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Standards-based Teacher Evaluation: What Have We Learned?

Standards-based Teacher Evaluation: What Have We Learned?. Steven Kimball, Tony Milanowski & Herb Heneman Consortium for Policy Research in Education Wisconsin Center for Education Research University of Wisconsin-Madison. Why Study Teacher Evaluation?.

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Standards-based Teacher Evaluation: What Have We Learned?

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  1. Standards-based Teacher Evaluation: What Have We Learned? Steven Kimball, Tony Milanowski & Herb Heneman Consortium for Policy Research in Education Wisconsin Center for Education Research University of Wisconsin-Madison

  2. Why Study Teacher Evaluation? • Traditional teacher evaluation weak on accountability and instructional improvement: • Narrow conceptions of teaching • Undifferentiated criteria, i.e., satisfactory/unsatisfactory • Limited evidence, e.g., single class observation • One-way communication in evaluation • Variability/inconsistency

  3. Why Study Teacher Evaluation? • “To this day, almost all educational personnel decisions are based on judgments which, according to the research, are only slightly more accurate than they would be if they were based on pure chance.” (Medley & Coker, 1987, p.243) • Classroom-based teacher evaluation increasingly a part of new compensation reforms (e.g., Denver ProComp; Teacher Incentive Fund program)

  4. Performance Evaluation A Key Part of Knowledge & Skill-based Pay • Base pay increase or bonus (typically $300 - $3,000) for competency demonstration • skill blocks – technology, student assessment, curriculum unit design, etc. • portfolio completion • dual certification • graduate degree in subject taught • Base pay increase or bonus for NBPTS certification ($1,000 - $15,000) • Base pay increase or bonus for classroom performance mastery (typically $1,000 - $3,000), as measured by standards-based teacher evaluation • May involve changes to single salary schedule • fewer steps • fewer or redefined lanes • performance-linked career ladder progression

  5. Why Standards-based Teacher Evaluation? • Standards for teaching and related performance- based assessments exist for NBPTS, PRAXIS III, Connecticut BEST program, Danielson Framework • Is it better than typical evaluation methods? • Can it serve as a foundation for knowledge- and skills-based pay?

  6. What is Standards-based Teacher Evaluation? • Developed from effective teaching literature and newer conceptions of teaching and learning (e.g., pedagogical content knowledge) • Comprehensive • Clear expectations with performance differentiation • Typically reflection and growth oriented • Multiple sources of evidence

  7. Framework for Teaching (Danielson, 1996) • 4 Domains, 22 components, 66 elements • Domains: Planning and Preparation, Classroom Environment, Instruction, Professional Responsibilities • Components from Instruction Domain: • Communicating clearly and accurately • Using question & discussion techniques • Engaging students in learning • Providing feedback to students • Flexibility & responsiveness

  8. Example from Instruction Domain, Communicating Clearly and Accurately Component

  9. Let’s Try It! • Using rubric to evaluate practice

  10. CPRE Research Standards-based Teacher Evaluation • Primary Sites: • Cincinnati Public Schools • Vaughn Next Century Learning Center (LA charter school) • Washoe County (NV) School District • Secondary : Anoka-Hennepin & La Crescent, MN; Coventry, RI; Newport News, VA • Each site adopted standards-based teacher performance evaluation systems based largely or in part on Framework for Teaching (Danielson, 1996)

  11. Vaughn’s Standards • Instructional Planning & Classroom Management comparable to Framework • 3-10 Content-specific Dimensions (Departs from Framework) • Literacy • Language development • Mathematics • Special Education, Science, Social Studies, Arts, Technology, Physical Education, Teaming

  12. Vaughn’s Standards, cont. • Elements of Literacy: • Teaches phonemic awareness & systematic explicit phonics • Develops spelling skills • Strengthens grade-level vocabulary development • Guides students through the reading process • Focus on comprehension skills, aiming at higher-order thinking skills • Guides students through the writing process • Integrates literature • Uses appropriate materials & teaching strategies • Implements appropriate student activities

  13. Evaluation Procedures - Cincinnati • Experienced Teachers • Peer ‘Teacher Evaluator’ makes 4, administrator 2 observations, Teacher Evaluator rates on management & instruction using 4 level rubric • Administrator uses portfolio to rate planning & professionalism using 4 level rubric • First Year Teachers, Struggling Teachers • Peer ‘Consulting Teacher’ makes 6 observations to rate on management & instruction, uses portfolio to rate on planning & professionalism

  14. Vaughn • Teacher, peer, and administrator rate twice per year based on varied # of observations during a fixed period, using 4 level rubric • Washoe • Administrator rates using 4 level rubric closely modeled on Framework. Evidence drawn from 1-6 formal classroom observations, ‘walk-thru’s’, artifacts and discussions with teachers Evaluation Procedures

  15. ‘Theory of Action’ Linking SBTE to Student Learning Shared Conception of Good Teaching • KSBP System • Model of Quality • Teaching • Assessment Process • Feedback • -PD Opportunities • Incentives Teaching According to the Model Teacher Skill Development Attraction & Retention Student Learning Other Causes

  16. Key Links We Focused On • Is teaching according to the model associated with higher levels of student learning? • What are the impacts of assessing teacher skills on the postulated mediating factors of teacher quality? • Shared conception of teaching • Skill development • Attraction/retention

