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KIPP: Effectiveness and Innovation in Publicly-Funded, Privately-Operated Schools. October 4, 2012 Presentation to the APPAM/INVALSI Improving Education Conference Christina Clark Tuttle Philip Gleason Brian Gill Ira Nichols-Barrer. Background.
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KIPP: Effectiveness and Innovation in Publicly-Funded, Privately-Operated Schools October 4, 2012 Presentation to the APPAM/INVALSI Improving Education Conference Christina Clark Tuttle Philip Gleason Brian Gill Ira Nichols-Barrer
Background • Network of 125 charter schools serving over 39,000 disadvantaged students in 20 states and D.C. • Model involves high expectations and more time in school to prepare students for college • Early KIPP model served grades 5-8 (age 10-14) • Represent a majority of schools in operation (n=70) • First elementary and high schools opened in 2004 • Mixed effects for charter schools generally • Positive pattern of findings for KIPP specifically
Research Questions • What are the impacts of KIPP middle schools on student achievement and other student outcomes? • Do KIPP schools engage in selective entry or exit? • Does the performance of KIPP students suggest they are on a path toward college?
Evaluation Design • Quasi-experimental analysis of “all” 70 KIPP middle schools • De-identified data from states on student selection, test scores, and attainment • Experimental (or lottery-based) analysis in 13 schools (1,000+ students) • School records • Parent and student surveys • Study-administered test • Validation of observational methods using experimental results
Pilot QED Sample Selection • 22 KIPP middle schools • 20 still operating • 2 “closed” by KIPP • Opened by SY2005-06 • Allows for more than one cohort to be analyzed across multiple years after KIPP entry • Located in jurisdictions with available data • Three consecutive years of longitudinally-linked student-level data, typically through 2007-08 • For both traditional public and charter schools • Between 3 and 8 cohorts per school
Analytic Approach • Treatment group comprised students entering KIPP in 5th or 6th grade (n=5,993) • Defined three comparison groups: • District: all students within the district • Feeder: students in ES also attended by KIPP students at baseline (and their MS) • Matched comparison: propensity-score matched comparison group using baseline characteristics • Analyses • Student characteristics • Attrition and replacement • Impacts on achievement
Demographic Characteristics Difference from KIPP is statistically significant at the 5% level
Baseline Achievement Difference from KIPP is statistically significant at the 5% level
Attrition Rates, by Grade Difference from KIPP is statistically significant at the 5% level
Average Baseline Achievement in Math, Stayers vs. Transfers • At both KIPP and district schools, early leavers are lower-achieving than students who stay Difference from stayers is statistically significant at the 1% level
Incidence of Late Arrivals • KIPP schools replace more students than they lose in grade 6, but fewer in grades 7 and 8 • District comparison schools replace more students than they lose in both grades 7 and 8
Average Baseline Achievement in Math, On-Time vs. Late Arrivals • At KIPP schools, late arrivals are higher-achieving than on-time arrivals; at district schools, they are lower-achieving Difference from on-time arrivals is statistically significant at the 1% level
Baseline reading and math scores, by grade *Difference from KIPP is statistically significant at the 0.05 level **Difference from KIPP is statistically significant at the 0.01 level • By 8th grade, KIPP classrooms comprise students higher-achieving at baseline
Estimating Impacts • Model specification: • Retain students who leave KIPP in the treatment group • “Freeze” scores for grade repeaters (more common in KIPP: 11% vs. 2% of 5th graders)
Estimated Impact of Potential Exposure to KIPP *Difference is statistically significant at the 0.05 level **Difference is statistically significant at the 0.01 level
Percentage of KIPP Schools with Positive and Negative Impacts in Reading, by Years after KIPP Entry
Percentage of KIPP Schools with Positive and Negative Impacts in Math, by Years after KIPP Entry
Conclusions • KIPP students are: • More likely to be a racial minority, eligible for FRPL • Less likely to be limited English proficiency or special education • Lower-achieving at baseline than the district overall but equivalent to other students at the same ES • Rates of attrition are similar in KIPP and district schools
Conclusions • Late arrivals present a mixed picture • Proportion of late arrivals relative to enrollment is similar at KIPP and comparison schools • KIPP schools are less likely to replace in later grades • KIPP late arrivals are higher-achieving • Patterns of attrition and late arrivals mean later grades at KIPP comprise higher-performing students, but “peer effects” can explain no more than about a quarter of cumulative impacts • Estimated impacts on reading and math scores are positive, statistically significant, and of substantial magnitude
For More Information • Please contact: • Christina Clark Tuttle • ctuttle@mathematica-mpr.com • View reports online at: • Impacts: http://www.mathematica-mpr.com/publications/PDFs/ education/KIPP_fnlrpt.pdf • Selection and Attrition: http://www.mathematica-mpr.com/publications/PDFs/ education/KIPP_middle_schools_wp.pdf
Location of KIPP Schools in Sample KIPP state in study Other KIPP state (as of 2005) Recent KIPP state (as of 2012)
Average Cumulative Attrition by Subgroup *Difference is statistically significant at the 0.05 level **Difference is statistically significant at the 0.01 level
Size of Impacts in Reading after Three Years KIPP Schools
Size of Impacts in Math after Three Years KIPP Schools