Student Voice Reimagines Professional Development

Chris McNutt
Nick Covington
August 6, 2024
We're reimagining what's possible using student voice in our professional development.

How do we understand what students think about school? How can we tell which programs are successful and which ones need improvement? What is the overall atmosphere and culture of a school building?

Traditionally, these questions have been answered through lengthy surveys, limited focus groups, or by relying solely on adult opinions.

Our new empathy interview process offers a transformative solution. It reimagines how schools can engage young people in dialogue to gain a complete understanding of their experiences and perspectives.

In short, the redesigned K-college HRP empathy interview process involves students hosting peer conversations to uncover key themes that reveal the assets and challenges within schools and districts. By gathering rich culture and climate data, we provide in-depth analysis that schools can use for district initiatives or extended partnerships in workshops, grants, and more, ultimately aiming to scale impact and drive meaningful change. We can now support hundreds to thousands of young people at a school or district to share their experiences, challenges, and ideas with us – allowing schools and districts to listen and learn from a massive dataset.

A conversation transcript with themes.

This shift not only enhances strategic planning but also encourages innovative thinking, with students playing a crucial role in reimagining the future of education. It’s also unlike any culture, climate, or school survey data that has existed before.

This model follows a three step process:

This work is made possible through HRP’s experience in partnership and student voice work with districts around the country, as well as the sense-making and transcription technology through our partner, Cortico.  Cortico’s Fora technology allows us to quickly analyze key themes and highlights of conversations, as well as enable students to easily host these conversations and tell us what stood out the most to them.

Use cases could include:

This evolution in our PD process aligns with HRP's core mission to enact change by listening and fostering genuine connections. By positioning students as leaders in focus groups, we not only validate their experiences but also create opportunities for them to develop essential leadership skills. Through this process, students learn to advocate for themselves and their peers, gaining a sense of agency and ownership over their learning journey.

Two example highlights from a conversation.

As we continue to evolve our professional development initiatives, HRP remains committed to placing students at the forefront of educational change. This is aligned with our commitments to the PD process:

In addition, HRP will continue its longstanding professional learning services centered on design thinking (interdisciplinary project-based learning), alternative assessment (ungrading and portfolios), and critical digital literacy (AI, digital media, and the like).

Our goal is to inspire schools to embrace this student-centered model, recognizing the transformative potential of student voice in shaping the future of education. In partnership, we can create learning environments that prioritize human connection, empathy, and collaboration, ultimately leading to a more equitable and empowering educational experience for all. Let’s restore humanity, together!

Example Step-by-Step:

  1. HRP partners with a school or district to learn about the concept and challenge they’re looking to learn more about. We co-create questions that will be hosted in student empathy interviews (focus groups).
  2. We schedule dates to train a small group of students (e.g. 10) to host empathy interviews. In addition, we brainstorm additional questions from the student perspective to add to our question set.
  3. Each group of students hosts and records 2-4 conversations with ~6-8 peers, then leads a reflective sensemaking session to determine what stood out most to young people in each conversation. (10 students leading 4 conversations with 8 peers would capture 320 student perspectives!)
  4. HRP analyzes this information using its own qualitative research metrics, AI, and toolkits offered by Fora.
  5. HRP prepares a formal report that’s presented to teachers, administrators, or the community, with recommendations for further support and/or next steps.

If you’d like to listen and learn from hundreds of young people at your school or institution, reach out to us and let’s make it happen – or click here to learn more!

An image of a white man with a brown goatee and glasses.
Chris McNutt
Chris McNutt is the co-founder and executive director of Human Restoration Project, a nonprofit organization focused on student engagement, well-being, and motivation. His work centers on realizing systems-based change, examining how progressive pedagogical shifts (e.g. PBL, ungrading) reimagine school to best suit the needs of students and teachers alike. He was a public high school digital media & design educator who focused on experiential learning, portfolio-driven assessment, and community involvement.
An image of a white man with a brown goatee and glasses.
Nick Covington
Nick taught social studies for 10 years in Iowa and has worked as a labor organizer. He is currently the Creative Director at the Human Restoration Project.
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