This is an Eval Central archive copy, find the original at engagewithdata.com.
If you couldn’t tell, I have always loved the excitement of returning to school.
Unfortunately, for many children, families, and educators, this year felt different.
Some of the usual excitement and jitters have been replaced by trepidation about what to expect from a year like no other.
Concerns about health and safety, academic progress, and schedule juggling have been abundant in my conversations with teachers and the staff and family surveys I have analyzed.
So how will schools and districts know if they are adequately addressing their stakeholders’ fears?
Well… they’ve got to ask them.
Colleagues in a number of recent conversations have been discussing the use of continuous improvement cycles. If you’re not familiar with continuous improvement, its hallmark is the Plan-Do-Study-Act (PDSA) Cycle.
- Determine what need or concern they are going to address and how they will address it,
- Implement the intervention, program, or practice they proposed,
- Collect and analyze data to see if what was implemented actually worked, and
- Make a plan for what to continue and what to change.
Then, the cycle starts all over again … quickly.
We’re not talking about huge, multi-year studies here … This is a relatively quick and simple process!
Make a plan, implement the plan, figure out if the plan worked, and if not, adjust and try again!
With school kicking off, schools and districts have already put a short-term plan in place and are putting it into action.
And this year, short cycles of trial and error are going to be key, as even our modes of schooling could change multiple times throughout the year.
So how can schools and districts get feedback from their stakeholders NOW to see if their plan worked?
Instead of a lengthy formal survey, think of creative ways to ask for feedback:
- Polls in Google Classroom or Zoom for students during or after class
- Fun tools like PollEverywhere or Mentimeter that can help you embed polls into presentations and display the results
- Create a poll on Twitter or other social media platforms from your school or district
*Just make sure the platforms you choose will allow for translation.
Now here’s the kicker: once you collect on data, you have to complete the cycle … ACT!
Make it clear for students, families, and staff that you valued their feedback and are going to put it to use … and tell them how!
Start this crazy school year off right by lifting up the voices of your stakeholders in fun and easy ways and demonstrating that their feedback will guide your next round of planning and action.