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Project Hiller
A long-term evaluation of a high school laptop
initiative
The story of Project Hiller, a laptop initiative
launched three years ago at Union Hill High
School in New Jersey, is a story of educational vision, effective use of technology,
and proven academic improvement. More than anything, however, it’s a
story of belonging.
Over the past three years, the Union City School District gave network-enabled
laptop computers to 110 incoming freshman students and 70 teachers and administrators
at Union Hill High School—an urban high school in a community that is
95 percent Latino, with 72 percent of the students eligible for free or reduced-price
lunch. For students selected for Project Hiller, the laptop—and all that
came with it—was a powerful gift.
“You could see the motivation in their eyes when they first got the laptops,” recalls
researcher Daniel Light of EDC’s Center
for Children and Technology (CCT),
which conducted a three-year evaluation of Project Hiller. “Some of the
students were literally hugging their laptops. Within days, they had all changed
the look of their desktops, or they had created their own personal Web pages.
It immediately became a great vehicle for them to express themselves.”
The
striking thing about Project Hiller, as documented in CCT’s recently
published evaluation, is the powerful sense of reciprocal belonging. For
students, ownership of a laptop quickly evolved into a sense of ownership
within the
school and their own learning—which, in turn, gave them a sense of
belonging to the school. As one teacher explains in the CCT study, “Project
Hiller is more than technology. It is self-reliance, group work, and teacher
responsibility.
What students need is mentoring and belonging. That is the answer to school
reform.”
The Union City Context
For CCT, the special appeal of Project Hiller
wasn’t the laptops, per
se, but rather the context in which the laptops were introduced into the
school. For more than a decade, the Union City School District
has conducted a series
of experiments with technology designed to advance the goals of a systemwide
educational improvement plan. As CCT noted in its evaluation report, Project
Hiller presented “a unique chance to investigate the role ubiquitous
technologies can play in a setting where many initial challenges associated
with urban school reform and technology integration have been overcome.”
In
designing Project Hiller, the district had articulated a clear set of goals:
- To retain the best eighth-grade students in the public school
system
- To create a cadre of technologically sophisticated students
to advance the use of technology among peers and teachers at
Union Hill High School
- To improve relationships between students
and teachers and, by supporting students’ facility
with technology, enhance teachers’ perceptions of students’ capabilities
- To
promote collaborative and project-based learning, and make technology
more central to core teacher practices
- To increase student performance and outcomes
on traditional measures as well as on more innovative measures,
such as students’ multimedia project
presentations
- To provide urban students with technology comparable to
that of suburban schools
The Union City Board of Education committed
three years of funding (the 1998–2001
school years) to provide network-enabled laptop computers to 40 incoming
freshman students and 20 teachers and administrators at Union Hill
High School. In Years
2 and 3, additional cohorts of students and teachers were added, reaching
a total of 70 teachers and 110 students directly involved in the program.
Half
the Hiller spots were reserved for honors students; the other spots
were spread among the other three tracks at the school: general,
bilingual,
and special
education. For these tracks, the selection criteria favored attitude
and motivation over academic performance.
Because Hiller students,
with their laptops, sat side by side with classmates not in the
program, CCT researchers had a natural control
group to compare
with the Hiller students. The unique setup also allowed the researchers
and district to watch the ripple effects of the project throughout
the entire
student population and faculty. For example, the researchers quickly
identified a group
of students they named “friends of Hiller,” who worked
in close collaboration with classmates in the program.
From the outset,
administrators made clear that Project Hiller students were expected
to produce resources for the entire school. In addition
to regular
course work, Hiller students worked with teachers to research and
produce presentations on academic subjects that would be used in
the classroom. “Teachers
ask the Hiller students to find information and produce presentations
on all kinds
of things,” says Light. “For example, one teacher asked
them to download spoken-word versions of the Harry Potter books.
Or create a presentation
for a history class. You see the fruits of the Hiller students’ labors
everywhere, and they receive recognition for it, with signs saying, ‘These
resources were provided by . . . ’”
Changes like these
are good examples of what CCT was asked by the school board to
track in its three-year evaluation of the project.
The board
was interested
in four key domains:
- Students’ academic and social engagement
- Teachers’ and
administrators’ beliefs about students’ abilities
and competencies
- School culture and climate
- Portability
To track changes across these domains, CCT designed
a multifaceted research strategy, including student and teacher
surveys; case
studies culled
from extensive interviews and observations over the course of
the three-year project; and
analysis of students’ performance on standardized tests.
Results are impressive across all of these realms.
Students’ Academic
and Social Engagement
Some of the clearest
signs of the success of the project have been the performance of
Hiller students on several standardized
tests.
During the three years
of the evaluation, test scores rose significantly for Project
Hiller students across all tracks. By the second and third years
of the
project, participating
students scored significantly higher than their non-Project Hiller
peers.
For
example, within the honors track, Project Hiller students scored
414.05 on the mathematics portion of the New Jersey State High
School Proficiency
Test
(HSPT), whereas their non-Hiller peers scored only 396.14.
Other
results:
- Regarding tenth graders’ performance on the HSPT,
the mean scores for Project Hiller general track students in
each subject
were higher
than the
non-Hiller honors student means.
- On the eleventh
grade HSPT, the honors Hiller students scored highest across
all three subjects, and the general track Hiller
students’ scores
were equivalent to the non-project honors students in writing
and math. At this
level, the test is a state graduation requirement: 100 percent
of the Hiller students passed in math, and 98 percent passed
in reading and
writing.
- The average total SAT score for all Union Hill students
was 796; the average for Hiller participants was 978, and the
average for non-participants
was 762.
