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Learning facts: the brave new world of data-informed instruction.


In just the last ten years, goaded goad  
n.
1. A long stick with a pointed end used for prodding animals.

2. An agent or means of prodding or urging; a stimulus.

tr.v.
 by broad and still unsettled cultural shifts, education practices have changed dramatically. Schools are no longer just recording and analyzing inputs--dollars spent, number of days of instruction, numbers of students per teacher--but pushing their data-gathering and analysis efforts into the brave new world Brave New World

Aldous Huxley’s grim picture of the future, where scientific and social developments have turned life into a tragic travesty. [Br. Lit.: Magill I, 79]

See : Dystopia


Brave New World
 of outcomes. Who is dropping out and why? Which students are reading at grade level, and which are not? How are 4th graders doing on fractions and decimals? Today's educators are deciphering, and using, the results of student assessments better than ever. And it is not a reform at the margins. "Nearly all states are building high-tech student data systems to collect, categorize cat·e·go·rize  
tr.v. cat·e·go·rized, cat·e·go·riz·ing, cat·e·go·riz·es
To put into a category or categories; classify.



cat
 and crunch the endless gigabytes of attendance logs, test scores and other information collected in public schools," reported the New York New York, state, United States
New York, Middle Atlantic state of the United States. It is bordered by Vermont, Massachusetts, Connecticut, and the Atlantic Ocean (E), New Jersey and Pennsylvania (S), Lakes Erie and Ontario and the Canadian province of
 Times in a front-page story last May, confirming the scope of the trend.

[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]

Hundreds of state education departments and school districts, driven in part by the No Child Left Behind (NCLB NCLB No Child Left Behind (US education initiative) ) mandate to demonstrate "adequate yearly progress Adequate Yearly Progress, or AYP, is a measurement defined by the United States federal No Child Left Behind Act that allows the U.S. Department of Education to determine how every public school and school district in the country is performing academically. ," are retooling their assessment regimens and technology systems to use outcome data to drive instructional and policymaking pol·i·cy·mak·ing or pol·i·cy-mak·ing  
n.
High-level development of policy, especially official government policy.

adj.
Of, relating to, or involving the making of high-level policy:
 decisions (see Figure 1). A study of 32 San Francisco Bay Area “Bay Area” redirects here. For other uses, see Bay Area (disambiguation).

The San Francisco Bay Area, colloquially known as the Bay Area or The Bay
 K-8 schools released in 2003 by the Bay Area School Reform Collaborative (now Springboard Schools) found that "what matters most [in closing the achievement gap] is how schools use data." In fact, those schools that had accelerated the progress of their low-performing students--who were catching up with high-performing students--were those that regularly captured data for the purpose of improving results.

What follows is a close look at three schools that have integrated data into their instructional decisionmaking. Each has concluded that the practice has helped improve student achievement. I examine a traditional public school, a district-turned-charter school run by an education management organization, and a relatively new charter school. The experiences of these schools illustrate the benefits of mining both internal assessments and standardized test A standardized test is a test administered and scored in a standard manner. The tests are designed in such a way that the "questions, conditions for administering, scoring procedures, and interpretations are consistent" [1]  results for data to guide curriculum decisions and inform classroom instruction.

Four Stars in the Lone Star Lone Star (or Lonestar) may refer to:
  • Lone Star Flag, the official flag of the State of Texas
  • The Lone Star State, an official nickname for the State of Texas; derived from the flag
 State

Evelyn S. Thompson Elementary School elementary school: see school.  is located in a Texas district that has been nationally recognized for improving student achievement over the last decade. The state's accountability measures, on which No Child Left Behind was modeled, have grown increasingly stringent. Even as the district's percentage of low-income students has risen, student achievement in the Aldine Independent School District Aldine Independent School District is a school district based in unincorporated Harris County, Texas, United States.

Aldine ISD covers a part of northern Houston as well as parts of unincorporated Harris County and a portion of the city of Humble.
 (AISD AISD Austin Independent School District (Texas)
AISD Amarillo Independent School District (Amarillo, TX)
AISD Aldine Independent School District (Houston, TX) 
)--a mid-sized urban district with 66 schools and 56,000 students on the northwest edge of Houston--has kept pace. But it wasn't always so.

