220 likes | 333 Views
Accountability Measures and School League Tables. Rober t Coe Capita workshop , 15th July 2014 . Outline. Evidence on impact of accountability Typology of accountability systems Moral leadership What should we do?. Who wants accountability?. Direct incentives drive people’s behaviour
E N D
Accountability Measures and School League Tables Robert Coe Capita workshop , 15th July 2014
Outline • Evidence on impact of accountability • Typology of accountability systems • Moral leadership • What should we do?
Who wants accountability? • Direct incentives drive people’s behaviour • Policymakers • Economists • Parents • Negative side-effects outweigh benefits • Teachers • Education researchers • Parents
Evidence on impact of accountability Robert Coe
Research evidence • Meta-analysis of US studies by Lee (2008) • Small positive effects on attainment (ES=0.08) • Impact of publishing league tables (England vs Wales) (Burgess et al 2013) • Overall small positive effect (ES=0.09) • Reduces rich/poor gap • No impact on school segregation • Other reviews: mostly agree, but mixed findings • Lack of evidence about long-term, important outcomes
Evidence from PISA • DfE Accountability response: ‘OECD evidence shows that a robust accountability framework is essential to improving pupils’ achievement’ (DfE, 2013) • What the report actually said: ‘there is no measurable relationship between…various uses of assessment data for accountability purposes and the performance of school systems’ (OECD, 2010, p46)
Dysfunctional side effects • Extrinsic replaces intrinsic motivation • Narrowing focus on measures • Gaming (playing silly games) • Cheating (actual cheating) • Helplessness: giving up • Risk avoidance: playing it safe • Pressure: stress undermines performance • Competition: sub-optimal for system Some evidencefor all these, but mostly selective and anecdotal
Accountability cultures • Trust • Autonomous • Confidence • Challenge • Supportive • Improvement-focus • Problem-solving • Long-term • Genuine quality • Evaluation • Distrust • Controlled • Fear • Threat • Competitive • Target-focus • Image presentation • Quick fix • Tick-list quality • Sanctions
Official Accountability Systems Professional Monitoring Systems Accountability and improvement If you find a problem with your performance, what do you do? Cover it up Expose it to view. (Tymms, 1999)
Overall evidence-based conclusions • Easy to cherry-pick ‘[E]ducational policy makers and practitioners should be cautioned against relying exclusively on research that is consistent with their ideological positions to support or criticize the current high-stakes testing policy movement’ (Lee, 2008, p. 639) • Direct incentives do drive people’s behaviour; current evidence suggests accountability has small positive effects on attainment • Accountability systems always seem to have some undesirable side-effects • Balance of positive & negative effects likely to depend on a range of factors; current knowledge does not allow us to predict confidently
Hard questions • Imagine there was no accountability. What would you do differently? • Would students be better off as a result? • No – I wouldn’t do anything at all differently • Not significantly – minor presentational changes only • Yes – students would be better off without accountability • What actually stops you doing this?
Making Accountability Work • Reclaim professionalism • Experiment to optimise • Improve the measures • Make teacher assessment robust • Uncertainty and unpredictability • No substitute for judgement (Coe & Sahlgren, 2014)
1. Reclaim professionalism • Take the pledge: “We do what’s right for children and young people, not just what Ofsted might want” • Commit to supporting other schools/teachers who suffer as a result • Need evidence of great teaching, from robust evaluation and monitoring: can’t just support any school/teacher judged inadequate • Important that it is not just the ‘failed’ school/teacher that complains • Social media campaigns can be very effective: @OldAndrewUK vs Ofsted
2. Experiment to optimise • Should accountability have • Explicit (eg PRP, schools ‘academised’) or implicit (challenge, compare) incentives? • Performance published or confidential? • Interpreted judgements or objective data? • Improvement through consequences or feedback? • Focus on information for consumers (eg parents) or professionals? • We don’t know, so need to experiment
3. Improve the measures • Choose measures that are genuinely aligned with what is valued (& hard to distort) • Ensure assessments/qualifications are predictive of later success • Measure a wide range of outcomes • Look at distributions, not just thresholds • Use delayed outcomes: eg for 11-16 • % NEET @ 18 • % entering elite university courses • Build in loophole-closing mechanisms (egre difficulty/value of ‘equivalents’)
4. Make teacher assessment robust • Training in assessment and moderation • Link teacher assessed mark distribution to within-centre exam mark distribution • Spot checks (risk targeted): can students reproduce it? • Support whistle-blowing • Signed declarations from teachers, headteachers and students • Questionnaire audit of practices: ‘too good to be true’ triggers spot check
5. Uncertainty and unpredictability • State general aims, but be vague/flexible about specific targets/measures • Change the targets and monitor who chases • Make assessments less predictable (more capricious?)
6. No substitute for judgement • Combine statistical measures with face-to-face observation & judgement • Require inspectors to demonstrate their ability to make sound judgements about complex data, from observation, etc • Actively look for (and publicise) gaming and unintended consequences; encourage whistle-blowing on counter-productive gaming
www.cem.org Summary … @ProfCoe Evidence on accountability is not great, but suggests small positive impacts Dysfunctional side-effects are also real We need experiments to learn how to optimise Moral leadership is required Robert.Coe@cem.dur.ac.uk