Showing posts with label get set. Show all posts
Showing posts with label get set. Show all posts

Tuesday, January 12, 2016

Five EdTech Companies to Watch in 2016




JANUARY 12, 2015
 
Five EdTech Companies
to Watch in 2016
 
Last week, Eduventures predicted the changes and challenges ahead for higher education in 2016 and encouraged institutions to unite their stakeholders around a set of common-sense solutions. In support of your New Year’s resolutions, we also want to take time to highlight vendors that offer innovative products and services to help you reach your goals this year.

Below, we highlight a few of the companies that shared their product roadmaps and strategies with us at the end of 2015. Most of the vendors we chose to profile are in the early phases of their forays into higher education. Some have already demonstrated success in other industries but have not yet been widely embraced in higher education. Others represent the cutting edge of metacognition science in education and are just starting to make an impact through pilot programs. One vendor, Tutor.com, has been very active in higher education and is now differentiating its offering with data analytics. We think all of these providers are attempting to solve real problems in innovative ways and look forward to following their progress in 2016.

Moving Beyond Adaptive Learning

Much of the attention to advances in adaptive learning has been on delivering resources to students based on their demonstrated mastery and comprehension of prior content. Beyond simple metrics, such as time spent reading specific content, measuring student engagement has been challenging for instructional designers. When students do not succeed, it has little to do with ability or content comprehension and more to do with their ability to overcome a negative academic mindset or the availability of one-on-one academic support. The following innovative companies identify the students who are in need of additional support, prescribe the types of support would be most helpful based on each student’s learning style, and deliver content or services to them in the format they prefer.

4. GetSet Learning

According to Karan Goel, CEO of GetSet Learning, 88% of students who drop out do so for non-academic reasons. Just having a positive academic mindset is closely tied to student success, allowing motivated students to overcome obstacles both inside and outside the classroom. GetSet Learning aims to improve students’ mindsets through an approach that includes writing therapy and modeling positive peer behaviors. Its platform enables students to learn directly from peers who have shared stories about overcoming their own challenges. Institutions can integrate this approach into orientation activities, first year experience programs, and academic advising.

Its unique program depends on current students taking a more active role in advising and intervention efforts for other students. To get the most from this technology, it would be best for institutions to coordinate with student advocacy groups or student government to develop a pilot program. This would help get the word out about the technology’s potential and identify the largest group of students to seed the system with their own techniques for overcoming academic challenges.

Wednesday, August 20, 2014

GETSET VIDEO INTRODUCTION

Start your college success story with GetSet from GetSet Learning on Vimeo.

BUILT IN CHICAGO COVERS GETSET LAUNCH

Just out of stealth mode, GetSet is already helping thousands of college students stay in school

Carlin Sack
File 39619
Karan Goel has always dealt with a curse (or a blessing): he is obsessed with solving big problems in education. After he sold his first edtech company, PrepMe, partially to Blackboard in July 2011 and partially to Hobsons in February 2012, he vowed to take a break from edtech and travel the world with his wife for a year. Three months into their trip, Goel found himself participating in - and winning - a Startup Weekend EDU in India. So much for an edtech break.
Now, thanks to some Techcrunch coverage, the secret is out that Goel is at it again: he is building another new edtech company called GetSet with his PrepMe partner-in-crime Eric Bjerstedt as VP of Product.
GetSet started in late 2012 when Goel and Bjerstedt reunited (after Goel graduated from Chicago’s Starter League) and set out to solve a problem without a particular solution in mind. The co-founders wanted to solve the problem of rising college dropout rates (despite increased spending on this problem by universities).
While in a self-funded stealth mode, the two brought on UX Lead Danielle Chutinthranond and “started trying things, hacking it together and just putting it out there.” They knew they wanted to take a non-academic approach to the dropout problem (since only 13 percent of students drop out due to failing), but during “the first few months, the experiments didn’t go all that well,” Goel said of random pilots with students. But around mid-2013, things started looking up: they learned that when the product was inherently social, it was well-received by students.
“So then we said, ‘Let’s try to create a product that students actually want to use,’” Goel said. “It should be completely non-academic and should create growth mindsets so that people can overcome challenges.”
File 39620
So here’s what they came up with: the current GetSet product allows students to connect with other students who have similar goals or have faced similar problems. By finding another (often older) student to help with a social, personal, or academic problem, supportive campus communities are formed, ultimately leading to lower dropout rates.
GetSet even has a leading social psychologist, Dr. Steven Nakisher, and a psychology professor, Dr. Robert Feldman, on board to advise the team on the science behind making students successful. Despite the psychologists backing GetSet, Goel stresses that “we are not a counseling product, we are a peer-to-peer mentoring product” for students facing problems that might cause them to drop out.
This product was validated by over 50 user tests Chutinthranond did with students from Chicago colleges like DePaul and Columbia College in early 2014 (she actually watched and analyzed all these students individually). Now, the user pool is getting substantially bigger with GetSet’s launch with over 10,000 freshmen at Arizona State University this week and with another large school in Southern California next week.
They have many more schools waiting in the wings to sign up (all are eager to solve their dropout problem, it’s just a matter of getting through the red tape). As more and more schools sign on, the GetSet product will evolve even more quickly as the 9-person team is “going to be learning a lot from the students.”
The GetSet team itself will be expanding right here in Chicago on the dev, product and data science sides. As the team grows and the product morphs, Goel and Bjerstedt are just glad to be back in the edtech game working on their own venture again.
“I want to work on the biggest problem in education,” Goel said. “People ask me, ‘Why don’t you do something outside of education?’ Well, it’s something I’m really passionate about and that’s the thing about being an entrepreneur: I get to do exactly what I want to do.”

