The Importance of Data-Based Decision Making: Vignette
The Importance of Data-Based Decision Making: Vignette
of Data-Based
Decision Making
1
T his chapter provides a general introduction to data-based decision
making by addressing the question, why is using data for decision
making important for school improvement? Today’s effective educational
leaders use data extensively to guide them in decision making, setting
and prioritizing goals, and monitoring progress. They use data to define
needs, set goals, plan interventions, and evaluate progress. The continu-
ing analysis of the gaps between goals for student learning and student
performance defines the actions of effective schools. Capable data-based
decision makers understand the array of data that is needed for school
improvement. They know some fundamental principles of measurement
and assessment and can implement data-analysis skills. They use a mul-
titude of strategies to analyze data to propel teaching and learning and
school improvement. They use technology to support the use of data.
They engage the school community (teachers, parents, students) in using
data to analyze strengths, weakness, threats, and opportunities for school
improvement. At the end of this chapter, you should be able to explain
why data-driven decision making is critical for schools to meet the needs
of all children and to reach accountability expectations.
Vignette
and establish new relationships with your staff, you face many
demands. The greatest demand for you is guiding your school in
a high-stakes accountability environment. Although your school
has a highly qualified staff and supportive parents, your school
must help students learn more and should, therefore, produce bet-
ter results, particularly on the state-mandated assessments. When
you were hired, you were informed by the district superintendent
that Rosemont’s test scores have declined during the past few
years. You need a plan. A systematic one. One that will provide
leadership to your school and maintain the support and morale
of your staff and parents. What will you do? The first thing you
know you must do is come to grips with understanding all the
data available about your school, your staff, and your students.
You desire to know how these data support Rosemont’s vision and
mission and how the data provide information for improving what
occurs in your school.
Standards-Based Reform
and Data-Based Decision Making
. Although there probably is some merit to these critics’ claims, it is important to note
that many researchers do not hold to the contention that public schooling in the United
States is failing our students (see Berends, Lucas, Sullivan, & Briggs, 2005; Berliner &
Biddle, 1995; Grissmer, Kirby, Berends, & Williamson, 1994; Rothstein, 1998).
• Improving Schools With Data
on science and mathematics tests by the year 2000, and George W. Bush’s
No Child Left Behind Act of 2001 (NCLB) expanded the role of standard-
ized tests to evaluate schools’ progress in educating their students with the
aim that all students would be proficient in reading and mathematics by
2014. Although NCLB has generated widespread debate, its initial passage
in Congress showed the strong bipartisan support for the use of standards-
based accountability. At the core of these reforms across the country is a
focus on students and the conviction that they must be able to demonstrate
what they have learned in their course work by performing on various
assessments at different points in their academic careers.
Standards-based reform consists of four key elements: content and
performance standards, curriculum and instructional alignment, assess-
ments, and accountability.
Curriculum Alignment
A second key element of standards-based reform is the alignment of the
delivered curriculum to the standards. Alignment entails focusing teaching
The Importance of Data-Based Decision Making •
Once test scores have been calculated, they are disseminated to various
organizations throughout the state, both inside and outside of education.
States and districts receiving Title I funds must prepare and disseminate
annual report cards according to NCLB.
The disaggregated results on the state standardized tests are used to
determine if a school has met adequate yearly progress (AYP) under No Child
Left Behind. Each state defines adequate yearly progress for school districts
and schools by setting the level of student achievement a school must attain
for each of the subgroups (http://www.ed.gov/nclb/accountability/schools/
accountability.html). AYP measures the yearly progress toward achieving
grade-level performance for each student group. These report cards contain
such information as depicted in Tables 1.1 and 1.2.
The information is made public to provide accountability, the last ele-
ment of standards-based reform. Reformers argue that scores on these
standardized tests offer evidence of the degree to which teachers, classes,
or schools have made progress in educating students according to the
standards and benchmarks. Accountability entails monitoring, challeng-
ing, and rewarding educators to improve student learning as evidenced
on standardized assessments. To promote enforcement of this account-
ability, standardized test scores are made public through newspaper
articles, local news organizations, and state or district Web site postings.