In 1994, the first time the new Texas Assessment of Academic Skills The TAAS, or Texas Assessment of Academic Skills, was a standardized test used in Texas between 1991 and 2003, when it was replaced by the TAKS test. Prior to 1990, the test was known as the Texas Educational Assessment of Minimum Skills.  (TAAS n. 1. A heap. See Tas. ) tests were given to all 4th-, 8th-, and 10th-grade students, half the kids in the district failed. Until then, Aldine thought it had a decent school system; its students often received awards and scholarships and the local press wrote favorably about them. But when the district received an "academically unacceptable" label that year, it got a wake-up call as well. "Our educational philosophy had been all about self-esteem as our key goal," recalls Superintendent Nadine Kujawa, a Texas native who had worked in the district since the early 1960s and in 1994 was the deputy superintendent Deputy Superintendent, or Deputy Superintendent of Police (DSP), was a rank used by police forces of the British Empire. In some territories it was called Deputy District Superintendent of Police (DDSP).  of human resources The fancy word for "people." The human resources department within an organization, years ago known as the "personnel department," manages the administrative aspects of the employees.  and instruction.

Over the next decade Aldine undertook major structural reforms that emphasized academics and student achievement. "Now," says Kujawa, "we believe that if students are successful academically, self-esteem will take care of itself."

The key to this new emphasis on achievement was the TRIAND data-management system, developed in partnership with a local software vendor to capture, analyze, and share specific student achievement data among administrators, school leaders, teachers, and even parents. Over the last eight years, the Years, The

the seven decades of Eleanor Pargiter’s life. [Br. Lit.: Benét, 1109]

See : Time
 district has spent $32 million on the hardware systems necessary to track student demographic and performance data districtwide, and another $2 million on additional computers that allow teachers to access the system; much of this funding has come from the federal E-Rate program, which has allocated more than $10 billion toward Internet infrastructure in K-12 schools and libraries since 1996 (see "World Wide Wonder?" research, Winter 2006).

At Thompson Elementary, set in a quiet working-class neighborhood, this top-down push was welcomed by teachers like Cherie Grogan, a math teacher and self-described "data geek A technically oriented person. It has typically implied a "nerdy" or "weird" personality, someone with limited social skills who likes to tinker with scientific or high-tech projects. The origin of the term dates back to the late 1800s. ." For years Grogan has been creating forms in Microsoft Excel (tool) Microsoft Excel - A spreadsheet program from Microsoft, part of their Microsoft Office suite of productivity tools for Microsoft Windows and Macintosh. Excel is probably the most widely used spreadsheet in the world.

Latest version: Excel 97, as of 1997-01-14.
 to help teachers better understand their students' annual test results. She is one of the school's "skills specialists," four experienced teachers who support classroom teachers in specific subjects, including math, reading, writing, science, and bilingual education bilingual education, the sanctioned use of more than one language in U.S. education. The Bilingual Education Act (1968), combined with a Supreme Court decision (1974) mandating help for students with limited English proficiency, requires instruction in the native . In addition to modeling lessons for teachers and working with small groups of students, the skills specialists also regularly analyze student scores on diagnostic, formative, and standardized tests across classrooms, subjects, and grades. It is a responsibility they have always held and that has consumed an increasing amount of their time over the last decade as the district continues to emphasize the regular use of student assessment results to guide instruction.

This support begins even before the school year does: the week before students arrived last year, Thompson's skills specialists sat down with teachers to review the prior year's test scores (known as the Texas Assessment of Knowledge and Skills, or TAKS TAKS Texas Assessment of Knowledge and Skills (statewide student assessment as of Spring 2003) , the successor to TAAS) for 3rd and 4th grades (the only grades currently tested at Thompson) in order to identify gaps in skills and knowledge, and to develop preliminary plans for addressing those problems throughout the year.

Once the school year begins there are weekly meetings between the school's principal, Sara McClain, and the skills specialists to review data and plot strategies for supporting those students and teachers who need help. For example, when reviewing reading scores across the 4th grade, they found that many of the students were struggling with the concept of summarization. In the following weeks, two of the skills specialists with experience in teaching reading went into the 4th-grade classrooms to model additional lessons on summarization and worked separately with small groups of students who still weren't grasping the skill.