GetSet Uses Natural Language Processing To Reduce College Drop-out Rates

GetSet Uses Natural Language Processing To Reduce College Drop-out Rates

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GetSet, a new stealthy US edtech startup that’s aiming to reduce the high college drop-out rate is uncloaking today and revealing its first rollout at Arizona State University, with its 10,000+ freshmen.
First up, in case you’re feeling a spot of deja vu, last week TechCrunch covered a UK startup called Wambiz that’s taking aim at the same problem. Yes, yes, you wait ages for college drop-out reduction startups and then two come along at once. So it goes.
That said, they’re not identical. Wambiz is building an engagement platform cum social network as a better way to reach/engage with students, rather than sending comms via more traditional channels like email and SMS.
While GetSet is taking an algorithmic approach to the drop-out problem, building a natural language processing (NLP) engine that asks students to feed it with data about their college aims and problems which it uses to match students to others who have similar goals/backgrounds or who had the same sort of issues previously and overcame them.
Although the GetSet front end does also include a social network layer where students have profiles and can share content with each other and generally participate in a digital community that’s specifically tied to their college, so there is some overlap in the approach. But engaging young people digitally is inevitably going to involve something social and connected.
Fixing the problem of student orientation in a new and potentially alienating environment is key to the college drop-out problem, argues GetSet CEO and founder Karan Goel, because “social factors” play the biggest role in high US college drop-out rates. He says research has shown that more than half (54%) of college drop-outs are driven by social factors, such as students not feeling like they fit in or not making friends, vs around a third (30%) leaving for financial reasons, and even fewer (16%) for academic reasons.
Goel argues that traditional support channels for students — such as face to face counseling — aren’t working well any more because students are no longer comfortable utilizing these forms of support. They want something faster and more accessible via the channels they are used to: aka their digital devices. “The challenge has changed a lot in the last 50 years,” he says. “Traditionally students would go see their counsellor when they ran into an issue. In today’s age students just don’t go. They don’t reach out to the counsellor. They want something instant.”
The GetSet system gives freshers a social platform that connects them to similar peers — based on things like their shared goals — to help them make friends when they first arrive. And even before day one at college. “We use a community of peers to create instant support,” is how Goel puts it. He stresses that it is instant — it’s not a forum style system where you post a question and have to wait an indeterminate amount of time for a response; the matching is done immediately.
“Whatever we’ve learned about the student, we show them someone just like them who’s run into that same challenge and overcome it,” he says. “We call this vicarious success. Showing you examples of good behaviour and how to overcome challenges or solve problems. And it’s instant. It’s not like you post something on the school network and you wait for people to respond. You just tell us what you want to accomplish, or what your question is and we instantly find a match for you.”
The platform also provides an ongoing support role for students after they have initially settled in by giving them a quick way to find peers who can help them when they are having specific difficulties, beyond the challenge of arriving at a new school. It does this by real-time matching an individual with a problem to someone else at the college who was able to resolve the same sort of issue — again using NLP to achieve real-time matches.
GetSet’s NLP and matching engine is called PeerWisdom. “It’s very powerful because, as you can imagine, the average 18-year-old is much more likely to listen to something from a 19-year-old who’s relevant to them than from an expert who’s much older — even though the expert might have the best answer, they’re more likely to listen to the peer,” Goel adds.
Obviously, the more data this sort of system has the better it gets — so there’s initially likely to be the equivalent of a learning curve as it accrues data from the students that will ultimately be reflected back to them to provide community support for their very specific problems.
“It just gets better over time. All the information the school has to give us is the name, email, cell phone number if they have it… It basically learns about them over time. Let’s say they first question comes up — what’s your inspiration [for going to college] — so you’d answer it and that would be the only thing we would really know about you at that point. And we would match you with somebody at the same university with the same inspiration. And then you answer one more thing and then we keep building a richer and richer profile of you over time,” says Goel.
The startup is leaning on psychology as its underlying basis when it comes to matching criteria. “Our chief scientific advisor, his name is Dr Robert Feldman, he’s the deputy chancellor of the University of Massachusetts Amherst. He’s spent the last 30 years — he’s the leading researcher in student success, [asking] how do you get students to graduate? He’s helped us develop these questions in a way that we get students to open up,” says Goel.
