College of Education Sitemap
Skip to Main Content
Menu
College of Education
About News Alumni Giving
  • ‹ College Menu
  • Program Menu ›
  • College Menu
  • RLDL Menu
    • Academics
      • Undergraduate
      • Master’s
      • Specialist
      • Doctoral
      • Online
      • Graduate Specializations and Certificates
      • RELATED
        • Departments
        • Program Rankings
        • Our Faculty
        • Office of the Dean
    • Certification
      • MSU Interns
      • Post Bachelor’s
      • Teachers & Administrators
      • School Psychologists & Counselors
      • Non-Traditional Certification
      • RELATED
        • Student Affairs Office
    • Research
      • Centers & Institutes
      • Research Projects
      • Office of Research Administration
      • Recent Awards
      • Opportunities for Students
      • Faculty Research Profiles
      • RELATED
        • Research News
        • Undergraduate Research Opportunities
        • Graduate Research Opportunities
    • Outreach
      • Policy
      • K-12 Schools
      • Urban Areas
      • International
      • Alumni
      • RELATED
        • Education Policy Innovation Collaborative
        • Office of K-12 Outreach
        • Office of International Studies in Education
        • Education Policy Forum
    • Resources
      • For Students
      • For Faculty/Staff
      • Financial
      • Technology & Data
      • Buildings & Facilities
      • Jobs
      • RELATED
        • Directory
        • Undergraduate Student Scholarships
        • Graduate Student Scholarships & Fellowships
        • College Merchandise
  • About
  • Members
  • Research
  • Publications
Michigan State University Spartans
College of Education

About

News

Alumni

Giving

Menu

MENU

menu-arrow Academics menu-arrow Certification menu-arrow Research menu-arrow Outreach menu-arrow Resources

Academics

  • Undergraduate
  • Master’s
  • Specialist
  • Doctoral
  • Online
  • Graduate Specializations and Certificates

RELATED

  • Departments
  • Program Rankings
  • Our Faculty
  • Office of the Dean

Certification

  • MSU Interns
  • Post Bachelor’s
  • Teachers & Administrators
  • School Psychologists & Counselors
  • Non-Traditional Certification

RELATED

  • Student Affairs Office

Research

  • Centers & Institutes
  • Research Projects
  • Office of Research Administration
  • Recent Awards
  • Opportunities for Students
  • Faculty Research Profiles

RELATED

  • Research News
  • Undergraduate Research Opportunities
  • Graduate Research Opportunities

Outreach

  • Policy
  • K-12 Schools
  • Urban Areas
  • International
  • Alumni

RELATED

  • Education Policy Innovation Collaborative
  • Office of K-12 Outreach
  • Office of International Studies in Education
  • Education Policy Forum

Resources

  • For Students
  • For Faculty/Staff
  • Financial
  • Technology & Data
  • Buildings & Facilities
  • Jobs

RELATED

  • Directory
  • Undergraduate Student Scholarships
  • Graduate Student Scholarships & Fellowships
  • College Merchandise

Research Laboratory for Design Learning

RLDL MENU
up
RLDL MENU
  • About
  • Members
  • Research
  • Publications
up
up
up
Recent posts
  • National Center for Education Research grant for Culturally Relevant and Technology-enhanced Science Education
  • Invited Speaker at Binary Minds by WKAR
  • Kui Xie named American Psychological Association Fellow
  • Publication on Learners’ Behavior and Engagement in Online Learning
  • Presentation at APA 2024 Seattle

Build student success with practical research

August 24, 2020

Professor Kui Xie (second from left) and his research team Lin Lu, doctoral candidate; Vanessa Vongkulluksn, postdoctoral researcher; and Mike Nelson, doctoral student, help schools and districts in Ohio use data and research to improve student learning.

Gain solid data for your school’s response to students’ learning needs

In changing times, school leaders need tailored information to know exactly what strategies are most effective for their students’ learning and success.

Kui Xie, the Ted and Lois Cyphert Distinguished Professor and an expert in student learning motivation, spent the last five years serving 16 Ohio schools and districts, providing reliable information to ensure students are prepared for college. Xie’s efforts with one of the schools was via contract. All the others were funded originally by two grants from the Ohio Department of Education: College Ready Ohio and EDCITE – Evaluating Digital Content for Instructional and Teaching Excellence. He and his team of researchers have gathered and interpreted data from more than 2,000 teachers and 15,000 students.

One district had started an innovative teaching approach last autumn and wanted to hear from students and teachers what worked and what did not. Another district had given all students iPads and wanted to assess teachers’ professional development needs, then how students were doing with the technology.