In addition to TAKS scores, the data gathered at Thompson Elementary come from diagnostic tests like the Texas Primary Reading Inventory Texas Primary Reading Inventory Neurology An abbreviated test for dyslexia developed at the U Tex-Houston. See Dyslexia. , which is designed to measure students' skill levels and needs. As soon as scores from these beginning-of-year diagnostic assessments are available (usually in mid-September), the skills specialists sit down with McClain and a stack of printouts from TRIAND in one of their weekly meetings and assess which of their "kiddos" are struggling to read at grade level. As they flip through the spreadsheets, the skills specialists flag the students having trouble and bring the numbers to life with anecdotes about those students' work in the classroom. McClain encourages the specialists to follow up with each teacher to share the data and ensure that teachers have created small reading groups based on learning needs, as well as lunchtime or afterschool af·ter·school  
adj. often after-school
1. Taking place immediately following school classes: afterschool activities.

2.
 tutoring for those students still reading at low levels.

Like other schools in Aldine, Thompson Elementary also regularly administers its own tests to measure whether students are mastering the district's standards as well as the school's benchmarks. And although grading, analyzing, and discussing interim assessments takes an estimated three to four hours per month, even veteran teachers seem to consider the new responsibilities a help to their teaching, rather than a hindrance hin·drance  
n.
1.
a. The act of hindering.

b. The condition of being hindered.

2. One that hinders; an impediment. See Synonyms at obstacle.
. "It's great to see where kids are performing, where my gaps are, and what I need to do," says Debra Bingham, a 16-year veteran teacher who now specializes in 3rd-grade reading.

Sara McClain, who has been principal at Thompson for eight years, says that despite some teacher turnover in the early years, as the district's instructional reforms took hold the remaining teachers came to embrace the new, more rigorous approach. "Teachers tend to come in early and stay late," she notes. They see the use of data "not as additional but as a part of instruction, their professional responsibility, and their high expectations."

The increased attention to the data seems to have paid off. Between 1994 and 2002, the percentage of Thompson students passing the state's math assessment rose from 65 to 98 percent. And even with the more rigorous state standards, the school has maintained a passing rate in the 90s since then. Principal McClain attributes this to a consistent, constant, schoolwide focus on student results. "Previously we were very scattered," she says. "We needed to increase expectations and get everyone going in the same direction around student achievement."

A Better View in Chula Vista Chula Vista (ch`lə), city (1990 pop. 135,163), San Diego co., S Calif., on San Diego Bay; inc. 1911.

Fed up with years of dismal performance from its 1,100 K-6 students (four out of five of them poor), in 1997 administrators at Mae L. Feaster Elementary School in Chula Vista, California “Chula Vista” redirects here. For the area in Florida, see Chula Vista, Florida.
Chula Vista is a city in southern San Diego County, California, United States.
, just south of San Diego San Diego (săn dēā`gō), city (1990 pop. 1,110,549), seat of San Diego co., S Calif., on San Diego Bay; inc. 1850. San Diego includes the unincorporated communities of La Jolla and Spring Valley. Coronado is across the bay. , decided to partner with members of the community and convert the school into a charter school. They gave management of the rambling rambling Neurology Fragmented non-goal directed speech most often caused by acute organic brain disease. See Organic brain disease, Word salad.  block of "portable" and permanent buildings to Edison Schools Edison Schools Inc. is a for-profit company that manages public schools in the United States and the United Kingdom. It was founded in 1992. History
Edison Schools was widely hailed at the beginning of the 21st century as the leader in what "school reformers" saw as the
.

Over the next eight years the reborn re·born  
adj.
Emotionally or spiritually revived or regenerated.


reborn
Adjective

active again after a period of inactivity

Adj. 1.
 Feaster-Edison Charter School showed a steady improvement in student achievement, increasing average scores on the Stanford Achievement Test (or SAT-9) from the 19th to the 34th national percentile percentile,
n the number in a frequency distribution below which a certain percentage of fees will fall. E.g., the ninetieth percentile is the number that divides the distribution of fees into the lower 90% and the upper 10%, or that fee level
 between 1998 and 2001 and from 17 percent to 32 percent proficient on English language-arts tests between 2001 and 2005.

