A case report was written about each site, and
reviewed by authorizers for accuracy. From
these case reports, artifacts, and transcripts
of interviews, the project team identified
common themes that contributed to success
across the sites. This cross-site analysis built
on both the research literature as reflected in
the study scope and also emerging patterns
in the data.
This descriptive research process suggests
promising practices—ways to do things that
other educators have found helpful, lessons
they have learned—and practical "how-to"
guidance. This is not the kind of experimental research that can yield valid causal claims about
what works. Readers should judge for themselves
the merits of these practices, based on
their understanding of why they should work,
how they fit the local context, and what happens
when they actually try them. Also, readers
should understand that these descriptions
do not constitute an endorsement of specific
practices or products.