Virginia school drives up achievement with data-driven decisions.
Ocean View Elementary School Principal Lauren Campsen contends that
there is indeed a silver bullet for improving education for all
students--at least at her Norfolk, Va., school, where the achievement
gap has been virtually eradicated.
She credits data-driven decision making, in which student outcomes
inform decisions affecting student learning, with narrowing the margin
in performance between white students and their ethnic minority peers,
who historically have lagged behind at the school.
In fact, at Ocean View--a 2008 recipient of the U.S. Department of
Education's Blue Ribbon Award--the students are doing about equally
well. In reading, 100 percent of Hispanic students and 99 percent of
black students followed by 94 percent of white students in grades 3-5
performed at proficient or advanced levels on the latest state exam.
Results were similar in math, in which 100 percent of Hispanic students,
97 percent of white students and 93 percent of black students scored at
grade level or above.
"The secret to getting rid of the achievement gap is to have
everybody proficient," says Campsen, who was one of five principals
the Department honored last year with the Terrel H. Bell Award for
outstanding leadership.
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While the school reached that goal in the fifth grade in 2008, with
every student achieving Virginia's Standards of Learning (SOL) in
reading, writing and science, Campsen is hoping to shrink the gap to
under 3 percent this year at other grade levels.
Collecting Data vs. Using It
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Pointing to one of the data charts posted outside of her office,
Campsen says that promoting educational equity in an urban school with
black and white populations that are nearly equal and a small percentage
of Hispanic students "looks like that," as she traces with her
finger a line that slides from 30 to 0 percent. The chart illustrates
the reading achievement gap among fifth-graders that has faded over the
past seven years.
Scores overall have risen sharply ever since Ocean View implemented
the data-driven decision-making model at the start of the 2001-02 school
year. Campsen received training the previous summer at the
Colorado-based Center for Performance Assessments (now called the
Leadership and Learning Center) on how to effectively use test-score
data to make administrative and instructional decisions that would
improve student achievement. She in turn taught her staff how to collect
data and assemble it in binders.
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Presuming the newly adopted strategy would raise two years' of
slumping proficiency rates since the state first began testing, Campsen
looked forward to receiving the results with great anticipation. But
when the data came in, she noticed there was little difference. "I
was in tears, because we had worked so hard organizing our data
notebooks," she recalls. She says she realized after that
"there's collecting data, then there's using it."
Yet, still hopeful by the slight progress, Campsen returned to the
center the following summer for additional training. This time she
learned about building the leadership capacity of the school by creating
vertical data teams, assembling teachers across grade levels to examine
student data by subject. She reorganized the school around this concept
right before the 2002-03 school year, handpicking four instructional
specialists as team leaders for each core subject.
At the end of the school year, the scores were released--publicly
for the first time over the Internet--to the amazement of Ocean
View's educators. Third-grade reading and math, for instance,
increased by an average of 27 percentage points from 2002 to 2003 (54 to
77 percent proficient and 58 to 89 percent proficient, respectively).
The gains proved that the new system, which called for additional
assessments to monitor students' academic needs, was worthwhile, as
one reluctant teacher admitted.
"He looked at me and said, 'I guess all those things you
made us do really do work,'" says Campsen. "And you can
talk to people in this building--I'm sure they're going to
tell you the same thing--they wouldn't go back to the way it was
before. They just can't imagine how you can teach without knowing
where your kids are on a consistent basis."
Debbie Price, who is teaching in her ninth year at Ocean View,
agrees. "I can look at my 20 students and everybody looks like
they're doing a great job--everybody's answering the
questions, they're participating. But what they're doing is
participating only on the questions they know. So through
data--it's very concrete--I can see who still doesn't know
something.... I was missing kids before. I'm not missing them
now."