A large part of the secret to Feaster-Edison's success, say the school's teachers and administrators, is its use of data. Feaster-Edison relies heavily on both standardized test scores and Edison's own benchmark assessments to inform and adjust instruction throughout the year. Before school starts each year, all the school's teachers are taught how to work with data as part of a weeklong "teacher academy." Also before the school year begins, teachers review student assessment results from the prior spring, both by student and by "strand" (groups of standards), on the California Standards Test, the state's annual standardized test for grades 2 through 11. The analysis is both retrospective, identifying instructional strengths and weaknesses, and prospective. Test scores are reorganized re·or·gan·ize  
v. re·or·gan·ized, re·or·gan·iz·ing, re·or·gan·iz·es

v.tr.
To organize again or anew.

v.intr.
To undergo or effect changes in organization.
 according to according to
prep.
1. As stated or indicated by; on the authority of: according to historians.

2. In keeping with: according to instructions.

3.
 new classroom assignments so that teachers can use those data in preparing for the year ahead.

Reviewing student performance on the prior year's standardized tests can also highlight critical schoolwide issues. "Data start the conversation," says Principal Erik Latoni, who noted that one priority was to improve English-language development among all students, a decision prompted by data showing lack of improvement, or in some cases a decline, in students' English language English language, member of the West Germanic group of the Germanic subfamily of the Indo-European family of languages (see Germanic languages). Spoken by about 470 million people throughout the world, English is the official language of about 45 nations.  skills. Latoni and his teachers decided that all lead teachers would attend two training programs that year to help them supplement student reading and writing skills with listening and speaking skills. He also asked lead teachers to discuss tactics for addressing the problem with other teachers in their upcoming "house meetings," daily gatherings in which all teachers within each grade level (or "house") gather in an empty classroom to discuss curriculum, instruction, and administrative matters. As a result of those meetings, for instance, 3rd-grade teachers created a writing rubric RUBRIC, civil law. The title or inscription of any law or statute, because the copyists formerly drew and painted the title of laws and statutes rubro colore, in red letters. Ayl. Pand. B. 1, t. 8; Diet. do Juris. h.t.  to regularly assess students' English-language skills and ensure that they are continuing to make progress.

These house meetings are also where teachers collaborate to analyze their students' results on Edison's monthly benchmark assessments. Edison uses state standardized assessments to create these tests; each month, students are tested on a sampling of the standards they will be expected to master by the end of the year. At Feaster-Edison, benchmark assessments are administered on laptop computers wheeled into each classroom on a cart and connected wirelessly to Feaster-Edison's main system, making results available immediately to teachers and administrators. Before meeting with others in their grade, teachers are expected to examine their students' results and fill out a benchmark analysis form, provided by Edison, which asks what standards are not yet mastered, which students are not proficient in those areas, and what teachers plan to do about it. "You have to give teachers time to analyze data, and link the conclusions back to instruction, so that [using data] isn't just an activity. There should be a change in instruction," says Francisco Escobedo, the school's former principal and now a vice president of achievement for Edison.

[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]

In grade-level meetings, teachers compare data across the grade, looking for Looking for

In the context of general equities, this describing a buy interest in which a dealer is asked to offer stock, often involving a capital commitment. Antithesis of in touch with.
 patterns and opportunities to borrow strategies from one another. The steps they take next vary according to teacher and grade. Fifth-grade lead teacher Joshua White looks at student performance on each "strand" of standards in reading, writing, and math, both within his own class and across the grade. He then takes a highlighter high·light·er  
n.
1. A usually fluorescent marker used to mark important passages of text.

2. A cosmetic for emphasizing areas of the face, such as the eyes or cheekbones.
 to the printout (PRINTer OUTput) Same as hard copy.  of results, marking strands on which a majority of the class struggled. In addition to covering the material again and making sure students understand the vocabulary used in those questions, he will often put some of the test items up on an overhead transparency and walk students through techniques for answering them.

Teachers also work together to determine how to cover standards that were missed the first time. For example, in the 3rd grade, all of the teachers use the same math curriculum at the same pace, so they are able to coordinate their reteaching where necessary. At the January benchmark assessment, data showed that many 3rd-grade students missed the test's two questions on statistics, so 3rd-grade teachers created new lessons on the subject and added them to the February calendar.