Metro Early College High School in Columbus gained deep knowledge about its students that helped improve learning outcomes, said Cory Neugebauer, dean of students at the school. “They did a fabulous job of really listening to what we wanted to know about ourselves,” he said. “It’s not theoretical research for research’s sake. They’re very customer oriented. They want to help your kids, now.”

Xie calls the services he and his team of researchers provide highly interactive. “We don’t go into a school proposing to ask certain questions,” he said. “We gather questions from school leaders, counselors, teachers and help focus them. Then we create survey tools specific to their needs.” Schools control administration of the surveys, then send the results to Xie for analysis. He and his team create reports that are easy to understand and show trends over time.

Metro Early College Middle and High Schools continue to conduct student surveys under a contract with Xie’s team in preparation for autumn. “In a small school like Metro with about 1,000 students, you get to know individual kids. You can rely more on anecdotal evidence,” Neugebauer said. But Metro prefers to let facts and data drive its decision making. “For large school districts, I think Dr. Xie’s research and this method would be even more critical,” he said.

Understanding student academic motivation during COVID-19

The schools that Xie worked with before COVID-19 reaped benefits, but after the coronavirus arrived, their need for his services increased.

With everyone online, knowing how students were doing became harder. Neugebauer described how Vanessa Vongkulluksn, a postdoctoral researcher on Xie’s team, approached them in March, offering to assess student socioemotional well-being and learning motivation.

“We started with asking if kids were getting food and felt physically safe,” Neugebauer said. “You have to worry about that before you worry about doing your algebra work.”

Weekly reports were provided to Metro. Neugebauer and counselors reached out to any students expressing difficulty — with food, safety or technology issues. Metro also was able to address other aspects of student response to learning online.

When Xie works with a school, he focuses not just on students’ grades, but on the factors documented by research to underlie academic performance – academic motivation, cognitive engagement, social engagement and school facilitative environment.

Four factors of academic performance

Academic motivation: Do students feel motivated to do their school work? Do they feel competent to do the work? Do they believe in the value of their education? How much are they experiencing positive or negative emotions?

Cognitive engagement: What study strategies do students use for their school work? How do students monitor their understanding of learning concepts? Are they managing their learning time and tasks effectively? Are they procrastinating?

Social engagement: Do students feel they belong at their school or do they feel like outsiders? Are they interacting online with teachers and peers about course content? Are they asking for help when needed?

School facilitative environment: Which aspects of online learning technology work well and which do not? Are parents engaged with their students and the school to support learning? Are teachers or counselors available?

Each time Metro received a weekly report, the staff used it to support decision-making.

“Dr. Xie’s information was definitely a validation in concrete form of what kids were experiencing,” Neugebauer said. “It wasn’t just what we imagined kids were going through; this is what kids were saying.”

“This information is good in any environment, but in a virtual environment, I don’t know how any school can operate without this type of information about students,” he said.

Let our experts solve your school’s practical problems with research

Consider what information your school needs from students and teachers to make timely, well-informed decisions.

Do you have an autumn restart committee and want solid data points about what was effective online and what was not, so you can plan for school reopening in autumn?

Whatever your scenario, here are the basic steps for working with Professor Xie:

  1. Describe your challenges and the questions you have about your school’s students.
  2. Review survey questions formulated by Professor Xie’s team and discuss adjustments if appropriate for your school’s needs.
  3. Receive the survey from the team for deployment to students and deliver responses to them.
  4. Receive survey results from the team, with opportunity to discuss how to interpret them.

This article is republished from EHE News under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

College Links

Academic Programs

  • Undergraduate Programs
  • Master's Programs
  • Doctoral Programs
  • Online Programs

People

  • Administrators
  • Faculty/Staff Directory
  • Dean’s Office
  • Alumni & Friends

What's New

  • News
  • New Educator
  • Events
  • College Blogs

Academic Departments

  • Counseling, Educational Psychology & Special Education (CEPSE)
  • Educational Administration (EAD)
  • Kinesiology (KIN)
  • Teacher Education (TE)

Resources

  • Undergraduate Advising
  • Financial & Scholarships
  • Jobs

In The College

  • About
  • Centers & Institutes
  • Rankings

Connect

Subscribe to our
enewsletter ›
Call us: (517) 355-1734
Contact Information
Sitemap
Privacy Statement
Site Accessibility
Call MSU: (517) 355-1855
Visit: msu.edu
SPARTANS WILL.
© Michigan State University
Michigan State University Wordmark