  17. Multilevel random intercept models with controls for prior year achievement and various student characteristics ( e.g., free/reduced lunch) at Level 1 • Two versions at Level 2: 1. no predictors of classroom intercepts  EB intercept residuals obtained and correlated with evaluation scores for evaluated teachers 2. evaluation score as predictor of classroom intercepts  calculate effect of change in evaluation score on student test scores (in S.D. units) Statistical Methods

  18. Evaluation Score – Student Achievement Correlations*

  19. Effect of Change in 1 TE Level on Achievement on Test Scores*

  20. Reliability/Inter-rater Agreement • Cincinnati: • 60% to 80% absolute agreement at domain level; higher for classroom mgmt, lower in new teacher samples • Estimated reliability of 6 classroom observations over the year: .73-.89 at domain level; lower for new teachers • Vaughn: • self,peer, administrator agreement .74-.86 (Coef. Alpha for 5 common domains) • “Cross-semester” domain score correlations: .74-.93

  21. Decision-Making Studies • Evaluator Interviews & Review of Evaluation Reports (Cincinnati, Washoe) • Cincinnati: well-defined rating process & close adherence to it; outside evaluators reduce leniency • Vaughn: less structure, more ‘gut’; strong culture and agreement on instruction counteract leniency • Washoe: more variation in process; more rigor for new teachers, leniency for tenured teachers

  22. Is Experience Better at Predicting Student Achievement? • Correlation of student achievement with experience lower than with evaluation score and varies by site: • Cincinnati: -.20 to .15 • Vaughn: .00 to .32 • Washoe: .07 to .16 • Student achievement tends to rise with experience over first 3-5 years, then levels off

  23. Relationship of Experience to Student Achievement, Washoe County 03-04

  24. Impact – Shared Conception • Cincinnati – helped make district expectations clear, especially to new teachers; reinforced emphasis on student standards. • Vaughn – reinforcement & reflection of Vaughn culture (“little school that could”) • Washoe – limited impact, competition with other initiatives and school priorities

  25. Impact – Attraction & Retention • Cincinnati: • Initial implementation appears to have encouraged senior teachers with concerns about skill evaluation to retire • Rigorous process may encourage turnover of new teachers • Vaughn • Strong communication of Vaughn expectations discourages low efficacy teachers from joining and lower performers from staying • Washoe • No impact on recruitment • Marginal improvement in weeding out marginal teachers

  26. Impact – Skill Improvement • Commonalities: • Impact wide but not deep • Promotes reflection • Classroom management, planning • Attention to student academic standards • ‘Tips’, materials, solutions to specific problems • While evaluation process affects teacher practice, to maximize impact, systematic feedback, coaching, & aligned professional development are needed

  27. Impact – Skill Improvement • Cincinnati: • Initially encouraged participation in study groups • Minimal impact on experienced teachers • Vaughn • Influences development of new & junior teachers • Washoe • Varies widely depending on principal & teacher • Developmental potential limited by leniency

  28. Other Findings about KSBP & Evaluation • Classroom-level value-added jumps around from year to year • At Vaughn, by the end of year 3 there was minimal between-classroom variation in student test scores • Teachers accepted the teaching standards used to evaluate performance, but had mixed reactions on the fairness and validity of evaluation ratings

  29. Other Findings, cont. • Administrators accept the teaching standards, reported increased workload in implementing new system, & had difficulties providing feedback • Implementation glitches were frustrating to teachers and administrators in systems with high stakes • Lack of alignment of human resource systems (recruitment, selection, induction, mentoring, professional development, compensation, performance management, instructional leadership) to the teaching standards

  30. Guidelines for Design and Implementation • Specify that performance improvement is a strategic imperative • Develop teaching standards and scoring rubrics (i.e., competency model) • Prepare for added teacher and administrator workload • Thorough communication

  31. Guidelines, continued • Video-taping classroom practice and/or use of multiple evaluators • Train and re-train evaluators • Support teachers through feedback and professional development • Align human resource management systems

  32. Strategic HR Alignment Student Achievement Goals Performance Improvement Strategy (Programs, Plans) Performance Competencies (What Teachers & Administrators Need to Know & Be Able to Do) Human Resource Programs Recruitment - Selection - Induction - Mentoring Prof. Development - Compensation - Performance Management - Leaders

  33. Guidelines, continued • Pilot system and monitor implementation • Examine validity and inter-rater agreement

  34. Examples of CPRE Work on Standards-based Teacher Evaluation (SBTE) • 1997: Odden & Kelley, Paying Teachers for What They Know and Can Do (2nd ed. 2002, Corwin Press) • 2005: Milanowski, Kimball, & Odden. Teacher Accountability Measures and Links to Learning. In Rubenstein, R., Schwartz, A.E., Stiefel, L., and Zabel, J. (Eds.), Measuring School Performance & Efficiency: Implications for Practice and Research, 2005 Yearbook of the American Education Finance Association. Larchmont, NY: Eye on Education. • 2006: Heneman, Milanowski, Kimball & Odden, Standards-based teacher evaluation as a foundation for knowledge-and skill-based pay, available at: http://www.cpre.org/Publications/RB45.pdf • For more information: www.wcer.wisc.edu/cpre

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