Title: What is our evidence from research?
1What is our evidence from research?
- Teacher Leader Institute
- San Antonio, June 5 2003
- Francisco X. Gómez B.
- Director, NDEC
2Volunteers Needed
- Scientific Study randomized trial
- You will be assigned randomly to one of four
groups - You dont know what group you will be assigned to
before you volunteer - You will have to consume (or not consume) daily
for 30 years as follows.
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4Randomized Trials
- Randomized trials are not the only legitimate
form of scientific inquiry - They are not necessarily the best or highest
quality type of research - Even in medicine, epidemiological,
quasi-experimental, clinical other methods are
more common advance knowledge - The medical model is not always relevant
5What is science? Says who?
- Who defines or should define what science is?
- What criteria are to be used?
- Traditionally, scholars from a given field define
criteria of what constitutes good science good
research - These standards are not rigid methods need to
adapt to different situations opportunities for
learning
6Guidance to Reading First
- Each State educational agency that receives
Reading First funds must assess and evaluate, on
a regular basis, the progress of local
educational agencies that receive subgrants in
meeting the goals of the Reading First program. - U.S. Department of Education (2002).
7Reporting Requirements for SEAs/1
- Implementation Evidence The SEA must
demonstrate that it has met all program
requirements and obligations related to the
implementation and administration of the Reading
First program. - Achievement Gains The SEA must specifically
identify the schools and local educational
agencies within the State that report the largest
gains in reading achievement.
8Reporting Requirements for SEAs/2
- Program Effectiveness The SEA must report on
the progress the SEA and local educational
agencies are making in reducing the number of
students in grades 1 through 3 served by Reading
First who are reading below grade level. SEAs
should select methods of collecting and reporting
this information that will result in the
submission of data that are valid and reliable.
9Reporting Requirements for SEAs/3
- Reducing Students Reading Below Grade Level
Statewide The SEA must report on whether it and
local educational agencies have significantly
increased the number of students reading at grade
level or above, including whether the percentages
of students in certain categories reading at
grade level or above have increased.
10Disaggregated Data Tables
- Disaggregated data tables help answer questions
on achievement gains for different groups - Discontinued students from various groups tend to
exhibit fairly uniform outcomes - School districts can request District Reports
with disaggregated data for 75 - School Data Summaries contain disaggregated data
- free
11Scientifically Based Research
- The U.S. Department of Education has outlined
four criteria for local and state educational
agencies to evaluate research findings. - Agencies that meet these criteria are considered
to be using scientifically based research
principles for evaluation.
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13Criterion 1/a
- Use of rigorous, systematic and empirical methods
- This is the definition of a scientific research
methodology. The evaluation methodology for
Reading Recovery evaluation can be found in the
Methodology section of the National Report. Site,
District and School Reports contain abbreviated
versions.
14Criterion 1/b
- The Data Collection Procedures Manual, which must
be followed equally by all participants in
Reading Recovery, is an example of a rigorous,
systematic and empirical methodology.
15Criterion 2/a
- Adequacy of the data analyses to test the stated
hypotheses and justify the general conclusions
drawn - The RR methodology has 8 research questions
- The data in the reports provide the answers to
these questions
16Criterion 2/b
- RR evaluations are usually descriptive because
they report on the implementation of an
intervention in a population. - The same basic design can be used to test
hypotheses. - Conclusions in national, state other reports
are based on data
17Criterion 3/a
- Reliance on measurements or observational methods
that provided valid data across evaluators and
observers and across multiple measurements and
observations
18Criterion 3/b
- The six tasks of the Observation Survey have been
normed and shown to be reliable. - See Clay, M. M. (1993a/2002). An observation
survey of early literacy achievement. Portsmouth,
NH Heinemann. - 2002-2003 random sample data will allow for a
re-norming of the OS.
19Criterion 4/a
- Acceptance by a peer-reviewed journal or approved
by a panel of independent experts through a
comparably rigorous, objective and scientific
review (U.S. Department of Education, 2002).
