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The Value of Data The Vital Importance of Accountability American Institutes for Research February 2005.

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Presentation on theme: "The Value of Data The Vital Importance of Accountability American Institutes for Research February 2005."— Presentation transcript:

1 The Value of Data The Vital Importance of Accountability American Institutes for Research February 2005

2 The Value of Data 2 Federal Uses of NRS Data Develop report to Congress Determine national progress for Program Assessment Rating Tool (PART) and Government Performance Results Act (GPRA) performance Assess national and state trends Monitor program outcomes and data quality Negotiate performance targets with states Determine whether states met prior performance targets

3 The Value of Data 3 State Uses of NRS Data Evaluate local program performance Promote and evaluate local program improvement efforts Report to legislatures Negotiate state performance targets with feds

4 The Value of Data 4 Importance of Data Critical to Federal accountability Supports funding Maintains unique program identity Performance standards: GPRA, Office of Management and Budget (OMB)

5 The Value of Data 5 Government Performance and Results Act (GPRA) Requires annual performance targets tied to program goals for all Federal programs Adult education’s targets part of ED’s Strategic Plan Targets—percentage who: Acquire basic skills to complete level (ABE, ESL) Transition to postsecondary education Obtain GED Enter employment

6 The Value of Data 6 GPRA Performance, 2000–2004

7 The Value of Data 7 GPRA Performance, 2000–2004

8 The Value of Data 8 GPRA Performance, 2000–2004

9 The Value of Data 9 GPRA Performance, 2000–2004

10 The Value of Data 10 GPRA Performance, 2000–2004

11 The Value of Data 11 Program Assessment Rating Tool (PART) OMB review process to enforce GPRA Every program reviewed & scored annually PART scores must be submitted to Congress with budget request Secretaries use PART scores to increase/decrease program $ request Congress uses PART scores to make appropriations (e.g., de-fund programs)

12 The Value of Data 12 PART (FY05) Findings for Adult Ed. Adult education’s scores (out of 100%): Program purpose & design (100%) Strategic planning (29%) Program management (67%) Program results (0%) Summary: “Results Not Demonstrated”

13 The Value of Data 13 PART “Results” Findings: Progress toward long-term goals Meet annual performance goals Demonstrate efficiency and cost effectiveness Compare favorably to other programs Independent evaluation of program effectiveness No

14 The Value of Data 14 PART

15 The Value of Data 15 PART Example from appropriations committee report: “The Committee recommends no funding for [this program]. [ED] has not developed performance indicators consistent with the requirements of GPRA…. the Committee has chosen to focus its resources on higher priority programs.” p. 197

16 The Value of Data 16 From the President’s 2006 Budget: [Reduced funding for this program] ” … is consistent with the Administration's goal of decreasing funding for programs with limited impact or for which there is little or no evidence of effectiveness. A PART analysis of the program … produced a Results Not Demonstrated rating. The program was found to have a modest impact on adult literacy, skill attainment and job placement, but data quality problems…. made it difficult to assess the program's effectiveness.”

17 The Value of Data 17 Independent Program Evaluation of Effectiveness One element of PART where we failed, evaluation study may be coming To show impact we need: Good assessment data Assessments correctly administered Pre-post scores Program models—program goals, approach, student participation Meaningful instructional approach—with standards or a framework

18 The Value of Data 18 Setting State Performance Standards Key to improving national performance Promote continuous improvements Problems resulting from: High intra-state variance across years Wide variation among states Vastly exceed negotiated level

19 The Value of Data 19 Intra-state variance across years

20 The Value of Data 20 Wide variation among states

21 The Value of Data 21 Vastly exceed negotiated level

22 The Value of Data 22 Setting State Performance Standards Compare with past years’ performance Compare to national and median range Equal or exceed actual performance Show continuous improvement State factors Initiatives, policies, politics Attendance, student variables

23 The Value of Data 23 Situation similar to 1995 Reauthorization—program will be evaluated Funding—in a time of huge deficits Renewed interest by the administration in block grants—workforce focus Need to demonstrate value and identity of adult education program Continued Vital Importance of Accountability Data

24 The Value of Data 24 Discussion Need for valid and reliable data to counter PART High quality data Improve GPRA measures for program Continuous program improvement is essential Demonstrate program effectiveness What improvements are needed?


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