Title: Presenting, Pondering, and Planning with Minnesota Student Survey Data
1Presenting, Pondering, and Planning with
Minnesota Student Survey Data
- Spring 2005 Regional Workshops
2Morning Meeting
- At your tables, spend time answering the
following questions (next slide). - Use the talking piece to guide who is speaking in
turn. - Select three responses to each question you want
to share with the larger group. - Identify someone to record these responses.
- Put these responses on the large white paper on
your tables.
3Questions to Ponder
- What do you need in order to be inspired today?
- What do you hope to take home from todays
workshop? - Whats the most critical question you have about
the Minnesota Student Survey?
4Overview of Today
- Minnesota Student Survey Overview
- 30 Key Indicators
- Examining and Giving Meaning
- Comparing Data
- Presenting and Collaborating with Data
- Using Data for Planning, Assessment
- Sharing Resources
- SDFS E-Application
5Resource Materials
- Teal packet
- Agenda, presentation slides, worksheet materials,
copies of MSS, MSS use examples, statewide data
tables, trends report, evaluation, funding flyer,
training flyer, information gathering - Additional materials
- Attendance certificate, county tables, prevention
region tables, MPRC materials
6Minnesota Student Survey Basics
- Population-based youth survey for grades 6, 9
12 - 2 versions of the survey
- Paper-pencil bubble survey
- Brief one class period
- Uniform instructions, site administration
- Administered every three years since 1989, spring
administration
7Content
- Demographics
- School academics, plans, relationships, safety
- Family relationships, risk factors
- Health/risk behaviors physical activity,
nutrition, ATOD, sexual behavior, injury and
violence - Stress, coping and mental health
8Involvement
- Traditional public schools
- Including charter schools, tribal schools
- Alternative schools/area learning centers
- Juvenile correctional facilities/detention
centers - Residential behavioral treatment facilities
9Participation
- Student participation rates
- Statewide, the 2004 MSS data represent these
percentages of regular public school students - 6th grade 76 48,131
- 9th grade 72 49,210
- 12th grade 55 34,521
- Districts 88
- Special populations
- Alternative schools/area learning centers 3,508
- Juvenile correctional facilities 798
- Residential behavioral treatment facilities 228
10Sharing Results
- www.mnschoolhealth.com
- Click on the BLUE Data button
- Statewide tables, trend report, county reports
- District reports e-mailed to each district
directly - www.health.state.mn.us/alcohol
- ATOD trends, 1992-2004
- Planning materials
- Regional meetings, special presentations
- Future work
- Content specific briefs, associations analysis
- Release of dataset
1130 Key Indicators
- Student-centered framework
Student (Individual)
School
Family
Community
12Setting the Stage
- Who took the survey?
- Which young people are the focus of our data
sharing? - What are important characteristics to share?
- Total number of youth participating
- Gender
- Age
- Race/ethnicity
- Which adults youth live with
- Mental or physical health problems of youth
13Demographics
- Table 1, page 1 of data tables
- Questions
- 1 What is your sex?
- 2 What is your grade in school right now?
- 3 How old are you?
- 4 How do you describe yourself? (Mark all that
apply)
14Total Numbers
15Gender
16Age
17Race/Ethnicity
18Living Situation
- Question 5 Which adults do you live with? (Mark
all that apply) - Table 9, page 11 of data tables
19Living Situation
20Mental/Physical Health
- Question 28 Do you have a mental or physical
condition or other health problem that has lasted
at least 12 months? - Table 15, page 17 of data tables
21Mental/Physical Health Problem
22Reflecting on Your Data
- As we review key indicators,
- Use the first four pages of your worksheet packet
to select four key indicators you want to explore
further using your own data - Student, school, family, community
- In a manner similar to the presentation, graph
your own key indicator data - Select an indicator, identify the appropriate
legend/key - Graph the values (remember to add up across
categories!) for your data
23Individual (Student)Indicators
Student (Individual)
24Group Brainstorming
- What are the key pieces of information you would
like to know and share about students? - Behaviors? Attitudes?
- In what areas?