20Criterion 4/b
- A study of the effectiveness of the Reading
Recovery intervention was both reviewed by a
panel of independent experts and accepted for
publication in a peer-reviewed journal. - See Pinnell, G. S., Lyons C. A., Deford, D. E.,
Bryk, A., Seltzer, M. (1994). Comparing
instructional models for the literacy education
of high-risk first graders. Reading Research
Quarterly, 29, 839. - Other peer-reviewed research articles can be
found in the What Evidence Says document
published by RRCNA.
21Quality Levels of Evidence
- Adapted from Reyna, 2002
- Official U.S. position on quality of research
- Case Studies most subjective least convincing
level of evidence testimonials. A very common
program evaluation methodology in public
education today. For theory building.
22Quality Levels of Evidence/2
- Correlational Study without statistical controls-
- For example, X number of students scored Y on
Test A, therefore a good instructional method was
used no basis for comparison no measure of
statistical significance
23Quality Levels of Evidence/3
- Correlational Study with statistical controls
- This would be a study that compares two groups,
without any before-after data without
controlling who is in those groups. Allows
statistical testing but inferences that can be
drawn are limited.
24Quality Levels of Evidence/4
- Quasi-experiment, including before and after
- Two groups are selected according to pre-defined
criteria (e.g., RR RS). - The groups are measured before after treatment
(e.g., Fall, Mid-Year Spring testing of RR
RS) - As close as you can come to a lab experiment
25Reading Recovery Evaluation
- Uses a quasi-experimental study design
- Study groups are Reading Recovery Random Sample
(or DLL RS-DLL) - All groups measured before after
- Rigorous, uniform criteria for belonging to a
group - Uniform measurement (Observation Survey)
- Uniform implementation (training model ensures
fidelity)
26Quality Levels of Evidence/5
- Randomized trial-
- Study groups assigned randomly
- Pre Post testing
- Statistical significance
- Extraneous factors eliminated as much as possible
- Very difficult costly
27Randomized Trials in Education
- Held up as ideal by U.S. Department of Education
but very difficult in practice - Ethical issues which study group will your child
or school be part of? Any volunteers? - Methodology issues schools are not labs
- Raudenbush cites only 2 examples
- Thomas Cooks studies of Comer schools
- The Pinnell et al. Reading Recovery study
- (Raudenbush, 2002)
28Treatment Effect Studies
- Once a treatment effect has been established in a
randomized trial, it does not need to be
re-established in further studies if the
treatment is unchanged. - Example, no studies within last few decades of
effectiveness of aspirin the effectiveness of
the treatment established long ago - Pinnell et al. study results still stand
29RR Scientific Research
- RR meets the toughest requirements set by U.S.
Department of Education we have a randomized
trial on record - Routine monitoring research uses second-highest
quality level, the Quasi-experimental approach - Randomized trials are not the end-all, be-all of
scientific inquiry - Monitoring scientific research are two
different things - Monitoring research provides evidence of
effectiveness in scaling up
30References 1/2
- Clay, M. M. (1993a/2002). An observation survey
of early literacy achievement. Portsmouth, NH
Heinemann. - Pinnell, G. S., Lyons C. A., Deford, D. E., Bryk,
A., Seltzer, M. (1994). Comparing instructional
models for the literacy education of high-risk
first graders. Reading Research Quarterly, 29,
839 - Raudenbush, S. (2002). Scientifically based
research. Paper submitted at February 6, 2002
U.S. Department of Education seminar. Found on
5/29/03 at http//www.ed.gov/offices/OESE/esea/res
earch/raudenbush-paper.html
31References 2/2
- Reyna, V.F. (2002). The logic of scientific
research. Paper submitted at February 6, 2002
U.S. Department of Education seminar. Found on
5/29/03 at http//www.ed.gov/offices/OESE/esea/res
earch/reyna-paper.html - U.S. Department of Education (2002). Guidance for
the Reading First Program. Washington, D.C.
Author - http//www.ed.gov/offices/OESE/readingfirst/Readin
gFirstGuidanceFINAL.pdf
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