Such regular use of student achievement data at Feaster-Edison--and at all Edison schools, since the company's national office is also reviewing the data--reinforces the sense of accountability for student performance that is shared by teachers, principals, and Edison itself. "You have to see data as helping you be accountable for something that's really important to you," says John Chubb, chief academic officer of Edison Schools. "We are responsible for student achievement outcomes and scores. We are literally hired and fired on that basis."

Pioneering on the East Coast

Elm City College Preparatory School preparatory school: see school.
preparatory school

School that prepares students for entrance to a higher school. In Europe, where secondary education has been selective, preparatory schools have been those that catered to pupils wishing to enter
 is located near New Haven's Wooster Square Wooster Square is a neighborhood in the city of New Haven, Connecticut to the east of downtown. The name refers to a park square (named for the American Revolutionary War hero, David Wooster) located between Greene Street, Wooster Place, Chapel Street and Academy Street in the , an Italian neighborhood just a stone's throw stone's throw
n.
A short distance.


stone's throw
Noun

a short distance

Noun 1.
 from Yale University Yale University, at New Haven, Conn.; coeducational. Chartered as a collegiate school for men in 1701 largely as a result of the efforts of James Pierpont, it opened at Killingworth (now Clinton) in 1702, moved (1707) to Saybrook (now Old Saybrook), and in 1716 was . The charter school opened its doors in the fall of 2004, with an elementary and a middle school crammed cram  
v. crammed, cram·ming, crams

v.tr.
1. To force, press, or squeeze into an insufficient space; stuff.

2. To fill too tightly.

3.
a. To gorge with food.
 into a small building that had housed a Catholic school. The school is part of Achievement First, a nonprofit charter school management system founded in 2003 by two University of North Carolina North Carolina, state in the SE United States. It is bordered by the Atlantic Ocean (E), South Carolina and Georgia (S), Tennessee (W), and Virginia (N). Facts and Figures


Area, 52,586 sq mi (136,198 sq km). Pop.
 graduates (Class of 1994), Doug McCurry and Dacia Toll. McCurry and Toll wanted to replicate the success of Amistad Academy, a high-performing charter middle school they opened in New Haven New Haven, city (1990 pop. 130,474), New Haven co., S Conn., a port of entry where the Quinnipiac and other small rivers enter Long Island Sound; inc. 1784. Firearms and ammunition, clocks and watches, tools, rubber and paper products, and textiles are among the many  in 1999. Achievement First now runs 10 schools, serving nearly 1,700 students; five are in New Haven and five in New York City New York City: see New York, city.
New York City

City (pop., 2000: 8,008,278), southeastern New York, at the mouth of the Hudson River. The largest city in the U.S.
.

It was at Amistad that cofounder co·found  
tr.v. co·found·ed, co·found·ing, co·founds
To establish or found in concert with another or others.



co·found
 McCurry, who was also a teacher at the school, began to develop interim assessments to track his students' progress in math over the course of the year. "As a charter school, we were accountable for results, but there was confusion about whether we were getting there," says McCurry. Using the Connecticut state standards and previously released test items from the state's standardized test, the Connecticut Mastery Test The Connecticut Mastery Test, or CMT, is a standardized test administered to students in Connecticut in grades 3 through 8. The CMT tests students in mathematics, reading, writing, and science (science will be administered for the first time in March 2008). , McCurry worked backward to develop a scope and sequence for the curriculum, as well as cumulative assessments that would be administered every six weeks.

Today, teachers at all Achievement First schools use a consistent scope and sequence of instruction, and progress is measured using interim assessments, modeled on the ones McCurry developed, to inform ongoing instruction in reading, writing, and math. Principals and Achievement First staff look at these and other student data to make initial plans, allocate resources, and make instructional decisions throughout the year. As with many other successful data-driven schools, at Elm City the work begins before school starts, when teachers and principals--both Dale Chu, who heads up the elementary grades, and Marc Michaelson, who oversees the middle school--use a variety of diagnostic tests to understand the ability and achievement levels of their incoming students.

So far, the Connecticut Mastery Test has been of limited use to Elm City because scores arrive after the school year is in full swing. Though the test is being revamped, Elm City is not convinced that standardized tests will ever add much value at the classroom level.

