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Introduction to the Georgia Student Growth Model Understanding and Using SGPs to Improve Student Performance 1.

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Presentation on theme: "Introduction to the Georgia Student Growth Model Understanding and Using SGPs to Improve Student Performance 1."— Presentation transcript:

1 Introduction to the Georgia Student Growth Model Understanding and Using SGPs to Improve Student Performance 1

2 Why focus on student growth? A growth model will allow educators to move beyond status- based questions to ask critical growth-related questions. – Status What percentage of students met the state standard? Did more students meet the state standard this year compared to last year? – Growth Did this student grow more or less than academically-similar students? Are students growing as much in math as in reading? Are students on track to reach or exceed proficiency? The GSGM will provide student-level diagnostic information, improve teaching and learning, enhance accountability (CCRPI), and serve as one of multiple indicators of educator effectiveness (TKES and LKES). 2

3 Growth Under NCLB How many students have made it over the proficiency bar (% Meets/Exceeds)? Inferences about growth are made longitudinally across different cohorts of students 3 School2008200920102011 Acme ES80859196 Clubhouse ES75798690 Fraggle ES73757471 No growth? Fast growth, different starting points

4 What do we know about student- level growth? All information about student test performance has been collapsed into 3 criterion-referenced levels We cannot compare scale scores as the scales are not vertically scaled Leaves many important questions about progress unanswered 4 Grade45678 Marvin M. Meets DNM Olive O. Meets Donald D. Meets Exceeds

5 Understanding Percentiles 5 A distribution, for example, of height, weight, or academic growth 50% 50 th percentile The 50 th percentile is the value below which 50% of the distribution lies.

6 Student Change in Status 6 16%50% If a student goes from scoring better than 16% of all students in grade 4 to scoring better than 50% of students in grade 5, would this be evidence that growth had occurred?

7 What we miss if we focus on the proficiency bar… 7 16%50% If the red line marks the cut point for “Meets,” this is a student who was below “Meets” each year. But there is clear evidence that great progress has been made.

8 What are Student Growth Percentiles? A student growth percentile (SGP) describes a student’s growth relative to other students statewide with similar prior achievement – Calculations based solely on achievement SGPs not only show how individual students are progressing, but they also can be aggregated to show how groups of students, schools, districts, and the state are progressing 8

9 SGPs for Individual Students Each student obtains an SGP, which indicates how much he or she grew relative to his or her academic peers – Academic peers are other students statewide with a similar score history – Priors are the historical assessment scores used to model growth Growth percentiles range from 1 to 99 – Lower percentiles indicate lower academic growth and higher percentiles indicate higher academic growth Students also receive growth projections and growth targets, which describe the amount of growth needed to reach or exceed proficiency in subsequent years All students, regardless of their achievement level, have the ability to demonstrate all levels of growth 9

10 2011 SGP = 1 2010 4 th Grade Math Scale Score = 990 2011 5 th Grade Math Scale Score = 850 2011 SGP = 99 2010 4 th Grade Math Scale Score = 990 2011 5 th Grade Math Scale Score = 990 10

11 Understanding Academic Peers 11

12 Priors Priors are the historical assessment scores being used to model growth The immediate consecutive prior is required to produce growth percentiles – For example, an 8th-grade student must have a 7th-grade CRCT score in order to receive a growth percentile Two years of priors will be used (one year will be used when two years are not available) – For example, growth percentiles for an 8th-grade student would have his or her 7th- and 6th-grade CRCT scores as priors 12

13 EOCT Course Progressions For EOCTs, both prior achievement and course progressions (including year taken) must be considered. While most EOCT students will receive SGPs, those participating in uncommon sequences (small N) will not receive SGPs Most common sequences: – ELA: 8 th grade CRCT reading/ELA → 9 th Grade Lit → American Lit – Math: 7 th or 8 th grade CRCT math → Coordinate Algebra/Math I/GPS Algebra → Analytic Geometry/Math II/GPS Geometry – Science: 7 th or 8 th grade CRCT science → Physical Science/Biology → Biology/Physical Science – Social Studies: US History → Economics 13

14 Aggregating SGPs There are multiple ways of aggregating SGPs (such as for a classroom, school, or district) – Median – the median growth percentile for all students – Growth distribution – divide the growth percentile range (1-99) into intervals and report the percentage of students demonstrating growth in each interval – Percentage meeting a goal – the percentage of students demonstrating at or above a specified level of growth For example, the percentage of students demonstrating typical or high growth (SGP >= 35) 14

15 Interpreting SGPs Olive’s reading growth percentile is 54 – Olive grew at a rate greater than 54% of academically- similar students in reading 15 Lower growth Typical growth Higher growth

16 Interpreting SGPs The median reading growth percentile for Olive’s school is 65 – The typical student in Olive’s school grew at a rate greater than 65% of academically-similar students – Olive grew at a lower rate in reading compared to the other students in her school on “average” 16 Lower growth Typical growth Higher growth

