Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

A Prudent Question is Half of WISEdom Using WISEdash Data Wisely to Leverage Change Kenneth S. Donahue School Administration Consultant for Data Analysis.

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "A Prudent Question is Half of WISEdom Using WISEdash Data Wisely to Leverage Change Kenneth S. Donahue School Administration Consultant for Data Analysis."— Presentation transcript:

1 A Prudent Question is Half of WISEdom Using WISEdash Data Wisely to Leverage Change Kenneth S. Donahue School Administration Consultant for Data Analysis Wisconsin Department of Public Instruction

2 Goals To facilitate the USE of WISEdash to answer questions related to reading achievement for students with IEPs To make the case that the use of WISEdash is an important but insufficient condition for student- level improvement. To reiterate the importance of asking good questions once you have “completed” any data analysis To propose a set of guiding questions regarding the use of student level information in WISEdash

3 Outline State-Level Analyses – Question #1: With respect to reading achievement (WSAS reading), what is the nature of being a student with an IEP in Wisconsin? – Question #2: Which primary disability category should be least related to reading achievement, what is the performance of that category, and how does that inform our answer to question #1? – Question #3: Which factors most contribute to the performance gap between students with and without IEPs in Wisconsin? Student-Level Analyses – Question #1: What data best characterize reading achievement for a student with an IEP? – Question #2: What information is needed to help a student improve from basic to proficient? Suggested Guiding Questions for WISEdash Analyses

4 PART 1. STATE-LEVEL ANALYSES

5 Question #1: With respect to reading achievement (WSAS reading), what is the nature of being a student with an IEP in Wisconsin?

6 Analysis Options WSAS SwD vs. SwoD (point in time) WSAS SwD vs. SwoD (trend) WSAS by Primary Disability (point in time) Student Growth Percentiles

7 WSAS SwD vs. SwoD (point in time)

8 WSAS SwD vs. SwoD (trend)

9 WSAS by Primary Disability (point in time)

10 Student Growth Percentiles

11 Question #2: Which primary disability category should be least related to reading achievement, what is the performance of that category, and how does that inform our answer to question #1? AutismIntellectual Disability (CD) Emotional Behavioral Disability Hearing Impairment Orthopaedic Impairment Other Health Impairment Specific Learning Disability Speech or Language Impairment Traumatic Brain Injury Visual Impairment

12 WSAS by Primary Disability

13 Question #3: Which factors most contribute to the performance gap between students with and without IEPs in Wisconsin? WISEdashOther Sources Attendance RateSuspension Rate Economic DisadvantageDropout Rate Least Restrictive Environment Family Engagement Access to the General Curriculum Effectiveness of Interventions Effective Classroom Practices School Climate Other…

14 Disability and Economic Disadvantage Economic Disadvantage/SwoDNo Economic Disadvantage/SwD

15 Attendance Rate by Primary Disability

16 2012-2013 Suspension Rates

17 2012-2013 Dropout

18 Least Restrictive Environment Time-Series

19 Indicator 8 (Parent Involvement)Time-Series

20 PART 2. STUDENT-LEVEL ANALYSES

21 Question #1: What data best characterize reading achievement for a student with an IEP? – WSAS Proficiency WSAS Proficiency – Scale Score and Test Percentile Rank Scale Score and Test Percentile Rank – Growth Growth

22 WSAS Proficiency Level

23 WSAS Scale Score and Test Percentile Rank

24 WSAS Student Growth Percentile

25 Question #2: What information is needed to help this student improve from basic to proficient? WISEdashOther Sources Age/GradeFormative Assessment GenderDistrict-Wide Assessment Economic DisadvantageProgress Monitoring Tools RacePrevious Interventions and Effects ELL StatusIEP Goals Primary DisabilityStudent’s Learning Style Least Restrictive EnvironmentFunctional Behavioral Assessment Migrant StatusStudent History (e.g. trauma) Subscale Raw ScoresFamily’s Access to Resources Other…

26 Demographics

27 Subscale Raw Scores

28 PART 3. GUIDING QUESTIONS

29 Suggested Guiding Questions: WISEdash Student Profiles and Reading WISEdashOther Sources Age/GradeFormative Assessment GenderDistrict-Wide Assessment Economic DisadvantageProgress Monitoring Tools RacePrevious Interventions and Effects ELL StatusIEP Goals Primary DisabilityStudent’s Learning Style Least Restrictive EnvironmentFunctional Behavioral Assessment Migrant StatusStudent History (e.g. trauma) Subscale Raw ScoresFamily’s Access to Resources Other…

30 Economic Disadvantage Does a student’s economic disadvantage or access to resources relate to reading achievement? How does economic disadvantage effect student learning? What is the interplay of disability and economic disadvantage? What resources can the school/teacher provide to fill in access gaps related to reading achievement? Do I have preconceptions about economic disadvantage and academic achievement that effect my expectations or instruction?

31 Race Is race a factor in identification as a student with a disability? Is the curriculum taught in a culturally responsive manner? Is the student’s culture being engaged in instruction? Is the student missing instruction because of disciplinary referrals, suspension, expulsion, etc? Do I have preconceptions about race and academic achievement that effect my expectations or instruction?

32 ELL Status What is the interplay between ELL and IEP status? Is instruction culturally and linguistically responsive? Is ELL instruction aligned with the general curriculum?

33 Primary Disability Does the disability negatively effect reading achievement, and if so how? What disability specific accommodations will allow the student the same level of access to instruction in the general curriculum as students without IEPs? In addition to Special Education programming, what supplementary aids and services can enhance instruction in reading? Do I have preconceptions about disability in general, or specific categories of disability, and academic achievement? Does this effect my expectations or instruction?

34 Least Restrictive Environment If the student is not in the regular education environment full time… – To what extent are they removed? – Is removal aligned with individual students needs or school function? – Is instruction during removal aligned with the general curriculum? – Is instruction targeted and intensive? – Is the student making growth in his/her LRE or falling behind?

35 Migrant Status Does mobility effect attendance? Does mobility effect engagement, and if so how? How does mobility effect access to services, educational and otherwise? Can I access information from a student’s previous school(s) that can help me understand student need and inform instruction?

36 Subscale Raw Scores Where are the student’s strengths and weaknesses within reading? Are the strengths/weaknesses disability related and if so how? Does special education programming, aids, and services, mitigate the extent to which the disability negatively effects specific areas within reading? Are interventions targeting the area(s) of weakness within reading or the disability in general?

37 Goals To facilitate the USE of WISEdash to answer questions related to reading achievement for students with IEPs To make the case that the use of WISEdash is an important but insufficient condition for student- level improvement. To reiterate the importance of asking good questions once you have “completed” any data analysis To propose a set of guiding questions regarding the use of student level information in WISEdash

38 Thank You! If you're a scientist, and you have to have an answer, even in the absence of data, you're not going to be a good scientist. – Neil deGrasse Kenneth S. Donahue Kenneth.Donahue@dpi.wi.gov 608-266-1068


Download ppt "A Prudent Question is Half of WISEdom Using WISEdash Data Wisely to Leverage Change Kenneth S. Donahue School Administration Consultant for Data Analysis."

Similar presentations


Ads by Google