assessments framing the next lesson?

Integrating the right tech education platform can take the guessing game out of formative assessments and provide teachers with a quick, easy, and accurate gauge of vital student comprehension. The lack of complicated grading systems or point levels, but rather a focus on genuine understanding, allow teachers of any subject to feel confident their students are learning and developing coding skills. With this comprehension, they will hold onto throughout their education life and into their careers. 

Outside of the importance of knowing what your students are learning, here are three benefits of incorporating formative assessments through tech education:

Free Up Time

It sounds counterintuitive to think adding formative assessments would decrease workload, but that is the case with the right platform. Instead of developing mechanisms to gauge student comprehension, teachers can use a tech education platform like a classroom management system.

For Alicia Johal, Middle School Robotics Teacher & Assistant Director of Center for Innovation at the San Diego Jewish Academy, the real-time assessments offered by BSD Education in the classroom have opened the door for her to productively engage with students. In addition, these assessments let her do what she does best – teach.

“I can go in at any time of the day and check and see what project a student is on, what step they are on, how long they’ve spent on that step, and see how they are doing in the class,” said Johal.

Improve Dialogue and Collaboration

Students use an online, self-guided platform, while teachers like Alicia use the platform to accurately understand where to help them. This identifies possible issues students are having, but it also increases dialogue and collaboration between teachers and students.

“I’ve never talked to my students so much while they’re coding, and that is powerful,” said Johal. “Not only for their comprehension, but they are also talking about it. That sort of dialogue is so powerful, and I think that’s why they remember more than what I see them remember with other programs.”

Increase Student Engagement

Providing instant feedback for a student through formative assessments plays a significant role in maintaining student engagement. For Alicia’s students, the consistent feedback and progress displayed have helped them focus and overcome obstacles.

“They’re getting these little prompts after each step when they do it correctly, and I feel like it’s an intrinsic motivation,” said Johal. “They see their progress and movement within each class period. I’m always surprised that they don’t get bored or complain, and I think it’s the interface. Being able to see how they’re doing all the time makes a big difference.”

As classroom sizes grow, utilizing time efficiently has never been more critical for teachers. Tech education and BSD can empower educators of any subject or experience level to incorporate practical formative assessments that ensure students walk away with digital skills they can use for the rest of their lives. 

Learn how you can partner with BSD Education today and begin helping your students develop 21st-century skills.

Addressing Learning Loss: How do School Culture Systems Impact Learning In-Person & At-Home?

Last year the world changed forever due to the COVID-19 pandemic. Public spaces closed, public services and establishments shut down, schools closed, and people stayed home. As an educator, this time for my colleagues and me meant that we needed to ramp up and equip ourselves with skills to continue to teach our students virtually. The transition into Virtual Learning has been a challenge professionally, emotionally, and mentally for many of us. We’ve been challenged with coping with the vulnerability this time brings, managing our capacity, and supporting the academic success of our students.

Personally, when the pandemic hit, the newfound teaching experience of Virtual Learning served as a chance to recenter me and cultivate peace and balance in my home. The more I made this self-discovery, I realized how draining physically being in my school environment at the time was and how it was negatively taking a toll on my well-being physically, mentally, and emotionally. 

I used to teach at a charter school in North Philly that is considered a “renaissance school,”; meaning the charter system in this school has been implemented to revitalize the school’s performance through the charter network’s systems, operations, and academic standards. In the last blog, I shared that I also attended a charter high school. However, the charter school I attended was extremely different from where I taught; its school environment consisted of different demographics, administrative structures, and academic standards. 

The school I attended growing up was based in Southern California. Its student body was very diverse, each grade had a full administrative staff (including an Academic Counselor) that stayed with your graduating class from 9 – 12 grade, and the school was an individual charter school, not a part of a charter network; which afforded it the privilege to optimize academic and learning standards very efficiently.

This school’s environment has a college-prep-centered culture, and while there, I was able to cultivate a strong foundation of independence, self-accountability, and responsibility with my autonomy. Geographically, this school is located in a middle class predominantly white area. Still, because it is a public charter school, students from all backgrounds can apply and attend throughout the city’s county.

As a daughter to a Black single mother from Philadelphia, who moved to California to afford her children better opportunities, I’m fully aware of how her decision allowed me to benefit from having closer proximity to White Americans through academia. I often wonder how different my life would have been if my mom stayed in Philadelphia to raise my sister and me. I imagine my understanding of myself, my confidence, and my perspective would be different. But it’s beautiful how things come full circle because now I live in Philadelphia, close to family, and I’m blessed to serve a purpose through teaching techniques and to share insights from my experiences. 

