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Using Student Data as a Basis for Feedback to Teachers . Ronnie Detrich Wing Institute. Cal-ABA, 2011. Everybody’s Talking. Teacher accountability often offered as solution for education troubles. Numerous proposals to pay and evaluate teachers based on student performance.
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Using Student Data as a Basis for Feedback to Teachers Ronnie Detrich Wing Institute Cal-ABA, 2011
Everybody’s Talking • Teacher accountability often offered as solution for education troubles. • Numerous proposals to pay and evaluate teachers based on student performance. • Proposals usually linked to performance on high stakes tests. • Very weak means of influencing teacher behavior.
Difficulties with High Stakes Tests as Basis for Feedback • Low frequency • Once per year. • Long delay between behavior and feedback. • Test in spring, feedback following fall. • No direct link between teacher behavior and feedback. • Feedback is about student performance. • Does not specify what teachers do to influence student scores.
Alternatives to High Stakes Tests • Formative assessment • Curriculum-based measurement • Direct measures of behavior. • Characteristics • Frequent measurement • Easy and brief • Reliable and valid.
Function of Feedback Systems • Assure that all students are benefitting from educational services. • Student performance primary source of feedback to educators. • There are constraints.
What Should be Targets for Feedback • Logistically difficult to provide feedback on all aspects of teacher behavior. • Student performance influenced by variables not under teacher control: • Curriculum-usually selected at another level. • If curriculum is ineffective then inappropriate to hold teacher accountable. • Effectiveness of curriculum can be measured by student performance but only implemented with integrity. • How well educators implement an intervention is primary target for feedback.
Importance of Treatment of Integrity • Students cannot benefit from interventions they do not experience. • Unless educator knows what they are supposed to be doing they cannot do more of it.
Dimensions of Treatment Integrity(Dane & Schneider, 1998) • Exposure (Dosage): the extent to which participants are exposed to the intervention as prescribed. • Curricula usually prescribe frequency and duration of exposure that is necessary for benefit. • Ex: 3/week for 30 minutes/session. • Failing to satisfy either can impact student benefit. • Ex: 1/week for 30 minutes.
Dimensions of Treatment Integrity(Dane & Schneider, 1998) • Adherence: the extent to which the components of an intervention are delivered as prescribed. • Most common measured dimension. • It is necessary but not sufficient to produce benefits. • Adherence with low dosage not likely to produce positive outcomes.
Dimensions of Treatment Integrity(Dane & Schneider, 1998) • Quality of delivery: qualitative measure of how well the intervention is implemented. • Applied behavior analysts acknowledge importance. • Have not developed good measures. • Possible measures through social validity methods: • Enthusiasm • Sincerity • Variations in inflection and content of speech.
The Role of Student Data? • Student data provides feedback about progress. • If we know about adequacy of treatment integrity then can make decisions: • Adequacy of intervention • Adequacy of implementation • If implementation is inadequate then focus should be on improving educator behavior. • If implementation is adequate then focus should be on changing intervention so student can succeed. • Decisions can be made about increasing or decreasing intensity of intervention.
Visual Aids Can Enhance Data Interpretation Grade Level Standard Aim Line Trend Line
Taking Treatment Integrity Measurement to Scale • Insufficient resources to frequently observe all educators working with students to determine adequacy of implementation. • One solution: Measure student behavior and analyze at different units of analysis: • School • Classroom • Individual student • Any level there is gap between obtained and expected performance assess levels of treatment integrity.
Taking Treatment Integrity Measurement to Scale • Requires that data are routinely collected across all levels. • RtI: • CBM on all students 3/year. • PBS • Continuous measurement of Office Discipline Referrals • School-wide Evaluation Tool (SET) measures treatment integrity at the school level. • Schools with scores higher than 80% greater impact on social behavior than schools that do not exceed 80%.
Implications of Providing Feedback to Educators • Moves sole responsibility for student outcomes from teacher to broader system. • If teachers are to effectively implement: • System selects effective interventions for teachers to implement. • Assure that implementers are actually trained. • System must monitor teachers implementation of intervention. • Assure that resources are to present to implement effectively.
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