WHY USE A STUDENT SURVEY? The survey is a unique form of actionable feedback that districts, schools...
Transcript of WHY USE A STUDENT SURVEY? The survey is a unique form of actionable feedback that districts, schools...
WHY USE A STUDENT SURVEY?
• The survey is a unique form of actionable feedback that districts, schools and teachers can use to inform practice.
• Students are in a unique position to contribute to a comprehensive view of classroom practice because they experience it more than anyone else in the education system.
• Student perception data can offer a big-picture view of what is happening in classrooms as well as school- and district-wide trends.
Building a Robust Student Perception Survey
WHAT THE RESEARCH SAYS…
• The Measures of Effective Teaching (MET) Project had two significant findings around student perception surveys:
– When student surveys are combined with observation and student growth data, these three measures tell us more and are able to predict future effectiveness better than any of them alone.
– Student perception survey results are correlated to student achievement gains.
• The use of student feedback has also been shown to promote both reflection and responsibility on the part of the students. For more information, see our Research overview.
Building a Robust Student Perception Survey
Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation (2012). Asking students about teaching: Student perception surveys and their implementation. (MET Project Policy and Practice Brief). Wiggins, G. (2011). Giving students a voice: The power of feedback to improve teaching. Education Horizons, 89(3), 23-26.
• Free and publically available • 34-item survey about student learning experiences,
mapped to the Colorado Teacher Quality Standards• Two versions of the survey, grades 3-5 and 6-12• Developed by the Colorado Education Initiative
Building a Robust Student Perception Survey
COLORADO’S STUDENT PERCEPTION SURVEY
Link to the Full Technical Report
WHAT DOES THE SURVEY MEASURE?
• Survey does measure elements of student experience that have been demonstrated to correlate most closely to student growth.
• Survey does not measure whether or how much a student likes or dislikes a teacher.
Building a Robust Student Perception Survey
WHAT DOES THE SURVEY MEASURE?
Building a Robust Student Perception Survey
Student LearningHow teachers use content and pedagogical knowledge to help students learn, understand, and
improve.
Student-Centered Environment How teachers create an
environment that responds to individual students’ backgrounds,
strengths, and interests.
Classroom Community How teachers cultivate a
classroom learning community where student differences are
valued.
Classroom Management How teachers foster a respectful
and predictable learning environment.
See the full surveys for grades 3-5 and 6-12
Process/Survey Development Task TimelineConstruct definition & Item Development April – May 2012
Item/Construct Review, including district/expert/teacher feedback May 2012
Psychometric Field Test – Establish baseline psychometric properties and refine instrument as needed before Use Pilot
June 2012
Think-Alouds/Cognitive Interviews August 2012
Fall Use Pilot – Administer the survey to integration and pilot districts November 2012
Fall Pilot Analyses – Analyzed data to inform 2nd round of instrument revisions Nov – March 2013
Teacher feedback survey – Administered to 12 of the participating districts January 2013
Teacher focus groups (Round 1) – Convened to discuss the instruments and recommended changes and preferences for reporting formats
March 2013
Analyze & Finalize Results – Prepare reports and guidance documents regarding analysis/use of survey data with help of teacher focus groups
Dec – April 2012
Spring Validation Pilot Administration April – May 2013
Teacher focus groups (Round 2 & 3) – Convened to discuss pilot process, lessons learned, and future communication materials
June & August 2013
Prep & Release Full Toolkit – free and publically-available toolkit May – August 2013
SURVEY DESIGN & DEVELOPMENT
Student Feedback
• Students participated in “think-alouds” where they talked through their responses to each question.
• Students responded thoughtfully.– In my class, we learn things that matter to me: “She
made the people who speak Spanish feel more important because we participated… we could teach about our culture. [It] taught us to trust in ourselves.”
– My teacher knows when we understand the lesson and when we do not: “I say most of the time… one of my friends didn’t understand and when she asked if we all understood, he didn’t say anything [and she didn’t know and kept on going]”
Building a Robust Student Perception Survey
Teacher Feedback
• Over 1400 teachers provided input during the survey development process. – Focus groups, survey pre-piloting, online feedback forums
• We took feedback about the instrument very seriously.– Items were changed or eliminated for specific reasons. For
example between the fall and spring administration:• The item “I get bored in this class” was removed
because many teachers found it troubling. • “Schoolwork in this class is too easy” was
removed because it was not related to students’ responses on other items.
Building a Robust Student Perception Survey
Revisions to the Colorado SPS
• Removed all negatively-stated items– The fall 2012 instrument included a handful of
negatively-worded items– All were removed from the final SPS instrument.
• Redefined organizing elements (four mapped to TQS)
• Included open-ended question
Building a Robust Student Perception Survey
SPS RESULTS & EVALUATION RATINGS
Classroom Community Classroom Management
Student-Centered Environment Student Learning
SPS RESULTS & EVALUATION RATINGS
OPEN-ENDED RESULTS
• Analyzed 14,539 open-ended responses (3-5 and 6-12)• We find that not only were the majority of students taking
the survey seriously, but that many of the responses were specific and actionable in nature– 98.6% (N=14,341) were considered substantive – 66.3% (N=9,646) were coded as actionable – Moreover, although some subjects and grades were slightly
more likely to garner actionable feedback, in general actionable responses came from students in all grades and subjects
Building a Robust Student Perception Survey
WHAT STUDENTS ARE SAYING
Building a Robust Student Perception Survey
Link to Report on Open-Ended Results
GUIDING PRINCIPLES FOR ADMINISTRATION
• We know that teachers care about their practice and especially about their students. – They also may experience nervousness and anxiety about the
surveys, and district and school leaders must address those fears.
• By itself, a reliable and valid instrument does not ensure that teachers will receive good feedback.
• Messaging matters! – Engage stakeholders early and often.– Make the process as transparent as possible.
• Give stakeholders real decision-making power.
Building a Robust Student Perception Survey
HOW TO USE SURVEY RESULTS
• Considerations– “Hold-harmless” pilot year– Sharing teacher-level results
• Use of results– As a formative tool
• Reflect on individual practice• Identify over-arching trends and create strategies to address them.
– As a part of an evaluation • Used as an artifact for determining ratings for professional practices• Included as one of several multiple measures
Building a Robust Student Perception Survey
Amy Farley, Director, Research & [email protected]; 720-502-4723
Questions?Elaine Allensworth, Consortium on Chicago School [email protected]
Amy Farley, Colorado Legacy [email protected]
Kendra Wilhelm, Denver Public [email protected]
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