17 Growth Over Time Because SGPs are normative, meaning growth percentiles describe a student’s growth relative to other students in the state in a given year, how do we compare results over time? – A baseline is used as a reference point so change in overall growth can be observed from year to year – Without using a baseline, the median SGP for the state would be 50 every year – absolute changes in a school’s growth could not be observed since the state as a whole is moving too – The baseline utilizes multiple years of data in order to allow for a more stable comparison – As of 2013, all CRCTs and all EOCTs except mathematics (Math I, Math II, GPS Algebra, GPS Geometry, Coordinate Algebra) are baseline-referenced. 17

18 Growth Over Time 18 State Median This year = 50 Next year = 50 Two years = 50 etc. Without setting a baseline… …the state median will always be 50 with half of students below 50 and half above 50

19 Growth Over Time 19 This year = 50 With setting a baseline… State Median Baseline year Next year = 55 Two years = 60 …the state median can change from year to year, representing statewide change in growth over time

20 Growth to Proficiency How do we know if a student’s growth is enough to be on track to reach or exceed proficiency? – SGPs analyze historical student assessment data to model how students perform on and grow in between assessments – This information is used to create growth projections and growth targets for each student – The growth projection tells us where on the assessment scale a student may score next year for all levels of possible growth (1 st - 99 th percentile) – The growth target tells us, based on where students are now, how much they need to grow to reach or exceed proficiency in the future 20

21 Growth Projections and Targets 21 Exceeds Meets Does Not Meet This Year Future High Typical Low “Meets” Target “Exceeds” Target

22 Transitioning To New Assessments What happens when we change assessments? – Until we have enough years of implementation, we will produce cohort-referenced SGPs and will not have targets or projections. Will SGPs go down if the standards are higher and students perform poorly on the new assessment? – No because… 22

23 Transitioning to New Assessments 23 200 600 Elmer and his academic peers 7 th Grade Math 8 th Grade Math 810825 450 400 Math I Elmer Scale Score SGP 43059 8 th Grade

24 Transitioning to New Assessments 24 200 600 Elmer and his academic peers 7 th Grade Math 8 th Grade Math 810825 450 400 Coordinate Algebra Elmer Scale Score SGP 39059 8 th Grade

25 How can we analyze SGPs? Example (real data, fake names) – Acme Middle School Only middle school in district Has 3 6 th -grade mathematics teachers – Mr. W.E. Coyote Taught 6 th grade mathematics in 2012 Taught 116 students in 5 classes 25

26 How did Mr. Coyote’s students do on the 6 th grade mathematics CRCT? 26 12 scored Does Not Meet 85 scored Meets 19 scored Exceeds 90% of students (104 of 116) met the state standard

27 But did these students grow? 27 59 demonstrated low growth 32 demonstrated typical growth 25 demonstrated high growth Not really – 50% demonstrated low growth

28 Was there a difference across Mr. Coyote’s classes? 28 Sections C and E have some students demonstrating high growth But Sections B and D have more students demonstrating low growth Section E is particularly interesting – students either grew very little or a lot

29 Was there a difference across student performance levels? 29 Why did students who started the year below standards not grow much with this teacher? Why did these students grow more than other students with the same prior performance level?

30 What about the other 6 th grade math teachers in the school? 30 Mr. Coyote – high proficiency (90%), low growth (MGP = 34) Lower proficiency (70%), better growth (MGP = 43.5) Lower proficiency (77%), lower growth (MGP = 20)

31 What about other schools/districts? 31 Even though Acme MS has a relatively high proficiency rate, other schools/districts are showing much more growth among 6 th graders in math (and also have high proficiency rates). 6 th Grade Proficiency 6 th Grade Growth

32 What if we consider where our students started? 32 When we look at where students started, Acme MS had much lower growth than most other schools/districts who started in the same place. 5 th Grade Proficiency 6 th Grade Growth

33 What about the other grades in our school? 33 6 8 7 GradePrior % Proficient Current % Proficient MGP 697%83%24.5 776%95%58 893%88%32.5 What is happening in grade 6 that is resulting in lower growth than in grades 7 and 8?

34 Resources GSGM Visualization Tool – Accessible in SLDS – Information restricted based on role GaDOE Website – http://www.gadoe.org/Curriculum-Instruction-and- Assessment/Assessment/Pages/Georgia-Student-Growth-Model.aspx http://www.gadoe.org/Curriculum-Instruction-and- Assessment/Assessment/Pages/Georgia-Student-Growth-Model.aspx New for 2013 – Student growth reports for parents – Public visualization tool (school- and district-level results only) 34

35 Questions? For questions regarding the Georgia Student Growth Model, please contact: Melissa Fincher Associate Superintendent of Assessment and Accountability mfincher@doe.k12.ga.usmfincher@doe.k12.ga.us or (404) 651-9405 Allison Timberlake Program Manager, Growth Model atimberlake@doe.k12.ga.usatimberlake@doe.k12.ga.us or (404) 463-6666 35


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