Children Coming and Going
Preventing children from falling through the cracks can be a feat
at a school with challenging demographics like Ocean View's. Nearly
two-thirds of its 559 students receive federally subsidized meals,
indicating a high-level of poverty. And, as one of the schools in the
area serving military families stationed at Norfolk Naval Base, the
world's largest base of its kind, Ocean View has a cultural
diversity unlike that of the typical inner-city school with a relatively
dominant racial group. Its population is dichotomous: 47 percent are
black and 45 percent white, reflecting also the increasing integration
of the neighborhood. Students from Hispanic and other racial groups
account for the remaining 8 percent.
But the most troubling statistic is the mobility rate. One in four
students transfers each year because their families are: in the low
socio-economic strata, renting rather than owning homes and thereby more
likely to move; in the military and often reassigned to another base; or
homeless, living temporarily in a shelter. Campsen says the transient
rate is also fueled by an inestimable group of "underground"
homeless families who have no fixed address and reside with family or
friends.
"Our great challenge is the children coming and going,"
she laments. "If we got them all in pre-K and kept them all the way
through fifth grade, our challenge would be greatly reduced--even with
the fact that we draw from mostly low socio-economic children."
Which is why Campsen says there is such a heavy reliance on data,
not merely for accountability purposes to prove students are on grade
level, but primarily for its diagnostic capabilities to identify where
extra help should be targeted.
The data are drawn from a battery of tests. The state administers
assessments annually, the district quarterly, and Ocean View assesses
students' knowledge against state standards more regularly--from
monthly schoolwide exams to daily teacher-created quizzes--because the
teachers want more immediate information before they plan for the
following week what needs to be re-taught, explains Campsen.
Ocean View's assessments are far shorter than the Commonwealth
of Virginia's SOLs and, compared to Norfolk Public Schools',
have just a quarter of the 50 questions on each of the district's
subject tests. These monthly assessments--developed by the data team of
specialists for reading, math, science and social studies--run about
10-12 questions per subject. They evaluate the skills-of-the month. For
example, math in one month may focus on place value, followed by
decimals and fractions the next month.
Additionally, during the first 15 minutes of the school day,
students are given a "daily review" quiz. Teachers then
extract the problems proven to be the most difficult to create a
cumulative assessment administered at the end of the week.
Price, who teaches third grade, gives a reason for the multiple
tests: "With any 8-, 9-year old, the average child cannot apply
what they've learned in a different context. If you've asked
an addition problem in a certain way, and they've never seen it
asked another way, they don't know what to do with it. So through
daily reviews and our assessments we try to provide as many different
opportunities to see the same type of problem."
To enable students to demonstrate their understanding in more than
one way, the math vertical team recently discussed using more writing
prompts, which have open-ended questions, and less the traditional
multiple choice format. "A lot of times students don't have
[an opportunity] to actually show all their ideas and what their
mathematical thinking is so teachers can diagnose what their problems
are [in order] to see what their misconceptions are," says the
team's leader Tamara Smith-Moyler, a math instructional specialist.
Students nonetheless are constantly told "justify your
answer," which is the first of the Big Three Power Strategies
posted in every classroom and designed to develop high-order thinking. A
combination of research-based strategies, they also advise children to
"compare and contrast" as well as to "focus on
vocabulary."
"We're just not teaching so the kids can pass a
test," says Annette Bonner, the school's communications skills
instructional specialist. "We want those children to become
lifelong readers and writers. We want them to become scientists or
mathematicians one day."
Opening Doors With Intervention
When it comes to evaluating the quality of teaching at Ocean View,
test score data has a dual function: it reveals whether or not
instruction is effective and whether the intervention that follows is
just routine or is really making a difference. The basis of this data is
a two-tiered program of monthly assessments that tests specific skills
on "Form A" following instruction and subsequently on
"Form B" after intervention for those who were not proficient
on the initial test. (Reading is the only subject for which there is no
Form B because all students are assessed invariably on the same 12
comprehension skills. In writing, students revise papers following
instructional rewrites aligned with the district's rubric.)
