Nebraska Invests in K-8 Math Acceleration and Analyzes Impact

The Nebraska Department of Education offered Zearn Math for free to all public and non-public schools for academic years 2020-21, 2021-22, and both summers. During that time, more than 9,000 educators across almost 500 schools accessed core instruction, tutoring, and summer learning resources. The effort reached more than 110,000 students.

An Efficacy Research Study on this effort showed that consistent use of Zearn resulted in larger student gains on the Nebraska state math assessment, including significant proficiency gains for the lowest performing math students, English learners, Black and Latino students, and students eligible for free and reduced price lunch. Building on this success, Nebraska is enabling over 220 schools to access Zearn Math in the 2022-23 school year. This includes not only content for students but also training and support for educators and leaders.

We are spotlighting this because Nebraska is not only providing wide access to needed math supports, but also sharing evidence about the results in real time to demonstrate the return on investment for teachers and students.

Reviewer Analysis

Leslie Villegas

It is a common misconception that math is not a linguistically demanding subject. The English Learner Success Forum develops free resources designed to illustrate activities and scaffolds that can be strategically built into lessons and units to deepen and accelerate ELs’ content area learning over time and focuses on both math and ELA. It would be helpful to know to what extent ELs were able to access this program and whether EL teachers were participating in the program. It would also be helpful to know how ELs’ needs were integrated and addressed in these additional instructional programs.

The Data Quality Campaign

Nebraska is using program evaluation data in real-time to expand a successful math intervention to more students. By making evidence-informed decisions, the Nebraska Department of Education is ensuring that the state is investing in effective programs for its students.

Jocelyn Pickford

Nebraska has prioritized high-quality instructional materials and teacher training in pandemic recovery - and is studying the impact in real time.

Dale Chu

Nebraska has taken a smart approach by purchasing and providing Zearn Math to school districts free of charge. The effort includes both content for students and training for educators and to its credit, the state has made these resources available to both public and non-public schools. The evidence from the multi-year investment seems promising—other states would do well to look at how Nebraska structured its program to maximize availability to schools across the state.

The Edunomics Lab at Georgetown University

Purchasing training and licenses in high-quality instructional materials is a good use of one-time federal funds. Students can access the materials and get back on track, and the investment does not add any recurring financial obligations.

Center on Reinventing Public Education

States making fully funded statewide investments in high quality instructional materials systematizes instructional strategies for teachers across school systems, regardless of the local resources or challenges. This practice also stands out because it is supported by research.

EdAllies

This is a worthwhile effort to maintain programming that is showing promise. States looking to replicate this practice should be careful not to over-emphasize or over-incentive the use of tech products to take the place of core instruction but rather craft policy that appropriately places a program like this in the toolkit for educators.

The Education Trust

We are encouraged by this practice that offers all schools instruction, tutoring, and summer learning resources, while avoiding remediation, and we are excited that early evaluation shows specific benefits for students of color, English learners, and students from low-income backgrounds. We give a “thumbs-up” to high-quality interventions and teacher supports.

About the Author

Chad Aldeman is a nationally recognized expert on education policy, including school finance; teacher preparation, evaluation, and compensation; and state standards, assessment, and accountability. Keep up with Chad on the EduProgess: Unpacked blog.

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