Bill proposes that the Department of Public Instruction provide virtual reality technology to 16,000 students for math

Corrine Hess:

Students in Ohio saw an 11 percent improvement in their Algebra 1 assessments after using virtual reality for one year, according to the first randomized-control trial conducted from September 2022 to April 2023. 

Shannon Cox is the superintendent who brought virtual reality to 16 school districts in southwestern Ohio. 

Cox heads the Montgomery County Educational Service Center. In Ohio, there are more than 50 educational service centers that provide administrative, academic, fiscal and operational support services to schools and districts. 

According to Cox, bringing virtual reality into the classroom gave students a kinesthetic connection, a real world connection and a career connection to math.

“We knew that we needed to teach differently, because students learn differently,” Cox said. “It’s a different world, and we needed to give teachers different resources to help them do that.”

Seventy-eight percent of students surveyed in Ohio said the technology helped them understand math, 83 percent said it made learning math more interesting and 84 percent said it helped them see how math is used in the real world.

Cox said the feedback from teachers, even veteran teachers, was also positive.


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