The children identified for extra help are grouped according to the
skill that needs shoring up. Thanks to flexible scheduling, the
school's instructional specialists and literacy teachers move in
and out of classrooms all day long, giving skill-specific teaching,
which is woven with current class content so children receiving
intervention do not have to play catch up with the class lessons.
For example, in one class where 15 percent of the students did not
fare well on September's Form A test, the students pulled aside for
additional instruction had to take the post-intervention Form B retest and then be ready to take a new Form A test the following month. The
process restarts each month with a new skill goal.
Consequently, some children are receiving a "triple dose"
of instruction. A special needs student who is a struggling reader may
get a guided reading lesson from three teachers: first, her regular
classroom teacher; second, the special education teacher who will
provide the necessary accommodations to help compensate for her learning
disability; and third, the literacy teacher who will focus on the
lagging comprehension skill.
"They're not going to make it unless you make sure they
can read and compute and write at a level where they can leave
elementary school and be successful in middle and high school and then
have [additional] options," says Campsen. "Every time you
don't intervene with a child, you've closed doors for that
child's future."
Pulling out a notebook filled with data spreadsheets that track
individual student and class performance, Campsen delights in counting
the increases in forms A and B test results. There are two towering
bookcases in her office lined with data binders, of which the teachers
also have copies for their individual classrooms. "This is how
we're on track with AYP [adequate yearly progress] and closing
gaps," she says.
Data is everywhere at Ocean View, which has exceeded the
state's AYP targets since 2004. Every classroom has a data chart
right at the door showing both assessment and reassessment outcomes.
Campsen says having on display the data, which is updated monthly with
each new skill set, means "nothing is a secret, that you have to
face the brutal facts."
She adds that even when the numbers were not favorable for her a
few years ago she maintained a bulletin board of data outside of her
office where visitors are seated. This data wall reports school
achievement by grade, subject and student subgroup, as well as the
achievement gap between racial groups since the second year of state
testing in 1999-2000, when Campsen was promoted from assistant
principal.
Ocean View's elaborate data system is the result of years of
the staff's hard work and fine-tuning, but Campsen credits the
district, which initiated implementation of the data-driven
decision-making model, for facilitating the process of data collection
and use at all 61 city schools. Along with sending its school leaders to
training, Norfolk Public Schools--a 2005 winner of the prestigious Broad
Prize for Urban Education--acquired software that scans answer sheets
for the school and district's major benchmark tests. The program,
which Campsen admits is too expensive for a single school to purchase,
has provided educators with immediate feedback on student performance,
enabling them to respond quicker to students' academic needs.
A Shift in Management's Focus
The district's executive director of leadership and capacity
development believes the role of data has evolved successfully over the
years, from the school district dispensing student outcomes to schools
privately in an envelope to schools posting them publicly on a poster
board outside of each teacher's classroom, based on the trust
established.
"Trust had to come from central office to promise that the
data was not going to be used punitively, but [because] it's going
to help you grow as a school and meet the needs of the students,"
says Christine Harris.
Campsen remembers the former days when they had to calculate scores
by hand; when, as an elementary school teacher early in her career,
classroom assessments were called "quizzes" but were far less
extensive and standards-intensive; and when she arrived at Ocean View as
an assistant principal 14 years ago and the school was a site-based
management model before adopting the data-driven approach.
Under the former model, intended to decentralize decision making
and empower local schools to govern their own operations, she says the
use of allocated funds was determined by a committee of teachers whose
priority was managing the budget--a contrast to how decisions are made
now, with the data leadership team centering them on student outcomes.
"It's really a shift in the focus of the management,"
says Campsen. "So if we talk about budget around the table [today],
it's simply about how do we need to enhance our instructional
program."
Despite its hierarchical organization, the data-driven model
thrives on participatory decision making at all levels. Second in
leadership to the principal and assistant principal, the lead data team
comprises instructional specialists who each chair one of four vertical
content teams for English, math, science, and history and social
studies. These vertical teams consist of teacher representatives from
each grade level, pre-K to fifth, along with staff members from special
education and resources (art, speech therapist and literacy). Each team
averages 14 people.
