Educators have seen wave after wave of “innovative” solutions promise to address long-standing challenges — from personalization and engagement to college- and career-readiness — yet many issues remain stubbornly unresolved. Too often, solutions are developed and scaled without a clear understanding of how challenges show up in daily classroom experiences or how students, families and educators define the problems.Understanding the everyday barriers that students, families, practitioners and administrators identify ensures that potential solutions — whether technological, instructional or relational — are grounded in real needs rather than assumptions.What These Challenges Look Like in Classrooms and SystemsIn Digital Promise’s co-research and co-design work with communities across the country, students and educators describe challenges that are neither new nor isolated, but reflect enduring gaps in how learning environments are designed and supported. Looking closely at how these challenges surface through our Challenge Map reveals the deep connections between instructional practice, student engagement and systems-level supports — and why tackling one without the others often falls short.Supporting individualized learning requires systems that give educators the time, tools and structures to understand and respond to each learner’s growth.Together, these experiences shape whether students feel their learning opportunities are future-forward, adaptable to their goals, needs and circumstances, and equip them to exercise agency in their education and career journeys.Supporting individualized learning, for example, requires systems that give educators the time, tools and structures to understand and respond to each learner’s growth. Without those conditions, personalization requires extraordinary effort — making it difficult to sustain as a routine part of instructional practice.Similar structural challenges constrain college- and career-readiness efforts. Educators consistently pointed to the need for more holistic, student-centered pathways. One educator described the importance of a “multi-tiered career program in which students engage in self-exploration of their skills, abilities and interests” to connect learning to concrete opportunities and transferable skills they can use after high school.Engagement, Agency and the Conditions for LearningAt the crux of learning lies student engagement — shaped by both classroom practices and the broader systems in which learning occurs. Community members and educators both highlighted that academic success depends on students’ well-being.Students shared that learning is most meaningful when it connects to their interests and allows them to have a voice in shaping their educational experiences. Educators echoed this perspective, underscoring the importance of agency in fostering meaningful learning. As one educator reflected, ensuring educational excellence requires continually redefining educational systems in ways that “give every student access to their own version of success.”Engagement is not simply a matter of student effort or teacher technique, but a product of the environments and systems that shape learning opportunities.Engagement is not simply a matter of student effort or teacher technique, but a product of the environments and systems that shape learning opportunities.
Schools Keep Facing the Same Challenges. Students and Educators K
Educators have seen wave after wave of “innovative” solutions promise to address long-standing challenges — from personalization and engagement to college- and career-readiness — yet many issues remain stubbornly unresolved. Too often, solutions are developed and scaled without a clear understanding of how challenges show up in daily classroom experiences or how students, families and educators define the problems.Understanding the everyday barriers that students, families, practitioners and administrators identify ensures that potential solutions — whether technological, instructional or relational — are grounded in real needs rather than assumptions.What These Challenges Look Like in Classrooms and SystemsIn Digital Promise’s co-research and co-design work with communities across the country, students and educators describe challenges that are neither new nor isolated, but reflect enduring gaps in how learning environments are designed and supported. Looking closely at how these challenges surface through our Challenge Map reveals the deep connections between instructional practice, student engagement and systems-level supports — and why tackling one without the others often falls short.Supporting individualized learning requires systems that give educators the time, tools and structures to understand and respond to each learner’s growth.Together, these experiences shape whether students feel their learning opportunities are future-forward, adaptable to their goals, needs and circumstances, and equip them to exercise agency in their education and career journeys.Supporting individualized learning, for example, requires systems that give educators the time, tools and structures to understand and respond to each learner’s growth. Without those conditions, personalization requires extraordinary effort — making it difficult to sustain as a routine part of instructional practice.Similar structural challenges constrain college- and career-readiness efforts. Educators consistently pointed to the need for more holistic, student-centered pathways. One educator described the importance of a “multi-tiered career program in which students engage in self-exploration of their skills, abilities and interests” to connect learning to concrete opportunities and transferable skills they can use after high school.Engagement, Agency and the Conditions for LearningAt the crux of learning lies student engagement — shaped by both classroom practices and the broader systems in which learning occurs. Community members and educators both highlighted that academic success depends on students’ well-being.Students shared that learning is most meaningful when it connects to their interests and allows them to have a voice in shaping their educational experiences. Educators echoed this perspective, underscoring the importance of agency in fostering meaningful learning. As one educator reflected, ensuring educational excellence requires continually redefining educational systems in ways that “give every student access to their own version of success.”Engagement is not simply a matter of student effort or teacher technique, but a product of the environments and systems that shape learning opportunities.Engagement is not simply a matter of student effort or teacher technique, but a product of the environments and systems that shape learning opportunities.








