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    Home»Education»Things We Talk About When We Talk About Student Engagement
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    Things We Talk About When We Talk About Student Engagement

    Grace MaliskaBy Grace MaliskaOctober 30, 2025No Comments3 Mins Read
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    Either watch above or listen below.

    Discovery Education recently released its second annual Education Insights report, this time focusing on student engagement—a theme I keep hearing increasingly in edtech circles. While the findings reveal universal agreement that engagement is a top predictor of student success—90% of educators, superintendents, and principals recognize its importance—there appears to be significant disconnects on what “engagement” even means.

    I had the chance to dig into the details of the report with Brian Shaw, CEO of Discovery Education. He cites several critical gaps: Teachers point to thoughtful questioning as a key engagement indicator, while administrators focus on assessment performance.


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    Perhaps most striking is the measurement divide: overwhelming majorities of superintendents and principals believe they have the right tools to measure engagement, while only about half of teachers agree.

    Some more statistics from the report:

    • Engagement is broadly recognized as a key driver of learning and success. 93% of educators surveyed agreed that student engagement is a critical metric for understanding overall achievement, and 99% of superintendents polled believe student engagement is one of the top predictors of success at school. Finally, 92% of students said that engaging lessons make school more enjoyable.
    • Educators disagree on the top indicators of engagement. 72% of teachers rated asking thoughtful questions as the strongest indicator of student engagement. However, 54% of superintendents identified performing well on assessments as a top engagement indicator. This is nearly twice as high as teachers, who rank assessments among the lowest indicators of engagement.
    • School leaders and teachers disagree on if their schools have systems for measuring engagement. While 99% of superintendents and 88% of principals said their district has an intentional approach for measuring engagement, only 60% of teachers agreed. Further, nearly 1/3 of teachers said that a lack of clear, shared definitions of student engagement is a top challenge to measuring engagement effectively.
    • Educators and students differ on their perceptions of engagement levels. While 63% of students agreed with the statement “Students are highly engaged in school,” only 45% of teachers and 51% of principals surveyed agreed with the same statement.
    • Students rate their own engagement much higher than their peers. 70% of elementary students perceived themselves as engaged, but only 42% perceived their peers as engaged. 59% of middle school students perceived themselves engaged in learning, but only 36% perceived their peers as engaged. Finally, 61% of high school students perceived themselves as engaged, but only 39% described their peers as engaged.
    • Proximity to learning changes impressions of AI. Two-thirds of students believe AI could help them learn faster, yet fewer than half of teachers report using AI themselves to complete tasks. Only 57% of teachers agreed with the statement “I frequently learn about positive ways students are using AI,” while 87% of principals and 98% of superintendents agree. Likewise, only 53% of teachers agreed with the statement “I am excited about the potential for AI to support teaching and learning,” while 83% of principals and 94% of superintendents agreed.

    A copy of Education Insights 2025–2026: Fueling Learning Through Engagement can be downloaded here.

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    Grace Maliska 2025-10-28 15:03:37

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