For all the mountains of education research that exists, mining it for answers to specific questions can be a major barrier for policymakers and administrators who want to implement changes that can best improve schools.
A new project out of 海角论坛 aims to build a stronger bridge between those professionals and the solutions they actually need. The Answer Lab, founded within the (CEPEG), pairs policymaker and administrator questions to top experts in the education field. Those experts synthesize the existing research into briefs that are both understandable and direct.
Associate Professor of Education Morgan Polikoff, a co-director of CEPEG, first envisioned something like The Answer Lab in a with Harvard senior lecturer Carrier Conaway. Polikoff sees the lab as a more powerful鈥攁nd faster鈥攚ay to integrate research with the needs of policy.
鈥淭here have been lots of efforts to connect research to policy; some of these have succeeded, and many have not,鈥 Polikoff said. 鈥淚鈥檓 excited about this new approach, which I think addresses many of the shortcomings of prior efforts by taking questions directly from policymakers and giving them clear answers in formats they can readily use.鈥
Supported with funding from the Association of California School Administrators (ACSA), the lab has solicited questions from several superintendents so far. Polikoff then finds national experts to provide two-page briefs analyzing possible solutions and making recommendations for action.
The lab launched with two initial briefs. For a request to learn what district policies and practices and reduce the need for student disciplinary referrals, Polikoff turned to Kaitlin P. Anderson of Lehigh University. For a question about among students with disabilities, he turned to Douglas Fuchs and Lynn S. Fuchs of Vanderbilt University. Upcoming briefs focus on designing effective mathematics professional development and supporting English Learners in the classroom.
鈥淲e are focusing on K-12 policy,鈥 Polikoff said, 鈥渂ut I think the idea of The Answer Lab could work in just about any field. I hope others take what we鈥檝e started here and run with it.鈥