INITIATIVE
        CORE-PACE Research Partnership
 
In October 2015, Policy Analysis for California Education (PACE) and the CORE Districts launched the CORE-PACE Research Partnership. The CORE districts (Fresno, Garden Grove, Long Beach, Los Angeles, Oakland, Sacramento City, San Francisco, and Santa Ana Unified School Districts) together serve nearly a million students and utilize a unique multiple measures data system to work together to improve student outcomes. Our research aims to deepen their learning, while sharing lessons more broadly to accelerate improvement across the state. Our work falls into three main areas: continuous improvement, social-emotional learning, and making use of multiple measures of student and school performance.
Related Commentaries
                
    The PACE Perspective on 'The California Way'
  
      
    
    The Racial School Climate Gap: Within-School Disparities in Students’ Experiences of Safety, Support, and Connectedness
  
      
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Related News
              September 8, 2015 | USC News
      
October 16, 2014 | EdSource
      
October 1, 2014 | Stanford Graduate School of Education
      
Recent Initiative Publications
               
        This study explores the impact of reclassification on social-emotional learning skills (SEL) of English learners (ELs) in grades 4 to 8. Using a regression discontinuity design, the study found that reclassification improved academic self-efficacy…
 
        This study explores the impact of county-level immigration arrests on the academic achievement, attendance, and perceptions of school climate and safety for Latinx and Latinx English learner students in California's CORE districts. The research…
 
        Lessons from Two Learning Networks
This report examines how continuous improvement is applied to educational accountability in California. It analyzes the experiences of two organizations leading networks to increase postsecondary success, aiming to improve the consistency of…
 
        The Impact of Unmotivated Questionnaire Responding on Data Quality
This article explores the issue of satisficing, which is suboptimal responding on surveys, in the context of a large-scale social-emotional learning survey administered to over 400,000 elementary and secondary students. Despite concerns about its…
 
 
 
