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Using data from the whole school Perspective CEM CONFERENCE EXETER Geoff Davies Day 2 Final session 28 th February 2013.

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Presentation on theme: "Using data from the whole school Perspective CEM CONFERENCE EXETER Geoff Davies Day 2 Final session 28 th February 2013."— Presentation transcript:

1 Using data from the whole school Perspective CEM CONFERENCE EXETER Geoff Davies Day 2 Final session 28 th February 2013

2 What are schools about? Effective Learning Opening windows on a world Choices Realising potential Achievement and Standards Qualifications

3 BUT DO YOU RECOGNISE THIS??? You arrive at school one morning and you receive the following information Two pupils have misbehaved on the bus upsetting a third child A parent has phoned saying her child is being bullied in school and refuses to come to school A pupil has told her LSA that her mother has slapped her hard across the face the previous evening and there are finger marks on her face Two girls have been fighting in the canteen before school A member of staff is very upset after a disagreement with a colleague The gym roof is leaking and you have examinations scheduled there for the day You receive a serious complaint about a teacher’s conduct You are due to attend a meeting in an hour with the Chair of Governors

4 What are schools about? Preventive Detention For some pupils just keeping them off the streets is a major achievement Social function Nobody else may take on this function Providing security and a safe environment Pupils not at ease will not learn Effective Learning Opening windows on a world Choices Realising potential Achievement and Standards Qualifications

5 Schools are complex organisations Far too complex to make decisions by hunch! Can you really know your school without detailed research and surveys?

6 Carol Fitz-Gibbon 2001 British Psychological Society It gradually dawned on me that providing the data to schools was the most important outcome of the effort, far more important than writing research papers….. The provision of data to practitioners meant that they participated in the research. Indeed they were the only ones who knew the surrounding circumstances for their classrooms, their department, each pupil, each family, etc. They were the major players: the ones who could interpret and learn from the detailed data. 25 YEARS OF CEM CENTRE DATA

7 …..there is a need for teacher researcher posts on the Senior Management team with a brief to develop research that is useful. Given time in the timetable thousands of teachers could become active researchers…. Educational research should be a practical reality contacting scientific enlightenment not a mathematical weight lifting exercise

8 Necessary knowledge base to use CEM systems to their potential 1. The forms of Value Added Data: scatter graphs raw and standardised residuals SPC charts tables of data use of PARIS for further analyses (e.g. by gender, teaching group) 2. Predictive Data: point and grade predictions importance of chances graphs availability of different predictive data 3. Baseline Data band profile graphs IPRs Average GCSE score Computer adaptive tests 4. Attitudinal Data

9 Make curriculum changes Adjust staffing structure and cater for student needs self-evaluation procedures including the analysis of examination results using value added data the target setting process school and department development plans……. Improve your monitoring and reporting procedures Provide information to governors Have conversations with feeder primary schools Etc etc If you have the tools you can use them to do these

10 GCSE value added A challenging school Any result within the outer shaded area decreases the probability that the value added result is down to chance. The probability here is about 1 in 20 Outside the 99.7% confidence limit chance is les than 3 in a1000 Below are the value added charts from YELLIS to GCSE for two contrasting institutions. Which subjects are outside the confidence limits in a ‘negative value added’ way. There must be questions to ask regarding teaching and learning? Which subjects are outside the confidence limits in a ‘positive value added’ way? GCSE VALUE ADDED A successful school

11 Student A Student B Compare the data for Student A and Student B (not Kingston students) Find students A and B on each of the scatter graphs English and Maths

12 Scatter Graph English Scatter graph Maths Is there anything to learn from these scatter graphs?

13 YELLIS ATTITUDINAL You are looking at the attitudinal feedback from year 10 over time:

14 Do you notice a pattern between the four charts. There was an initiative in the school that contributed, but was it sustainable?

15 Extended YELLIS Comparison charts for English and Maths

16 What concerns you about these charts? Can you suggest which is the stronger department?

17 This school has a five-year development plan which includes as one its goals: “To help students prepare for university and the world of work by developing independent learning skills, the ability to reflect and to learn from others and to maximise the benefits to learning offered by emerging technologies.” The graphs below reflect students’ perceptions of the style of learning that has been adopted in their A-level classes in two broadly similar subjects. a) If the students’ perceptions are an accurate reflection of what takes place in the classroom, which subject seems more on board with the school’s development plan? b) How would these perceptions inform the Senior Management Team’s evaluation of progress with its 5-year plan if the subject achieving significantly better value-added results was i) Subject 1? ii) Subject 2?

18 Subject 1 Subject 2

19 YOU ALL HAVE DATA ! PRIORITIES FOR YOUR SCHOOL DO YOU SEE THE VARIOUS PICTURES FOR YOUR SCHOOL? DATA MAY BE COUNTER INTUITIVE? What action was taken because of data revealing a priority?

20 USE ONE YEARS DATA WITH CAUTION! Better to use three years data as patterns over time are more significant.

21 Using data to inform leadership decisions 1.Which data do I need AND which data do I not need? (e.g. MidYIS cohort or Independent Sector) 2.What does the data mean and what does the data not mean? (e.g. staff INSET and support) 3.Who is the data for? 4.Storage, retrieval and use of data (e.g. self-evaluation and preparing for Inspection) Some key questions:

22 The use of this data needs to allow us to do our best to help every student to at least achieve if not exceed their potential. It may challenge The culture of ‘my’ school/college Accountability policy Expectations Staff training in use of data and ability to cope with data (data overload) Integrating the data into school procedures, storage, retrieval, distribution and access Roles and Responsibilities

23 THE MOST IMPORTANT WORD IN EDUCATION??? FINALLY

24 CULTURE


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