In contrast to how I grew up, the charter school I taught in North Philly predominantly served African American and Hispanic students. It is a part of a large charter network of schools, academic subjects – not grade level, organized its administrative structure, and assigned grade-level social workers – not Academic Counselors. This school’s environment has a policy-centered culture that focuses students and staff on meeting the charter network’s school administration and behavioral management standards. 

While teaching there, I witnessed students, families, and staff persevere through numerous inconsistencies in school policies and academic practices. Unfortunately, witnessing this made me understand and appreciate why my mother raised my sister and me in Southern California. In comparison to my high school experience, the experience my students had was less stable and did not prepare them as well as I was for the “real-world” at their age.

Like many charter schools in predominantly Black and Latino communities that are underserved throughout the US, this school’s systems are presented to revitalize its academic community, but the nature in which they are implemented are over-policing the students, families, educators, and faculty within it; thus creating a hostile environment. These dynamics ultimately take a great deal away from the youth of color’s personal development and further disenfranchise communities of color through academia.

Learning Loss in 2020

On March 13th, 2020, two pivotal moments occurred in my community – Breonna Taylor was murdered by police who invaded her home, and the school I was teaching at shut down due to the emergence of COVID-19. This was nearly a month after Ahmaud Arbery was gun down and murdered by racist White American civilians in his neighborhood.

These events were like a domino effect in my academic community that set the stage to host conversations about the negative effects of school policing that we’d usually have privately. Bold teachers came together to have open conversations about how the charter network’s disciplinary systems nurture our students to be policed and misinformed and lay the foundation for their matriculation into the prison system instead of constructive and enfranchising post-secondary success. 

The reality is that charter school networks, like the one I worked at, in underserved communities throughout the U.S. are predominantly presented to families of color as a higher quality option for public education instead of city public schools. The corporate and administrative faculty members that lead these kinds of charter school networks to rely on families of color being ignorant to the realities of how their local schools are operated, and their desperate desire to expose their children to greater opportunities within their means; to profit from meeting attendance quotas that are subsidized by government funding when families send their children to these schools. 

This reality is a tough pill to swallow, but it is where America’s education system is for the youth of color in underserved school communities. Historically, the education of the youth of color, particularly Black youth, has been disenfranchising. Dating back to it being illegal for Black people to even read during slavery, to the formalization of Black schools that predominantly taught labor trades in the Reconstruction Era; the education of the youth of color in America has been rooted in controlling Black bodies and other subjugated communities – starting with the mind.

The Civil Rights Era achieved integration of America’s school systems; that time made a constructive impact on galvanizing the integration of other parts of society. However, many Americans, mainly White Americans, who were, and some still are, opposed to integration, have created systems that have diverted investment out of academic programs and institutions that once served predominantly white students; simply because students of color are a part of the population, and now are predominantly serving them. 

Due to this discriminatory divestment, what’s happening in the schools that serve students of color in underserved school communities is similar to that of a rose growing out of concrete. Imagine the student as that rose. Once that rose is plucked, another rose grows in that very same concrete. Instead of growing back as a multitude of flowers and lush greenery that would revitalize the environment that rose grows in, its surrounding remains the same concrete – broken, imbalanced, and malnourished.

In underserved school communities, many students, and the faculty supporting them, exist in oppressive environments. The operations they must facilitate lack mindfulness; as a result, our students are not receiving the appropriate and practical treatment to ensure them a better future. This cracking foundation inevitably is doing a disservice to youth of color and putting them in a position where they’ll disproportionately experience severe learning loss during Virtual Learning in the COVID-19 pandemic. 

Before the pandemic, the charter school I taught at mandated numerous policies and systems that diverted the focus of students, parents, and faculty away from the core principles of youth development. Most of the school’s rules and policies revolved around controlling students’ movement throughout the building and using excessive micromanagement to enforce their compliance with those rules. In theory, these rules were presented to ensure students were “ready to learn.” Still, the design and implementation of these rules created such a hostile environment that core elements of effective teaching and learning – such as relationship building, compassion, transparency, autonomy, and accountability – were never established to achieve academic success.

Once the COVID-19 pandemic emerged, these same systematic discrepancies transformed into even larger issues with Virtual Learning. Students in underserved school communities are experiencing more severe learning loss during the COVID-19 pandemic because they were already experiencing learning loss and being misinformed and misguided before it, based on how poorly their school communities have historically been structured and operated. 