Teacher and Administrator Beliefs About Students’ Abilities
and Competencies
Beyond tracking the improved performance of students on standardized
tests, the CCT evaluation documents the changing perceptions
that Union Hill teachers
and administrators have of student abilities. In a series
of interviews, Union Hill faculty comment on the ways in which
the project has
raised expectations throughout the school. “The kids are more equipped for technology,” one
administrator says. “[They] have more confidence
in themselves, in their own abilities, and teachers have
to react to that.”
The interviews document the boost in self-esteem that students
received from being selected for the project and receiving
the laptop—and the raised
teacher expectations that accompanied the laptops. “I
definitely expect more of them, academically,” says
a teacher. “I
expect them to be able to do their research and hand in
their assignments
on time.
They have
tools right in front of them, so I feel there is no excuse.”
A
veteran teacher and department head, who had been skeptical
about Project Hiller, explains that one of the successes
of Project Hiller
has been
changing teacher and student expectations. Students met
the new and higher expectations
because, he states, “it became important for the
kid to do a good job for the teacher.” In this teacher’s
view, not only did teachers expect more, the students themselves
expect more
as well.
School Culture and Climate
One of the key goals of the project
was to develop mentoring relationships between teachers and students.
Or, as one
administrator described
it, to shift the school culture from “vertical to
horizontal,” with teachers
becoming seen as partners in learning rather than “dispensers
of knowledge.” Project
Hiller created a series of opportunities for students to
work together with teachers in novel ways—from the
initial technology training sessions, where students and
teachers sat side
by side, to
Web teams that carried
out various research projects.
“Hiller has built a stronger connection between faculty
and students. Hiller teachers get more involved with these kids.
And it’s
spreading slowly,” says
Union Hill’s principal, adding that Hiller will form
the nucleus of a mentoring program that will be instituted
throughout
the school.
Other signs of growing student engagement soon
became apparent in the library/media center, which serves
as home base
for Project Hiller
activities. Since
the launch of the project, visits by students have grown
steadily; today, the
media center is full of students every day from 6:45 a.m.
to 5:30 p.m. “This
is their space,” comments the director of the media
center. “They
believe in the library and behave as if they own it. It
is theirs.” The
evaluators describe a typical scene:
On any given day, a
visitor to Union Hill’s media center can find a buzz
of activity: students surround a laptop, collaborating
on a project; a class works on half of the center’s
computers doing research; students read and study independently
or hang out with
friends. Close by, another
teacher
and her students complete production of a Spanish language
Web-zine on their laptops. Other teachers check e-mail,
search for material,
submit
online special
needs student progress reports, or work with students.
Portability
and the Impact of Ubiquitous Access
In their application
essays for the project—and in early interviews with
CCT—many Hiller students revealed a fairly narrow
view of technology. They focused primarily on a desire
to learn
basic computing skills,
which they see as critical for entry-level jobs. After
a year or two in the
project, however,
many students begin to see and use technology as a tool
for research and intellectual growth. In one example from
the evaluation,
a ninth grade general track participant
was involved in a class project to do field research and
write about the impact of different inventions on society:
On
his own, he and his partner—who were studying the
impact of the automobile—distributed
surveys over the Internet to contacts in Miami and rural
Tennessee so that they could compare trends in three different
locations.
They got
10 responses
from each site, as well as 50 in Union City, and were able
to talk about different patterns of car ownership and driving
age
in each place.
The
teacher was pleased
not only with the initiative but that the duo asked if
they could exceed the 10-page limit for their report.
Daniel
Light recalls another student who changed her career goals
as a result of her Hiller experiences. “At the beginning
of the project, one of the students said [that] technology
was important as a job skill. She wanted to
be a secretary, and it was necessary that she know how
to use a computer,” says
Light. “Three years later, she said she needed a
computer to learn everything she wants to learn. Now she
wants to be a child psychologist, and she’s
studying at University of Illinois–Chicago.”
One
of the final goals of the CCT evaluation was to analyze
the impact of ubiquitous access to computers. In other
words, what
advantages
come with
the portability
of laptops—and the one-to-one relationships of laptops
to students and teachers—versus desktop computers
that have been present in the classrooms and libraries
for years?
Light comments that the portability of the laptops
proved especially useful for high school students: “With
high school students moving from classroom to classroom,
the laptops are very valuable for storing all of their
information
and materials. They were particularly helpful with interdisciplinary
assignments—so
that they could bring the same work with them to history
and English classes, for example.”
CCT also observed
an increase in productivity. “We saw students working
in short spurts between classes because they had constant
access to their work and to the server,” says Light. “It’s
like us: Now that we’re
networked, we tend to work all the time. It’s the
same with students. They keep learning and keep thinking
all the time. One [graduating] student
commented that she would miss being part of an intellectual
community. She wasn’t just using the laptop to talk
to friends about trends and gossip. They are talking about
music and books
and authors.”
Looking back over the three-year evaluation,
Light says that what strikes him is how well the Hiller
experiment
actually
worked. “Project Hiller provides
a good example of the way policy can positively affect
classroom teaching and school culture,” he says. “The
district had been encouraging teachers to use computers
at Union Hill for years, but they had tended not to. They
wouldn’t assign presentations, for example, because
they didn’t
know PowerPoint and couldn’t teach the students how
to use it. With Project Hiller, they didn’t need
to worry about those kinds of things any more; the students
already knew how to use
the technology.
It shows
the
potential
of what can happen when you enlist students in the process
of pushing forward with reforms.”
For questions or comments, contact mosaic@edc.org.
Copyright 2000-2003
Education Development Center, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
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