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Featured researches published by Julie Edmunds.


Journal of research on technology in education | 2007

Technology as a Catalyst for Change: The Role of Professional Development

Nita J. Matzen; Julie Edmunds

Abstract This paper presents an analysis of results from an evaluation of The Centers for Quality Teaching and Learning, a professional development program placing technology in the context of student-centered instructional practices. This analysis focuses on the relationship between the professional development and teachers’ use of technology in their classroom and their general instructional practices. The results from this study indicate teachers increased their use of technology in ways viewed as more constructivist, regardless of their broader instructional practices. One possible explanation may be the instructional context of the professional development that teachers experience.


Peabody Journal of Education | 2010

Preparing Students for College: The Implementation and Impact of the Early College High School Model

Julie Edmunds; Lawrence Bernstein; Elizabeth Glennie; John T. Willse; Nina Arshavsky; Fatih Unlu; Deborah Bartz; Todd Silberman; W. David Scales; Andrew Dallas

As implemented in North Carolina, Early College High Schools are small, autonomous schools designed to increase the number of students who graduate from high school and are prepared for postsecondary education. Targeted at students who are underrepresented in college, these schools are most frequently located on college campuses and are intended to provide students with 2 years of college credit upon graduation from high school. This article reports on preliminary 9th-grade results from 285 students in 2 sites participating in a longitudinal experimental study of the impact of the model. These early results show that significantly more Early College High School students are enrolling and progressing in a college preparatory course of study. This expanded access, however, is associated with somewhat lower pass rates for some courses, suggesting the need for strong academic support to accompany increased enrollment in more rigorous courses. Implementation data collected on one school indicate that it is successfully implementing the models components.


Journal of Research on Educational Effectiveness | 2012

Expanding the Start of the College Pipeline: Ninth-Grade Findings From an Experimental Study of the Impact of the Early College High School Model

Julie Edmunds; Lawrence Bernstein; Fatih Unlu; Elizabeth Glennie; John T. Willse; Arthur Smith; Nina Arshavsky

Abstract Early college high schools are a new and rapidly spreading model that merges the high school and college experiences and that is designed to increase the number of students who graduate from high school and enroll and succeed in postsecondary education. This article presents results from a federally funded experimental study of the impact of the early college model on Grade 9 outcomes. Results show that, as compared to control group students, a statistically significant and substantively higher proportion of treatment group students are taking core college preparatory courses and succeeding in them. Students in the treatment group also have statistically significantly higher attendance and lower suspension rates than students in the control group.


Journal of Research on Educational Effectiveness | 2017

Smoothing the Transition to Postsecondary Education: The Impact of the Early College Model

Julie Edmunds; Fatih Unlu; Elizabeth Glennie; Lawrence Bernstein; Lily Fesler; Jane Furey; Nina Arshavsky

ABSTRACT Developed in response to concerns that too few students were enrolling and succeeding in postsecondary education, early college high schools are small schools that blur the line between high school and college. This article presents results from a longitudinal experimental study comparing outcomes for students accepted to an early college through a lottery process with outcomes for students who were not accepted through the lottery and enrolled in high school elsewhere. Results show that treatment students attained significantly more college credits while in high school, and graduated from high school, enrolled in postsecondary education, and received postsecondary credentials at higher rates. Results for subgroups are included.


Interdisciplinary Journal of Problem-based Learning | 2017

The Relationship between Project-Based Learning and Rigor in STEM-Focused High Schools.

Julie Edmunds; Nina Arshavsky; Elizabeth Glennie; Karen J. Charles; Olivia Rice

Project-based learning (PjBL) is an approach often favored in STEM classrooms, yet some studies have shown that teachers struggle to implement it with academic rigor. This paper explores the relationship between PjBL and rigor in the classrooms of ten STEM-oriented high schools. Utilizing three different data sources reflecting three different perceptions—student surveys, teacher logs, and classroom observations—the study examines the extent to which PjBL and rigor co-occur. Across all three measures, the results show that use of PjBL is associated with higher levels of rigor. However, the study also shows that academic rigor can be present in the absence of PjBL, and that PjBL can be implemented with low levels of rigor. The paper concludes with implications for practice.


School Effectiveness and School Improvement | 2014

Success in the college preparatory mathematics pipeline: the role of policies and practices employed by three high school reform models

Nina Arshavsky; Julie Edmunds; Luke C. Miller; Matthew Corritore

This paper examines the relationship of the policies and practices employed by 3 high school reform models – Early College High Schools, Redesigned High Schools, and High Schools That Work – with student success in college preparatory mathematics courses by the end of the 10th grade. Data on policies and practices collected through a survey of school principals in North Carolina are combined with administrative data on student course-taking and performance. The examined policies include course-taking requirements, rigorous instruction, academic support, personalization, and relevance. Results show that implementation of these policies varies across models and that higher levels of implementation of combinations of these policies are associated with improved outcomes.


NASSP Bulletin | 2017

Preparing Students for College: Lessons Learned from the Early College.

Julie Edmunds; Nina Arshavsky; Karla Lewis; Beth Thrift; Fatih Unlu; Jane Furey

This article utilizes mixed methods—a lottery-based experimental design supplemented by qualitative data—to examine college readiness within an innovative high school setting: early college high schools. Early colleges are small schools that merge the high school and college experiences and are targeted at students underrepresented in college. Results show that early college students are more likely to have successfully completed the courses they need for entrance into college; early college students also graduated from high school at a higher rate. Interview and survey data show that early college students are generally considered similarly prepared to more traditional postsecondary students. The interview data also provide detailed descriptions of the kinds of strategies the schools use to support college readiness. The article concludes with lessons learned for secondary school principals.


Teachers College Record | 2013

Mandated Engagement: The Impact of Early College High Schools.

Julie Edmunds; John T. Willse; Nina Arshavsky; Andrew Dallas


Teachers College Record | 2008

Using Alternative Lenses to Examine Effective Teachers' Use of Technology with Low-Performing Students.

Julie Edmunds


New Directions for Higher Education | 2012

Early colleges: A new model of schooling focusing on college readiness

Julie Edmunds

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Nina Arshavsky

University of North Carolina at Greensboro

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Fatih Unlu

University of Michigan

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John T. Willse

University of North Carolina at Greensboro

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Andrew Dallas

University of North Carolina at Greensboro

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Deborah Bartz

Brigham and Women's Hospital

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