25Indicator 1 Feelings About School(Like school
very much or quite a bit)
- Question 8 How do you feel about going to
school? - Table 2, page 2
26Indicator 1 Feelings About School(Like school
very much or quite a bit)
27Indicator 2 Skipping School(Skipped 1 times
in past 30 days)
- Question 10 During the last 30 days, how often
have you skipped or cut full days of school? - Table 2, page 2
28Indicator 2 Skipping School(Skipped 1 times
in last 30 days)
29Indicator 3 1 Hours in Activities
- Question 22 During the school year, how many
hours in a typical week do you spend doing the
following? - Band, choir, orchestra, music lessons, or
practicing voice or an instrument - Clubs or organizations outside of school
- Playing sports on a school team
- Table 7a, page 7
30Indicator 3 1 Hours in Activities
31Indicator 4 1 Hours in Work
- Question 22 During the school year, how many
hours in a typical week do you spend doing the
following? - Volunteer work or community service
- Chores at home/babysitting for family
- Work for pay (including babysitting for others)
- Table 7c, page 9
32Indicator 4 1 Hours in Work
33Indicator 5 Use of Internet at Home
- Question 24 Do you use the Internet at home? If
yes, what do you use the Internet for at home?
(Mark all that apply) - E-mail
- Chat rooms
- Homework or other research
- Table 8, page 10
34Indicator 5 Use of Internet at Home
35Indicator 6 Physical Activity(5 of last 7
days, 30 minutes)
- Question 31 On how many of the last 7 days were
you physically active for a combined total of at
least 30 minutes? - Table 17, page 19
36Indicator 6 Physical Activity(5 of last 7
days, 30 minutes)
37Indicator 7 Use of Seat Belts Always Wear When
Riding
- Question 25 How often do you wear a seat belt
when you.ride in a car? - Table 19, page 21
38Indicator 7 Use of Seat BeltsAlways Wear When
Riding
39Indicator 8 Suicidal Thoughts in Past Year
- Question 53 Have you ever thought about killing
yourself? - Table 23, page 25
40Indicator 8 Suicidal Thoughts in Past Year
41Indicator 9 Physical Fights at Least Once in
Past Year
- Question 68 During the last 12 months, how
often have you hit or beat up another person? - Table 26, page 28
42Indicator 9 Physical Fights at Least Once in
Past Year
43Indicator 10 Smoked Cigarette on at Least One
Day in Past Month
- Question 74 During the last 30 days, on how
many days did you smoke a cigarette? - Table 28, page 30
44Indicator 10 Smoked Cigarette on at Least One
Day in Past Month
45Indicator 11 Drank Alcohol at Least Once in
Past Month
- Question 79 On how many occasions (if any) have
you had alcoholic beverages (beer, wine, wine
coolers, or liquor) to drink during the last 30
days? - Table 31, page 33
46Indicator 11 Drank Alcohol at Least Once in
Past Month
47Indicator 12 Used Marijuana at Least Once in
Past Month
- Question 85 On how many occasions (if any) have
you used marijuana (grass, pot) or hashish (hash,
hash oil) during the last 30 days? - Table 34, page 36
48Indicator 12 Used Marijuana at Least Once in
Past Month
49Indicator 13 Sources of Information for
Alcohol/Other Drugs
- Question 37 Where have you received most of
your information about alcohol and other drugs?
(Mark all that apply) - Table 20, page 22
50Indicator 13 Sources of Information for
Alcohol/Other Drugs
51Indicator 14 Ever Had Sex
- Question 111 Have you ever had sexual
intercourse (gone all the way)? - Table 42a, page 45
52Indicator 14 Ever Had Sex
53Indicator 15 Talked about Preventing Pregnancy
(At Least Once with Each Partner)
- Question 113 Have you talked with your
partner(s) about preventing pregnancy? - Table 42b, page 46
54Indicator 15 Talked about Preventing Pregnancy
(At Least Once with Each Partner)
55School Indicators
School
56Group Brainstorming
- What are the key pieces of information you would
like to know and share about schools? - School environment? School staff?
- About what issues?
57Indicator 16 All/Most Students in School
Friendly
- Question 13 How many students in your school
are friendly? - Table 4, page 4
58Indicator 16 All/Most Students in School
Friendly
59Indicator 17 All/Most Teachers Interested
- Question 14 How many of your teachers are
interested in you as a person? - Table 4, page 4
60Indicator 17 All/Most Teachers Interested
61Indicator 18 All/Most Teachers Show Respect
- Question 14 How many of your teachers show
respect for the students? - Table 4, page 4
62Indicator 18 All/Most Teachers Show Respect
63Indicator 19 Feel Safe at School (Strongly
Agree/Agree)
- Question 15 How much do you agree or disagree
with the following statements? I feel safe at
school. - Table 5, page 5
64Indicator 19 Feel Safe at School (Strongly
Agree/Agree)
65Indicator 20 Insulted, Threatened, Assaulted at
School(At Least Once in Past Year)
- Question 16 During the last 12 months, which of
the following has happened to you on school
property? Has a student insulted you? Threatened
you? Pushed, shoved or grabbed you? - Table 6, page 6
66Indicator 20 Insulted, Threatened, Assaulted at
School(At Least Once in Past Year)
67Family Indicators
Family
68Group Brainstorming
- What are the key pieces of information you would
like to know and share about families? - Behaviors? Attitudes? Connections with youth?