As a result, teachers attend at least four mandatory meetings per
month to discuss student data: twice a month for the vertical team; once
a week for the horizontal team for their grade level; and once a month
to go over individual student performance with the principal.
The data leadership team is responsible for collecting and
organizing data and implementing intervention strategies schoolwide,
and, in collaboration with the vertical data teams, for analyzing data,
improving instruction and tracking student achievement. Campsen says
many of the innovative initiatives in the school are the result of these
meetings, such as the recent creation of a "live" wax museum,
a la Madame Tussaud's, to highlight historical figures for a social
studies lesson. For the one-day project, students did research and
performed as
costumed historical interpreters.
Teaching to the Test
But Campsen says their efforts involving data have not always been
welcomed with praise. She heard about a blog in which someone accused
her of leading the school to a Blue Ribbon Award "'because all
she's doing is testing the kids to death,'" Campsen
recalls. "And I'm like, 'They're going to be tested
their whole lives.'"
She even argues for training students on how to take a test,
considering there are some who are simply "bad test-takers,"
she says, and most will have to face high-stakes testing in their
future. "I don't understand what all the complaints are. In
high school, you should have a class that's called 'Test
Taking,' not because it's going to make you more intelligent,
but because you're going to have to take the SAT."
Bonner, who leads the English vertical data team, chimes in with
the defense against the teaching-to-the-test accusation. "People
think sometimes when we look at data we're just looking at a number
or a score. We're looking at the whole child. We're looking at
what the whole child needs."
Offering another viewpoint, Harris, who oversees data support for
the district, suspects that the criticism stems from a misunderstanding
about the intent for assessing. "There's a big difference
between tests and assessments," she says, though acknowledging that
the words are often used interchangeably." You can test students
too much. But you can't assess enough to see the progress....
It's more about using the assessments to inform instruction than
posting grades."
Adds Campsen, "The myth that this is all we do is really still
a myth. In addition to all this [testing and retesting], our school is a
maritime-focus school."
Practically a stone's throw away from the Chesapeake Bay,
Ocean View started its environmental education program as one of three
area schools that collaborated to offer the "Maritime Studies
Pathway," an initiative funded initially by a federal grant from
the Environmental Protection Agency. Now supported by the Elizabeth
River Project and other local partners, it engages students in
service-learning projects linked to the curriculum that supports the
restoration of the bay--the largest estuary in the country.
With the expert guidance of a retired science teacher, students
have created a veritable outdoor classroom in the backyard of their
school. Serving as maritime rangers, they have cleaned the last
remaining sand dune in Ocean View, the only one to survive the leveling
of the beach to build the naval base during World War II; set up nature
trails on part of the 64,000-square-mile watershed; and raise 300,000
oysters to put on reefs they're creating in the rivers flowing into
the Chesapeake Bay. Also, a room in the school decorated with life
preservers, netting drapes and saltwater tanks has been devoted as the
maritime laboratory.
A few years ago, when local residents were suffering from an
infestation of mosquitoes, students found that a natural combatant of
mosquitoes are praying mantises, which they then raised in the
laboratory to later release in the maritime forest.
"We do a lot of those type of activities," says Campsen.
"What the data allows us to do is to make sure that we're not
just doing some cutesy things that look great and look like they're
a lot of fun, but aren't actually helping our children achieve and
learn so that they can have all the opportunities this country makes
available to them."
Demographics
* Grade Span: Pre-K-5
* Locale: Urban
* Total Students: 559
* Race/Ethnicity Enrollment: 47% black, 45% white, 5% Hispanic, 3%
other
* Free or Reduced-Price Lunch Eligible: 63%
* English Language Learners: 6%
* Special Education Students: 9%
* Percentage Proficient (based on 2008 AYP results): 96% reading
and math, 97% science