decision making for results
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Decision Making for Results. Part One: Objectives. Develop a deeper understanding of the Decision Making for Results: Data-Driven Decision Making process Increase awareness of the relevance of data and its impact on leadership, teaching, and learning - PowerPoint PPT PresentationTRANSCRIPT
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Decision Making for Results
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Part One: Objectives
• Develop a deeper understanding of the Decision Making for Results: Data-Driven Decision Making process
• Increase awareness of the relevance of data and its impact on leadership, teaching, and learning
• Reinforce the importance of collecting both cause and effect data
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Objectives
• Apply the Decision Making for Results: Data-Driven Decision Making process to monitor leadership, teaching, and learning
• Implement the Decision Making for Results: Data-Driven Decision Making process to monitor school improvement
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Principles ofDecision Making For Results
Antecedents
CollaborationAccountability
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Seminar Overview
• Introduction• Building the foundation• Process and application• Action planning
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Becoming Data Driven
How are you currently embracing a data-driven decision-making process that leads to results?
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Data DrivenDecisions
Results-Driven Schools
• Where is the proof?
• 90/90/90 Schools, Reeves 2003• Education Trust, 2002• NCREL, 2000• Consortium for Policy Research in
Education, 2000• EdSource, 2005• Northern Illinois University Center
for Governmental Studies, 2004
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Reflection
“The value of the data emerges only when analysis provides insights that direct decisions for students.”
White, 2005
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Part TwoBuilding the Foundation
• Cause data and effect data• Continuous improvement cycle• Principles and processes of
Decision Making for Results: Data-Driven Decision Making
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“Only by evaluating both causes and effects in a comprehensive accountability system can leaders, teachers, and policymakers understand the complexities of student achievement and the efficacy of teaching and leadership practices.”
Reeves, 2006
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Definitions and Examples
Effect data: Outcomes or results
Cause data: Professional practices that create specific effects or results
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The Leadership & Learning Center Matrix
Effects/Results (stud.out.)
LuckyHigh results, low understanding of antecedentsReplication of success unlikely
LeadingHigh results, high understanding of antecedentsReplication of success likely
Losing GroundLow results, low understanding of antecedentsReplication of failure likely
LearningLow results, high understanding of antecedentsReplication of mistakes unlikely
Antecedents/Cause Data (Adult Actions)
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PIM
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Part ThreeProcess and Application
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Ocean View Elementary School A Look at Collaboration
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The Process for Results
Analyze toPrioritize
Monitor & Evaluate Results
Treasure Hunt
SMART Goals
Specific Strategies
Results Indicators
Inquiry;Develop Questions
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Inquiry
“Data-driven decision making begins by asking fundamental questions.”
Doug Reeves
• What questions do you have about teaching and learning in your school?
• What data sources are you using to gather the specific information?
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Step 1: Conduct a Treasure Hunt
• Why? To gather and organize data in order to gain insights about teaching and learning practices
• Considerations• Measures of data• Disaggregation • Triangulation • Reflection
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Measures of Data
• Student learning • Demographics• Perceptions• School processes—Behaviors within
our control: instructional and leadership strategies, programs and resources, and organization
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Disaggregation
• To separate something into its component parts, or break apart
• “Disaggregation is not a problem-solving strategy. It is a problem-finding strategy.”
Victoria Bernhardt, Data Analysis, 1998
Think, pair, share:
What data do you disaggregate and how do you use the information?
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TriangulationA Look at Learning
DRA
BenchmarkRunning Records
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Case Study
• Read case study
• Part 1: How did they categorize the different data sets and record their observations?
• Part 2: What did they discover?
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Conduct a Treasure Hunt Application
1. Review inquiry questions
2. Conduct a “Treasure Hunt”
3. Organize data on templates
4. Use rubric to monitor and evaluate your work
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Can You Identify with This?
“It is not so much a lack of data, but an absence of analysis, and an even greater absence of actions driven by the data.”
White, 2005
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Step 2Analyze Data to Prioritize Needs
Data Analysis at Northside Middle School
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Analyze Data to Prioritize Needs
• Why? To identify causes for celebration and to identify areas of concern
• Considerations
• Strengths• Needs• Behavior• Rationale
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Quality Prioritization
• Why? To take immediate action on the most urgent needs
• Quality prioritization requires a thorough understanding of:• Student population• Curriculum and Power/Priority Standards
(leverage, readiness)• Antecedents affecting student achievement• Quality of program implementation
White, 2005
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Case Study
• Review case study • What insights did you gain after
reading analysis of student performance?
