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High-Impact Tutoring Is the Missing Link In Curriculum Adoption and Student Achievement

The question isn’t whether you chose the right curriculum. It’s whether you’ve built the conditions for it to succeed.
July 13, 2026

Every superintendent knows this moment:

The district spends months selecting a new curriculum. The board approves the investment, teachers dig into professional learning, principals rework schedules, and instructional coaches support classrooms through the transition. Everyone is working harder than they were a year ago.

Then the first benchmark results arrive, and scores are flat or slipping. Teachers feel overwhelmed, parents start asking questions, and eventually someone says it out loud: “Did we choose the wrong curriculum?”

It’s an understandable question. It’s just usually not the right one. The better question, and the one that should shape every curriculum adoption decision, is whether the district has created the conditions the curriculum needs to succeed, and that students need in order to benefit from it. That question reframes the entire conversation.

The Time Equation

Curriculum adoption is more than a purchasing decision. It’s an organizational change that lives or dies on implementation. Teachers are asked to learn, all at once:

  • New instructional routines and pacing
  • New lesson structures and assessments
  • New digital tools and planning processes

And they’re expected to do it while accelerating student learning, responding to individual needs, and keeping instruction strong every day.

Implementation science tells us this period is predictable. Michael Fullan called it the implementation dip: performance often declines before it improves, because educators are rebuilding deeply established practice (Leading in a Culture of Change, 2001). The dip isn’t a failure. It’s what learning looks like at the adult level.

The challenge is that students keep moving while educators adapt. A first grader gets exactly one first-grade year. A middle schooler gets one window to build the algebra foundations everything else rests on. Teachers need time to learn, but students can’t afford to wait for them to finish. That tension is the leadership challenge at the center of every curriculum adoption.

The Cost of Implementation

District leaders put enormous care into selecting high-quality instructional materials, and rightly so. But implementation is where the investment actually pays off, or doesn’t. Consider what curriculum adoption requires before students ever experience its intended impact.

InvestmentTypical Cost for a Mid-Sized District
Curriculum materials and licensing$400,000 to $800,000
Professional learning$100,000 to $250,000
Instructional coaching$150,000 to $300,000
Teacher release time and substitutes$75,000 to $200,000
Technology and implementation supports$50,000 to $150,000
Total implementation investment$775,000 to $1.7 million

These figures vary by district and vendor, but they point to the same reality: the largest investment isn’t the curriculum itself. It’s everything around it. The financial risk isn’t purchasing excellent materials. It’s spending close to a million dollars without ensuring teachers can implement those materials confidently and consistently.

The curriculum is the asset. Implementation determines the return.

This is why EdReports and other national organizations increasingly emphasize implementation quality alongside curriculum selection. Districts tend to be confident in choosing instructional materials, but far fewer have formal systems to evaluate implementation fidelity or monitor whether the intended instructional shifts are actually happening in classrooms. That gap is where the real work begins.

The Capacity Question

When districts recognize that students need extra support during a curriculum transition, the instinct is often to add something:

  • A new intervention program
  • Another software platform
  • An additional assessment
  • One more professional learning initiative

Each may have merit on its own. Each also adds to the implementation load. Teachers learn another system, principals monitor another initiative, and instructional leaders train, coach, schedule, and evaluate another layer of work. Every new initiative competes for the same limited resource, and that resource is time.

Which raises a different leadership question: which investments increase student learning without increasing implementation complexity?

High-Impact Tutoring as Implementation Support

High-Impact Tutoring is one of the few strategies that gives schools a resource they can’t create internally: more instructional time. The curriculum organizes learning. Teachers bring it to life. High-Impact Tutoring keeps student learning moving while teachers build expertise.

What sets it apart is what it doesn’t ask of teachers. There’s no new curriculum to adopt, no new instructional framework to learn, no added responsibilities to absorb. It extends and reinforces existing classroom instruction, so students receive additional instructional time aligned to the same academic goals, standards, and priorities. Teachers aren’t redesigning lessons or managing another platform. They can focus on mastering the new curriculum while tutoring gives students more opportunities to strengthen essential skills.

That’s why High-Impact Tutoring is better understood as implementation support than as another intervention. It protects the district’s largest instructional investment by giving teachers the one resource every successful adoption requires, time, while giving students an equally valuable one: more opportunities to learn.

A district investing more than $1 million in curriculum implementation shouldn’t have to choose between supporting teachers and accelerating student learning. With a relatively modest investment, often less than five percent of the total adoption cost, High-Impact Tutoring makes both possible. It isn’t another initiative to manage. It protects the return on the initiatives already underway.

The best investment isn’t always the one with the lowest purchase price. It’s the one with the lowest implementation burden and the highest instructional return.

StrategyPurchase CostTeacher Implementation CostSupports Current Curriculum?
New intervention program$$HighSometimes
New software$$Medium to HighVaries
Supplemental curriculum$$$HighOften limited
High-Impact Tutoring$$LowYes

Capacity Requires a Partner, Not Just a Program

The other reason districts hesitate to expand student support mid-implementation is workload, and the concern is legitimate. Launching a new initiative typically means:

  • Hiring staff and building schedules
  • Developing curriculum and training educators
  • Monitoring quality and collecting data
  • Communicating with families and coordinating with school leaders

Every one of those responsibilities competes for the attention of people already managing significant instructional change.

A sustainable High-Impact Tutoring model should work in the opposite direction: less implementation burden, more instructional capacity. For district leaders, a fully managed solution changes the equation. Instead of recruiting tutors, building schedules, training staff, and aligning instruction across schools, the district relies on a single accountable partner.

With a fully managed partner like Catapult Learning, districts aren’t just purchasing tutoring services. They’re adding implementation capacity. Catapult takes on the operational work that so often determines whether a program succeeds:

  • Recruiting and training tutors
  • Coordinating schedules across schools
  • Managing program quality
  • Monitoring student progress
  • Communicating with school leaders

Those responsibilities sit with one accountable partner instead of being spread across staff who are already stretched.

The result:

  • Teachers stay focused on implementing the curriculum
  • Principals stay focused on instructional leadership
  • District leaders stay focused on outcomes instead of logistics
  • Students experience one coherent instructional journey

Because the tutoring is intentionally aligned with the district’s curriculum, instructional priorities, pacing, and assessment calendar, tutors reinforce the same concepts students are learning in class rather than introducing competing materials. Teachers don’t need to learn another framework. Students gain more instructional time without added confusion. The focus stays where it belongs: on increasing the return on the programs already in place.

A Final Consideration

When a district has invested hundreds of thousands, or even millions, of dollars in a curriculum adoption, the most effective next step is a partner who protects that investment by expanding teacher capacity, increasing student learning time, and keeping implementation sustainable.

Every curriculum promises better outcomes. None of them creates additional hours in a teacher’s day. High-Impact Tutoring does something no curriculum can: it gives students more opportunities to learn while giving teachers the time to become experts in the materials they’ve been asked to implement.

That isn’t another intervention. It’s leadership, fiscal stewardship, and instructional coherence in a single decision, and it’s an investment in teachers as much as in students.

Explore more insights on high-impact tutoring and real implementation stories:Ā Success Stories|Ā High-Impact Tutoring OverviewĀ |Ā Resources for School Leaders

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