"Our number-one data point for driving instruction is the interim assessment," says middle-school principal Michaelson. These assessments are given manually, with paper and pencil, mirroring the testing conditions in which students take the state test, and hand-scored by teachers. Teachers analyze their own class results by completing a "reflection form," similar to Edison's benchmark analysis form, that requires them to list the questions and standards that were not mastered, the names of students who missed each question, and how they plan to work with those students to address those areas. The cost of these interim assessments to Achievement First is not insignificant: McCurry estimates that each one costs $500 to $1,250 to develop. With 12 separate assessments needed for each grade--6 for math and 6 for reading--and sometimes additional tests in subjects such as writing and grammar, the school could easily spend $20,000 for a single grade's tests; fortunately, each assessment can be used in all Achievement First schools in a given state.

Administering, grading, and analyzing these assessments is also time-consuming, especially as the cumulative assessments get longer over the course of the year, covering all material taught to date. Michaelson estimates that the process of administering the test to a class, hand-grading each one, analyzing the class results, and discussing them with him takes each teacher anywhere from three hours for the reading assessment in the early part of the year to seven hours for math near the end of the year. For teachers, though, the value of this regular, specific data analysis seems to outweigh the hassle. "I am okay with the time it takes to grade and analyze the data because it's ultimately for my kids' benefit and mine as a teacher," says Seisha Keith, who teaches 6th-grade reading and writing.

Elm City has now created a data-collection culture that affects all aspects of the school, including how teachers are recruited, prepared, and supported. "Teachers have to be data-driven to get in the door," says Michaelson, who looks for evidence that prospective teachers have a quantifiable history of student achievement gains and are able to provide thoughtful explanations of how they have helped students improve. All new Achievement First teachers receive training on how to use interim assessments, while all new principals learn about how to analyze assessment results and have effective one-on-one conversations with teachers about the data.

The evidence so far suggests that Elm City is working for students. In its first year, 2004-05, the percentage of kindergarten and 1st-grade students reading at or above grade level increased from 26 to 96 percent; in the same period, the percentage of 5th graders reading at or above grade level increased from 18 to 55 percent. What's more, if the experience of Amistad Academy is any indication of Achievement First's potential here, then Elm City's improvement is likely to continue. Students in the class of 2004 at Amistad Academy went from 38 percent mastery in reading in 6th grade to 81 percent mastery in 8th grade. Their peers in New Haven public schools during this same period climbed slightly, from 25 percent mastery in 6th grade to 31 percent mastery in 8th grade. In math, Amistad students went from 35 percent mastery in 6th grade to 76 percent mastery in 8th grade, while their New Haven peers' performance declined from 24 percent mastery in 6th grade to only 19 percent mastery in 8th grade.

Lessons Learned

As the experiences of these three schools make clear, the use of data can help teachers and leaders stay focused on student achievement. These schools have all managed to achieve impressive results by using data on student performance in subjects like reading, math, and science, and yet all still manage to deliver a well-rounded curriculum that includes art, music, and physical education. They also discovered that not all data are the same, that data collection and analysis are only tools, and that the tools must be properly used to be effective.

Results from annual standardized tests can be useful for accountability purposes, but student progress must be measured on a far more frequent basis if the data are being used to inform instruction and improve achievement. To be useful in this way, interim assessments must be tied to clear standards. Another lesson is that ample time must be taken to analyze the implications of student assessment results, to plan for how instruction should be modified accordingly, and to act on those conclusions; otherwise, the data become more information that gathers dust on the shelf. Data should launch a conversation about what's working, what's not, and what will be done differently as a result. Administrators and principals must make explicit the time commitment necessary for capturing, analyzing, and acting on data, and support the work by scheduling time and allocating resources for it. In Aldine, district officials are looking at ways to build time for reteaching into the school year, based on feedback from teachers.

The results shown by these schools, however preliminary, were not achieved overnight. They are the product of steady and open analysis of student and school performance over many years. All of these schools have become collaborative, transparent communities in which information is shared freely and regularly as a means of focusing the entire school on improving instruction and increasing student achievement Increasing Student Achievement: What State NAEP Test Scores Tell Us is a RAND study of educational reform in the United States. The League of Education Voters cites the study in support of its Initiative 728, which advocates reducing class size and increasing per-pupil . Some, like Aldine and Feaster-Edison, have found that some teachers embrace these practices readily and that those who do not choose to work in other schools. Elm City, meanwhile, recruits teachers who are comfortable using data, so they are committed to this approach from the beginning.