As performance-based pay has yet to become a pervasive policy, public
knowledge comprises some of the most widespread incentives and pres-
sures for educators to improve their students’ performance.
Depending on the state, these test scores are then used as criteria
in various decisions. Tests that are used to make critical decisions about
rewards and sanctions for districts, schools, students, or teachers are
called high-stakes tests. For example, in many states students must pass
high school tests to graduate; in other states test scores may be tied to pay
raises. The stakes associated with such test results are high, and they may
go only higher.
NCLB ties schools’ receipt of national-level funding for certain pro-
grams to their students’ performances on state standardized tests. Such
policies have increased pressure on principals and teachers to improve
student scores on these assessments. The use of standardized test scores
in these ways is designed to give educators multiple incentives to improve
students’ performances and thereby improve their learning as defined by
the benchmarks. Reformers argue that such policies will not only promote
improved student learning but also offer educators and others a complex
way of monitoring progress toward the standards.
Key to implementing standards-based reform is high-quality profes-
sional development. Within the context of standards-based reform, profes-
sional development is the mechanism that effective leaders use to help
Table 1.1 Grades K–8: Subgroup Disaggregation for Math Scores
Math
Year One Year Two Year Two State
% Proficient % Proficient % Proficient % Proficient % Proficient
& Advanced & Advanced & Advanced & Advanced & Advanced
% Below % Proficient 2 Year % Below 2 Year 3 Year % Below 2 Year 3 Year
Criterion- Proficient & Advanced Average % Tested Proficient % Proficient % Advanced Average Average % Tested Proficient % Proficient % Advanced Average Average
Reference Target Proficient
Test (CRT) Target 95% & Advanced 79% Target 95% Target Prof & Adv 79%
All Students 24.0 76.0 75.0 100 19.0 51.0 30.0 79.0 77.0 100 12.0 48.0 40.0 86.0 83.0
White 15.0 85.0 85.0 100 11.0 44.0 45.0 87.0 86.0 100 8.0 45.0 47.0 91.0 89.0
Hispanic 29.0 71.0 68.0 99 23.0 57.0 20.0 74.0 71.0 100 19.0 53.0 28.0 79.0 76.0
African
33.0 67.0 66.0 100 25.0 57.0 18.0 71.0 69.0 100 23.0 57.0 20.0 73.0 70.0
American
Native
18.0 82.0 80.0 100 11.0 50.0 39.0 86.0 83.0 100 12.0 50.0 38.0 87.0 84.0
American
Asian/Pacific
13.0 87.0 86.0 100 6.0 38.0 56.0 91.0 89.0 100 4.0 32.0 64.0 95.0 93.0
Islander
Economically
33.0 67.0 66.0 100 25.0 56.0 19.0 71.0 69.0 100 19.0 56.0 25.0 78.0 75.0
Disadvantaged
Students With
67.0 33.0 28.0 99 54.0 37.0 9.0 40.0 34.0 99 45.0 42.0 13.0 50.0 46.0
Disabilities
Limited
English 46.0 54.0 52.0 99 29.0 54.0 17.0 63.0 58.0 100 26.0 53.0 21.0 70.0 67.0
Proficient
Female 18.0 53.0 29.0 11.0 50.0 39.0
Male 21.0 49.0 30.0 13.0 47.0 40.0
Migrant 30.0 54.0 16.0
Nonmigrant 19.0 51.0 30.0 12.0 48.0 40.0
11
12 • Improving Schools With Data
Table 1.2 D
isaggregated Results for High School Students Meeting Adequate
Yearly Progress
African Native
High School All White Hispanic American American
Math
% Tested + + + + <45
% Proficient/
x + x x <45
Advanced
Reading, Language Arts, Writing
% Tested + + + + <45
% Proficient/
+ + + + <45
Advanced
Event
+
Dropout Rate
Met AYP? x
Asian/
Pacific Economic Students w/ Limited English
High School Islander Disadvantaged Disabilities Proficient
Math
% Tested + + + +
% Proficient/
+ x x x
Advanced
Reading, Language Arts, Writing
% Tested + + + +
% Proficient/
+ x + x
Advanced
Event
Dropout Rate
Met AYP?
Vignette Revisited