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How to Explain the Numbers: Helping Staff, Parents, and Other Stakeholders Understand the Results of the NCSEAM Surveys for Part C and 619 Batya Elbaum,

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Presentation on theme: "How to Explain the Numbers: Helping Staff, Parents, and Other Stakeholders Understand the Results of the NCSEAM Surveys for Part C and 619 Batya Elbaum,"— Presentation transcript:

1 How to Explain the Numbers: Helping Staff, Parents, and Other Stakeholders Understand the Results of the NCSEAM Surveys for Part C and 619 Batya Elbaum, NCSEAM Pam Roush, West Virginia Part C OSEP National Early Childhood Meeting Arlington, VA, December 2007

2 Purpose of the session To provide participants with strategies for explaining the measures and percentages that come from the NCSEAM rating scales addressing Indicators C4 and B8.

3 Part C Indicator #4 “Percent of families participating in Part C who report that early intervention services have helped the family a) know their rights, b) effectively communicate their children’s needs, and c) help their children develop and learn.”

4 Part B Indicator #8 “Percent of parents with a child receiving special education services who report that schools facilitated parent involvement as a means of improving services and results for children with disabilities.”

5 WV Part C Indicator 4 4A – Know rights 200676.5% 200773.8% 4B – Communicate 200672.8% 200771.0% 4C – Help child 200686.3% 200778.7%

6 Change in mean measure by region

7 Percent on 4A by Region in 2006 and 2007

8 Why use a measurement analysis?

9 Use of a measurement framework ensures that measures will mean the same thing, regardless of how many items, or which specific items, are administered.

10 Why use a measurement analysis? We can’t assume that all survey items are equally agreeable. A measurement analysis gives us a measure of each item’s overall agreeability.

11 Order of Impact on Family items from least to most agreeable

12 Why use a measurement analysis? Use of a measurement framework allows us to test whether all the items are measuring the same thing.

13 Measuring the 3 subindicators NCSEAM’s measurement analysis of pilot data from thousands of families showed that items that are related to the three OSEP outcomes all fit into a single scale of family outcomes.

14 Measuring the 3 subindicators Families appear to achieve these outcomes in a very consistent order. Families who report that EI helped them know their rights also report that EI also helped them help their child develop and learn. Families who report that EI helped them effectively communicate their children’s needs also report that EI also helped them know their rights and help their child develop and learn.

15 Location of key items related to Indicator C4 Indicator 4c: Help their children develop and learn. IFS items: “Understand my child's special needs.” [516] “Do things with and for my child that are good for my child's development.” [498] Indicator 4b: Effectively communicate their children’s needs. IFS Item: “Communicate more effectively with the people who work with my child and family.” [556] Indicator 4a: Know their rights. IFS Item: “Know about my child's and family's rights concerning Early Intervention services.” [539] 556 539 516

16 Why use a measurement analysis? We can’t assume that the response choices (very strongly disagree, strongly disagree, disagree, agree, strongly agree, very strongly agree) indicated by equidistant circles or numbers on a page are really equidistant.

17 Spacing of response choices

18

19 The logic of distributions

20 Example: Distribution of height

21 Distribution of Measures of Reading Achievement - 1

22 Distribution of Measures of Reading Achievement - 2

23 West Virginia results 2006

24 West Virginia results 2007

25 WV without extreme cases 2006

26 WV without extreme cases 2007

27 Instrumentation and approach to data analysis make a difference

28 Choice of instruments: Part B NCSEAM K-12 and 619 9 NCSEAM K-1221 Customized NCSEAM survey11 State-developed or adapted18 ECO Family Outcomes Survey 1

29 States’ reported baseline data on Indicator 8B

30 Choice of instruments: Part C NCSEAM Survey 25 ECO Family Outcomes Survey 18 State-developed or adapted10 Combination 1

31 Analysis of states’ baseline data: Indicator C4

32

33 APR Family Outcome Results – Part C States Using NCSEAM Survey and RASCH analysis APRs submitted February 2007

34 Reference to a standard

35 Percent of measures above the adopted standards standards

36 What is the relationship between % at or above the NCSEAM standard and % agreement on the “threshold item?”

37 Sample descriptive interpretation related to Indicator 4A Approximately 90-95% of families agreed, with approximately two-thirds of families expressing strong or very strong agreement, that early intervention helped them: Understand their child’s special needs. Do things with and for their child that are good for their child’s development. Feel that they can handle the challenges of parenting a child with special needs.

38 Part C Example: WV data

39 Q44 - know about my child's and family's rights

40 Q42 - communicate more effectively

41 Q46 - understand my child's special needs

42 Part B Example

43 The NCSEAM standard is a stringent standard Cut score for B at 600 Cut scores for C at 539, 516, 556 The standard is set so as to ensure that approximately 95% or more of the responses will be in one of the agree categories on the item designated as the “threshold item” Simple agreement with the “threshold item” is not enough

44 How precise are the percentages that states are reporting?

45 Error in estimation Whenever data are based on a sample (whether owing to sampling or to a less than 100% return rate), there is some amount of error in generalizing to the population. “Error,” or imprecision, can be represented by a confidence interval. As sample size decreases, error of estimate - and its representation as a confidence interval - increases. The decrease is not linear!


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