• Make a recommendation: What is the most urgent need?
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Review, Analyze, and Prioritize Application
1. Review data from Step 1
2. Conduct analysis using the guiding questions
3. Prioritize urgent needs using the suggested criteria
4. Record your work on the templates
5. Use rubric to monitor and evaluate your work
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Step 3Establish SMART Goals
• Why? To identify our most critical goals for student achievement based on the challenges that were identified through the inquiry process
• Specific, Measurable, Achievable, Relevant, Timely
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Establish Your SMART Goals Application
• Review prioritized needs • Review Treasure Hunt baseline data• Apply SMART goal formula, use
templates• Use rubric to monitor and evaluate
your work
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Goals—Application
1. Review prioritized needs
2. Review Treasure Hunt baseline data
3. Apply SMART goal formula, use templates to record your work
4. Use rubric to monitor and evaluate your work
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Share Your Findings with Colleagues
• Meet in the middle of the room
• Be prepared to share your findings from Steps 1-3
• Highlight one celebration from a colleague
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Step 4Select Specific Strategies
Let’s watch Lake Taylor High School as they dialogue about strategies
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Select Specific Strategies
• Why?
• Adult actions will impact student achievement
• Strategies are—
• Action-oriented• Measurable/accountable• Specific• Research-based
• Considerations: Instructional, organizational, leadership, programmatic
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Research-Based Strategies
• Reeves, D.B. (2003. 90/90/90 schools. Retrieved from www.leadandlearn.com
• Reeves, D.B. (2006). Ten things high schools can do right now to improve student achievement. Retrieved from http://www.leadandlearn.com/resources/custom/Presentations/4.2.08.NY.NYC.pdf
• Learning 24/7 Observation Study (2005). What’s happening in schools? Or not?
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Additional Evidence in Support of Research-Based Strategies
• Zemelman, S., Daniels, H., & Hyde, A. (2005). Best practice. Portsmith, NH: Heinemann.
• Marzano, R. (2007). The art & science of teaching. Alexandria, VA: ASCD.
• Barr, R., & Parrett, W.H. (2007). The kids left behind. Bloomington, IN: Solution Tree.
• Marzano, R., Waters, T., & McNulty, B. (2005). School leadership that works. Alexandria, VA: ASCD.
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Let’s Do It!
Guided Practice
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Case Study
• Revisit case study analysis
• What types of strategies (instructional, organizational, leadership, programmatic) did they select?
• How will the strategies help students overcome the obstacles?
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Select Your Specific Strategies
1. Revisit your prioritized needs
2. Research the best possible strategies to meet the learner needs
3. Group by type of strategy: Instructional, organizational, programmatic, and leadership
4. Use rubric to monitor and evaluate your work
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Step 5Determine Results Indicators
Why? To monitor the degree of implementation and evaluate the effectiveness of the strategies
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Results Indicators
• Considerations
• Serve as an interim measurement
• Used to determine effective implementation of a strategy
• Used to determine if strategy is having the desired impact
• Help to determine midcourse corrections
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Case Study
• Review case study
• How will their results indicators serve as an interim measurement?
• How clearly will the results indicators help to monitor implementation and impact?
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Results Indicator Application
1. Revisit strategies (Step 4)
2. Develop results indicators
3. Use rubric to monitor and evaluate your work
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“Improvement cycles require leadership follow-up and relentless efforts to maintain the focus on data if decisions are truly going to be driven by informed data.”
White, 2005
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Step 6Monitor and Evaluate Results
Why? To engage in a continuous improvement cycle that—
• Identifies midcourse corrections where needed
• Adjusts strategies to assure fidelity of implementation
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Case Study
• Review the case study
• How did they monitor strategies?
• Was there any evidence of midcourse corrections?
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Develop Your Monitoring Plan• Review your work from developing questions to
determining results indicators then determine how you will monitor the strategies. When you create your monitoring plan consider:
• Teacher or administrator teams• Monitoring cycles• Goals• Strategies• Impact on student and adult behavior• Ability to make midcourse corrections
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Educators Matter
“Many people live their lives aspiring to make a difference and lead a life that matters. There need be no such uncertainty in the life of an educator or school leader. Every decision we make, from daily interactions with students to the most consequential policies at every level of government, will influence leadership and learning…
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…After all these words, statistical analyses, and graphs,…
What we do matters.”Reeves, 2006
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Questions and Discussion
Your ideas and reflections are important to us. Please take time to complete the short evaluation form that we reviewed at the
beginning of this seminar.
The Leadership and Learning Center866.399.6019
LeadandLearn.com