“GetSet facilitates the rapid development of meaningful relationships and sense of connection with other students at the very start of college.  In turn, this significantly raises the likelihood of future college success,” adds Feldman.
Goel’s prior edtech startup, PrepMe, sold to the owner of Blackboard in 2011. He’s been bootstrapping GetMe since founding the startup in October 2012, running a series of experiments and trials since early last year to refine the technology.
On the funding front, GetSet is in the process of closing a seed round of funding — it’s taken in some of this financing already (but not announced it before today) and is continuing to expand the round. Goel says the aim is to close $2.5 million in total.
Investors will include Social+Capital, founder of Braintree, founder of Fieldglass, Chicago Ventures, serial edtech entrepreneur Paul Freedman, and serial entrepreneur and prior investor in PrepMe Howard Tullman, according to Goel, plus some additional unnamed investors.
How exactly does GetSet work? It initially asks the students a handful of questions, such as what they hope to get out of college or their reasons for attending, and uses the initial shared data to power matching — with a view to helping them find others with similar backgrounds or aims who they might be likely to make friends with. As time goes on, students can set more goals or ask the system for help with specific problems.
They can also choose to share the information they submit publicly to the GetSet social network if they want to, but there’s no requirement to share to be sent matches. That means students can ask for help with a specific issue privately, i.e. without going public about it, and still be matched with a relevant peer who may be able to help them.
Matches are presented as one main match and a few  secondary matches. It’s then up to the student to contact the suggested peer if they choose. Students are incentivised to help each other via the system — which gives positive reinforcement in the form of thanks when students help others. “That’s why we deliberately use the term PeerWisdom, because I think a lot of students don’t think of themselves as wise — so it’s this nice surprise to feel like ‘hey I have wisdom, I know something that could help someone else’,” adds Goel.
From its initial trials of the tech, GetSet usage skews towards new students wanting to orient themselves in the environment — falling back to more of a support role after that. “Our current usage shows that students use it pretty heavily when they’re starting, so in the first few weeks, but then after that they’re coming back maybe 15 minutes, or 20 minutes, just to put in a new question or a new challenge, or something they want to do that they don’t know how to do. So the usage, they’re coming back, but they’re not using it as intensely — and that’s fine, because that’s really the point,” he says, adding: “We’ve got them embedded in the community, they feel like they belong, they’ve taken some of those relationships and are now engaging with those people offline or through Facebook or through Twitter — but we helped them get introduced to those people. And really what the school is measuring us on is did more students graduate, did more students stick around.”
Goel says the early indications for GetSet’s ability to improve drop-out rates look good, with the results from three months of trials involving a few hundred students — who self-selected to try out the product — showing users being 5% to 10% more likely to “stick around”, as he puts it. That’s pretty early data so it will be interesting to see what kind of success rates GetSet can achieve with far more substantial usage as it rolls out across universities — today’s ASU rollout being its first sizable deployment.
“We’ve got another big college in Southern California that’s launching the week after [ASU], so that’s our next big launch,” adds Goel. “And then we’ve got a whole set of schools. We’re trying to get it right — we’re only launching one school a week or every two weeks right now. We’re not going to try to sign up lots of schools but we have a very deep pipeline of traditional universities, online colleges.
“The drop-out problem is really across the board. I think people traditionally think of it as something that only happens at lower tier universities or online universities but really with the exception of maybe the top 50 or 100 universities in the US, everyone else has a big drop-out problem.”
In addition to targeted help to cut drop-out rates, Goel says the platform can help universities to quickly identify large-scale problems that are affecting the student body — giving them a chance to intervene early — such as, for example, a Chicago university that the startup has been working with being able to identify a parking problem that was making it tough for students to get to their classes via comments made on its platform.
“We provide some pretty deep business intelligence to the school. So the university has a word cloud so they can see what are emerging issues that are occurring on campus. This is really important for them because traditionally universities will only know if something is wrong if the student comes in to see a counsellor. Which today almost never happens,” adds Goel.
The GetSet business model is equivalent to a SaaS one, with the universities paying the startup so they can offer the platform as a free service to their students.

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