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  • A Once-In-a-Generation Opportunity: What States and School Districts Can Learn from the American Rescue Plan

    09/22/2021 | The 74

    We have a once-in-a-generation moment of unprecedented need, support, and opportunity. COVID-19 has disrupted schools across the country, negatively impacting student learning, especially for students of color and students experiencing poverty. 


  • New Tutoring Tool Available: Tutoring Quality Improvement System

    09/13/2021 | National Student Support Accelerator
    he National Student Support Accelerator is excited to share our new tool that makes it easier for tutoring programs to improve their quality and for districts selecting tutoring providers to better understand their provider options.

  • As schools return to in-person learning, demand for online tutoring remains high

    09/02/2021 | NBC News

    “The type of tutoring with evidence is intensive tutoring with a consistent tutor who comes with an understanding of the students needs — based on data from direct assessments or from the school or teacher — and with curricular materials for addressing these needs,” Susanna Loeb, the director of the Annenberg Institute for School Reform at Brown University, said in an email.


  • National partnership to generate new knowledge on teacher learning for equitable student outcomes

    08/31/2021 | Research Partnership for Professional Learning (RPPL)

    PROVIDENCE, R.I. (August 31, 2021)—Today the Research Partnership for Professional Learning (RPPL) launches a learning agenda and call to action to transform professional learning (PL) research and practice. The collaborative of researchers and PL organizations will generate new knowledge on how teacher learning improves classroom experiences and academic growth, especially for students from historically marginalized groups. 

    “We know that professional learning can work to improve teachers’ practice and student outcomes, but there’s more we need to learn to fully realize its potential to advance teaching and educational equity,” says Sarah Johnson, Vice Chair of RPPL and CEO of Teaching Lab. 


  • When schools shut down: How education interruptions can hurt student achievement

    08/28/2021 | The Journalist's Resource

    Projecting the Potential Impact of COVID-19 School Closures on Academic Achievement
    Kuhfeld, Megan; et al. Working Paper No. 20-226 from Brown University’s Annenberg Institute for School Reform, May 2020.

    This working paper predicted U.S. public school students would likely start the 2020-21 school year having learned 37% to 50% of what they ordinarily would have learned in math had schools remained open. “In some grades, students may come back close to a full year behind in math,” write the authors, from the University of Virginia, Brown University and the nonprofit education research organization NWEA


  • Brown University-Annenberg Study Shows Acelero Learning Head Start Children Made Significant Gains Despite Pandemic

    08/23/2021 | Acelero Learning

    A recent study conducted by the Annenberg Institute for School Reform at Brown University, in collaboration with Acelero Learning, found that Head Start infants, toddlers and preschoolers in Acelero programs made significant gains during the 2020-2021 school year despite the pandemic. These findings are especially compelling given reports of the disastrous effects of the pandemic on childhood education nationally.  


  • One Simple Way for Principals to Boost Students’ Unfinished Learning

    08/05/2021 | Education Week

    With school returning to something closer to normal after over a year of disruption, most principals are looking for ways to get students back on track. Recent research suggests surprising benefits to student outcomes from a relatively straightforward policy: keeping teachers in their current grade and subject assignment to the extent possible.


  • Annenberg Spotlight: Monica Lee

    08/03/2021 | Annenberg Institute at Brown University
    In college, I actually had plans to be a high school teacher or guidance counselor. However, I quickly realized that what really piqued my interest was gaining an understanding of the structural nature of inequality in our schools, as opposed to being in the classroom myself. I chose policy research because I love the process of producing knowledge that can then be used in various ways to improve systems and to help all students thrive.With that said, though, my roots as an immigrant and a first-generation college student most deeply influenced my interests in education policy. My early experiences of poverty and of being an English Learner continue to color my perspectives on various policies and their ability to set up students for success, regardless of their background or starting point.

  • The Justice League of Education

    07/21/2021 | University of Rhode Island Magazine
    At URI, Domingo Morel ’98, Soljane Martinez ’98, Tammy Warner ’99, M.S. ’06, and Matthew Buchanan ’98, —all first-generation college students from underrepresented communities—became friends. None planned to be educators. But they all found themselves drawn to education, finding there a sense of purpose and a cause—the fight for equity and social justice—that needed their particular superpowers.

  • Annenberg Spotlight: Biraj Bisht

    06/21/2021
    I was initially drawn to understanding education through my own schooling experience across three different countries. I started my K-12 schooling in Nepal and India and then moved to the U.S for college. I think this gave me a sense of curiosity to understand how different countries provide accessible and quality education.

  • 8 Considerations for Designing High-Impact Tutoring

    06/08/2021 | Education Week

    For many leaders, accelerating student learning is top-of-mind, and one method that has garnered a lot of recent attention is high-impact tutoring. The National Student Support Accelerator, founded this year at the Annenberg Institute at Brown University to promote and support high-impact tutoring, defines it as one-to-one or small-group support that supplements classroom learning and complements existing curriculum by focusing on specific goals in response to individual students’ needs. This kind of tutoring is also known as “high-intensity tutoring” or “high-dosage tutoring.”


  • With support from Brown, Providence’s Hope High School opens 21st-century library and media center

    06/07/2021 | News from Brown

    Dedicated spaces for individual and group study. Comfortable, versatile and laptop-friendly furniture. And a refreshed, expanded and diversified collection of books and periodicals.

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Annenberg Institute at Brown University

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Annenberg Institute at Brown University
Mailing address: Box 1985, Providence, RI 02912
Location: 164 Angell St., 2nd floor, Providence, RI 02906
Telephone: 401.863.7990
Email: [email protected]

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