More recently, conceptualizations of scaling have rightly shifted.
When thinking about scale in education, the right question is no longer “how can we ensure our intervention reaches the biggest number of people or schools?” But instead, “how, in a particular context, can we have the greatest impact?” in the sense of making a meaningful, positive change to learning.
As scaling expert Larry Cooley puts it, we need to scale impact, not interventions.
Being sensitive to context also means finding what is working already and trying to amplify it. This is important both strategically and pragmatically.
We know from behavioral and implementation research that building on existing ‘bright spots’—things that are working well—yields significant impact.
We also know that the political economy of international education has changed: ever tighter funding means we need to find smarter, faster pathways to impact children’s learning.
This requires an entirely different way of thinking and doing. It means starting with the question: where, how and with whom might we have the greatest impact?
What does ‘rethinking impact at scale’ look like? Amplification in Ghana
STiR has developed a new model of ‘amplification’ as one response to this question. In this approach, STiR seeks to harness its expertise in fostering motivation to provide insights and capacity building to strong local actors.
Focusing on scaling impact rather than interventions has meant distilling STiR’s expertise into a set of discrete, flexible principles that can be integrated into pre-existing or pre-planned professional development programs to ensure they’re robustly underpinned by what we know from the science of motivation.
An example of this approach is STiR’s project with T-TEL (Transforming Teaching, Education & Learning) in Ghana. T-TEL is a Ghanaian nongovernmental organization with a track record of working at scale with the national government.
The ‘Leaders in Teaching programme’ is a national program to reform secondary schools led and implemented by Ghana’s Ministry of Education.
The program aims to roll out a new secondary education curriculum and revamp pre-service and in-service teacher training with an emphasis on teacher leadership, quality of teaching, how teachers are recruited and their motivation as professionals.
This motivation component led T-TEL to approach STiR for support.
STiR’s role in the consortium led by T-TEL and funded by Mastercard Foundation is not just about delivering a one-time, standalone project, but how to embed the principles of intrinsic motivation across the program in order to ensure all aspects are underpinned by what we know about motivation and behavioral change.
Over the past 2 years, STiR’s support has included: contributing to a research study on teacher motivation in Ghana; sharing insights on processes for the monitoring and evaluation of motivation; reviewing teacher training program materials; and developing training for the T-TEL team on motivation.
Comments
John and Robin, I really like the emphasis your teams are placing on impact through 'amplification' rather than taking scale to mean quantitative coverage alone. And your commitment to novel partnerships is really timely. Could you share examples of indicators you have developed to gauge whether amplification is yielding the impacts at scale that participants, stakeholders and you yourselves value?
Leave a comment
Your email address will not be published. All fields are required.