Despite the progress made by these and other schools, there are still barriers to more widespread adoption of these practices. For example, the time and effort that teachers and administrators must spend on manual processes should be addressed by more streamlined technology systems. Technology could make a powerful difference by administering tests, automating their grading, and displaying data--to district leaders, principals, teachers, and students--in a timely way that makes strengths and weaknesses clear and next steps more obvious. The right data, provided at the right time and in the right way, can be a powerful driver for school improvement.

Julie Landry Petersen is communications manager at NewSchools Venture Fund The NewSchools Venture Fund is a non-profit venture philanthopy fund that invests in educational entrepeneurship projects at the K-12 levels in United States public schools. , a nonprofit venture philanthropy Venture philanthropy takes concepts and techniques from Venture Capital finance and high technology business management and applies them to achieving philanthropic goals.

Venture philanthropy is characterized by:
  • willingness to experiment and try new approaches
 firm based in San Francisco, California “San Francisco” redirects here. For other uses, see San Francisco (disambiguation).

The City and County of San Francisco (EN IPA: [sænfrənˈsɪskoʊ] 
.

RELATED ARTICLE

Evelyn S. Thompson Elementary School

District: Aldine

Location: Houston, Texas “Houston” redirects here. For other uses, see Houston (disambiguation).
Houston (pronounced /'hjuːstən/) is the largest city in the state of Texas and the


Grades: K-4

Enrollment: 635

Demographics (2004-05): 87% free or reduced-price lunch, 17% African American African American Multiculture A person having origins in any of the black racial groups of Africa. See Race. , 79% Hispanic, 63% Limited English Proficient

Performance: In the 2004-05 school year, 92% of 3rd and 4th graders met state standards in reading (up from 74% in 1994), and 94% met state standards in math (up from 65% in 1994).

Words to Teach By: "Data tell you where you are and what's going on What's Going On is a record by American soul singer Marvin Gaye. Released on May 21, 1971 (see 1971 in music), What's Going On reflected the beginning of a new trend in soul music. . The key is whether or not you use it to make changes." (Superintendent Nadine Kujawa)

[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]

Mae L. Feaster-Edison Charter School

Location: Chula Vista, California

Grades: K-6

Enrollment: 1,134

Demographics (2004-05): 81% free or reduced-price lunch, 6% African American, 83% Hispanic, 53% English-language learners, 10% special education

Performance: For the 2004-05 school year, 32% of students in 2nd through 6th grades were proficient or above in language arts language arts
pl.n.
The subjects, including reading, spelling, and composition, aimed at developing reading and writing skills, usually taught in elementary and secondary school.
 (compared with 17% in 2002), and 53% were proficient or above in math (compared with 23% in 2002).

Words to Teach By: "We don't want teachers to work harder, just smarter." (Principal Erik Latoni)

[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]

Elm City College Preparatory School

Location: New Haven, Connecticut

Grades: K-2, 5-6 in 2005-06 (with plans to add grades 3, 4, 7 and 8)

Enrollment: Elementary-150; Middle-100

Demographics (2004-05): Elementary: 77% free or reduced-price lunch, 67% African American, 32% Hispanic, 8% special education; Middle: 74% free or reduced-price lunch, 82% African American, 18% Hispanic, 3% special education

Performance: Over the course of the 2004-05 school year, kindergarten and 1st-grade students reading at or above grade level increased from 26 to 96 percent; in the same period, 5th graders reading at or above grade level increased from 18 to 55 percent.

Words to Teach By: "Student achievement is the shining star; don't just 'report' student achievement data-use it, interpret it, analyze it." (Achievement First training manual for new principals)

[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]
Building the Database (Figure 1)

State departments of education, local districts, and schools have
increased spending on software, data systems, and technology services in
recent years.

Note: Includes sales of instructional and administrative software and
system integration services.
SOURCE: Eduventures
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Title Annotation:feature
Author:Petersen, Julie Landry
Publication:Education Next
Date:Jan 1, 2007
Words:4090
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