Facebook-Built Platform Expands to 100 More Schools

Summit Public Schools, a network of charter schools based in the San Francisco Bay area, announced this week that more than 100 new schools across the country have joined its personalized learning program for the 2016-17 school year. The Summit Basecamp program — initiated by Summit Public Schools and supported by Facebook — now includes more than 1,100 teachers and 20,000 students across 27 states and the District of Columbia.

 More than 1,500 teachers and school leaders participated in Summit Basecamp training this summer, representing 80 districts and charter management organizations, according to a Facebook post by Summit Public Schools CEO Diane Tavenner.

Summit Basecamp is a free program that helps public schools bring personalized learning, usually computer-based, into their classrooms. Students are encouraged to drive their own education by determining for themselves how they learn best, setting goals and developing habits of success, according to Summit Basecamp’s website. The Summit Personalized Learning Platform is an online tool that helps students set and track goals, learn content at their own pace, complete projects and reflect on their experiences. It was developed in classrooms by teachers, the Summit website states.   

The platform contains curricula for English, math, science, social studies and Spanish for grades 6-12. The project-based curricula includes nearly 200 “deeper learning” projects and more than 700 “Playlists,” or libraries of learning content and assessments.

In 2013, Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg visited a Summit Public School and said he liked what he saw, the Summit Basecamp site states. Since 2014, Facebook engineers have been working with Summit educators to make the platform an effective, free tool.

Summit is also making the platform available to individual teachers to meet demand and provide another pathway into the Basecamp community, Summit CEO Tavenner announced on a Facebook post this week.

“It’s an honor to be a small part of a movement that puts students first and recognizes teachers’ talents,” Tavenner wrote in her post.

Summit Basecamp is used at all eight of Summit Public Schools in the Bay Area, as well as its three campuses in Washington state. Summit schools are public and tuition-free.

To learn more about Summit Basecamp, visit the program’s website.

About the Author

Richard Chang is associate editor of THE Journal. He can be reached at [email protected].

Featured

  •  laptop on a clean desk with digital padlock icon on the screen

    Data Privacy a Top Concern as Orgs Scale Up AI Agents

    As organizations race to integrate AI agents into their cloud operations and workflows, they face a crucial reality: while enthusiasm is high, major adoption barriers remain, according to a new Cloudera report. Chief among them is the challenge of safeguarding sensitive data.

  • chart with ascending bars and two silhouetted figures observing it, set against a light background with blue and purple tones

    Report: Enterprises Are Embracing Agentic AI

    According to a new report from SnapLogic, 50% of enterprises are already deploying AI agents, and another 32% plan to do so within the next 12 months..

  • stacks of glowing digital documents with circuit patterns and data streams

    Mistral AI Intros Advanced AI-Powered OCR

    French AI startup Mistral AI has announced Mistral OCR, an advanced optical character recognition (OCR) API designed to convert printed and scanned documents into digital files with "unprecedented accuracy."

  • student using a tablet with math symbols dissolving into a glowing AI

    Survey: Students Say AI Use Can Reduce Math Anxiety

    In a recent survey, 56% of high school students said that the use of artificial intelligence can go a long way toward reducing math anxiety.