In the emerging conversation around learning loss, many claims there shouldn’t be much learning loss based on the assumption that learning at home should be just like learning at school. But what if your school is poorly administered and you didn’t already have a substantial and sustainable model to look to or follow to create an effective learning model at home? This is the reality for students of color in underserved communities, and it’s creating more inequities for our community in the long run.

I firmly believe learning starts at home and that schools provide standardized guidance and academic structure to aid families throughout the youth development process. Our families and students care for their well-being and seek adequate guidance to ensure our community has a greater quality of life and a brighter future through education. But to achieve this, I think there are a variety of solutions that need to be adopted on a structural level to provide families of color a more trustworthy schooling model; here are some of those solutions:

Mandate adequate budgets for guidance counselors

In many schools in underserved areas, budgets for orchestrating school culture systems and academic pathways are allocated towards salaries for administrators or youth development staff, such as Assistant (Associate) Principals, Social Workers, and Dean staff; but rarely are these budgets designated for providing grade-specific Academic Guidance Counselors. As a result, most functions, like course load planning, attendance monitoring, and post-secondary planning, that would usually be the job of a guidance counselor are operated by Assistant Principals and Dean staff who do not have the educational background that would qualify them to facilitate these guidance counseling practices to aid a student’s matriculation into post-secondary success properly.

This dynamic also creates a conflict of interest when school administrators are pressured to pass students along to the next grade to meet attendance and grading quotes when planning student’s schedules. Investing in having strong Academic Guidance Counselors can help afford students of color a fairer chance at gauging and monitoring their academic progress.

Mandate cultural competency and anti-racism training

White American civilians who are leaders and faculty in school communities that serve students of color in underserved schools do not embody the genetic obligation most people of color feel to further the enfranchisement of people of color at large. Therefore, I think white academic leaders and faculty must learn about systemic racism and its effects on people of color to provide them insight into the weight of their decisions. Their daily decisions in schools affect the enfranchisement of the youth of color, and it is time for them to be held accountable to make more mindful, empowering.

Constructive decisions in school communities that serve students of color and predominantly white schools to produce more conscious white youth who can be more mindful in living in a society with people of color. Mandating these training sessions can also help teachers gain more compassion and understanding for their students in Virtual Learning to sustain their academic success and reverse learning loss.

Focus disciplinary practices on affirming accountability of students and staff instead of on reprimanding 

In my experience teaching in the charter school system, many rules focused on controlling student behavior instead of creating autonomy for students to become smarter decision-makers. Systems that eradicate a student’s individuality, like school uniforms and identification cards, or make them feel targeted, like metal detectors, stifle students from gaining confidence in who they are intrinsically and lead them to assume the worst of themselves when they aren’t compliant.

When students are reprimanded for being non-compliant, a piece of their spirit is murdered. They lose a sense of self and the opportunity to leverage their uniqueness to inform their personal decision-making. This mitigates the development of their personal accountability. As a result, they are brought up with a contentious relationship with authority and are not properly guided to make better informed (or resourceful) decisions independently in the long run. This leads to disproportionate incarceration for the youth of color in adulthood and further perpetuates the school-to-prison pipeline. 

The lack of adequate accountability systems in the school is a huge influence on why students are struggling to model their academic success in Virtual Learning, leading to substantial learning loss. With stronger and more accountable systems, students and families can receive proper guidance to aid youth development.

There is nothing new under the sun; these solutions I’ve shared are just a few common sentiments amongst Abolitionists in education. It is important to consider how these solutions can change the overall culture and environment of schools serving students of color in underserved communities. That change can provide a respectable model for students and families to adopt to limit and reverse learning loss in their at-home learning environments. There is so much that can be gained from teaching students how to use technology to empower themselves. It would be unfortunate if we took this time for granted and overlooked the opportunities to grow ourselves and our youth.

As the conversation around learning loss during this time emerges, I encourage us all to be mindful of the different factors that affect one another, step out of our own perspectives, and think holistically about how learning can be made more equitable for marginalized students; because we are living through a pivotal moment in history and the education of all our youth will immensely impact the future conditions of society and humanity. 

Blog Post Inspirations:

Education Liberation Network

Bettina Love

Melanated Educators

Caucus of Working Educators

Angela Crawford – Check out a profile article on her in The Atlantic! 

Sharif El-Mekki – Check out his opinion articles on EdWeek! 

Center for Black Educator Development

We Are Tech’s “Let’s Talk About Equity” panel discussion on Investing in Families of Color from Pre-K thru 12