- In what areas?
69Indicator 21 Talk with Father(Most/Some of
Time)
- Question 6 Can you talk to your father about
problems you are having? - Table 9, page 11
70Indicator 21 Talk with Father(Most/Some of
Time)
71Indicator 22 Talk with Mother(Most/Some of
Time)
- Question 7 Can you talk to your mother about
problems you are having? - Table 9, page 11
72Indicator 22 Talk with Mother(Most/Some of
Time)
73Indicator 23 Parents Caring(Very Much/Quite a
Bit)
- Question 39 How much do you feel your parents
care about you? - Table 10, page 12
74Indicator 23 Parents Caring(Very Much/Quite a
Bit)
75Indicator 24 Family Alcohol Use Problems
- Question 57 Has alcohol use by any family
member repeatedly caused family, health, job or
legal problems? - Table 12, page 14
76Indicator 24 Family Alcohol Use Problems
77Indicator 25 Family Drug Use Problems
- Question 58 Has drug use by any family member
repeatedly caused family, health, job or legal
problems? - Table 12, page 14
78Indicator 25 Family Drug Use Problems
79Community Indicators
Community
80Group Brainstorming
- What are the key pieces of information you would
like to know and share about communities? - Community environment? Connection to community?
Caring by members? - About what issues?
81Indicator 26 Feel Safe Going To and From
School (Strongly Agree/Agree)
- Question 15 How much do you agree or disagree
with the following statements? I feel safe going
to and from school. - Table 5, page 5
82Indicator 26 Feel Safe Going To and From
School (Strongly Agree/Agree)
83Indicator 27 Friends Caring(Very Much/Quite a
Bit)
- Question 39 How much do you feel your friends
care about you? - Table 11, page 13
84Indicator 27 Friends Caring(Very Much/Quite a
Bit)
85Indicator 28 Church/Spiritual Leaders
Caring(Very Much/Quite a Bit)
- Question 39 How much do you feel church or
spiritual leaders care about you? - Table 11, page 13
86Indicator 28 Church/Spiritual Leaders
Caring(Very Much/Quite a Bit)
87Indicator 29 Police Officers Caring(Very
Much/Quite a Bit)
- Question 39 How much do you feel police
officers care about you? - Table 11, page 13
88Indicator 29 Police Officers Caring(Very
Much/Quite a Bit)
89Indicator 30 Other Adults Caring(Very
Much/Quite a Bit)
- Question 39 How much do you feel other adults
in your community care about you? - Table 11, page 13
90Indicator 30 Other Adults Caring(Very
Much/Quite a Bit)
91Time for Your Indicators
- Select one of the key student, school, family and
community indicators that you find especially
relevant for your community - Graph the values from your data (district data,
county data, regional data) on the worksheets
9230 Key Indicators
Student (Individual)
School
Family
Community
93Break Time!
94How to Examine the Data
- Whats the best way to think about all of these
data? - Using various frameworks, based upon the audience
and consumers of the data - You may need to consider using multiple
frameworks, one for each of your audiences, or
one for each of your consumers
95Theoretical Frameworks
- Student-centered perspective
- Similar to our 30 key indicators, focusing on
student, and the student interaction with the
school environment, the home/family environment,
and the larger community - Mirrors the concepts of individual student
factors and interacting support factors (learning
environment, family/parent support, community
support)
96Theoretical Frameworks
- Assets and risks
- Examining each indicator or question from the
perspective of whether its a protective factor
or a risk factor - Withholding value judgments on indicatorsand
examining them from both perspectives - 37 of 12th grade boys binge drink!
- 63 of 12th grade boys dont binge drink!
97Stages of Development
- Boys and Girls
- Examining indicators by gender is critical,
especially for certain behaviors - Sex, ATOD initiation, mental health issues,
physical aggression
98Stages of Development
- Grades
- Examining indicators by grade is also important,
especially as it gives an opportunity to notice
changes over time, dips and peaks - Theres a clear dip in the ability of 9th grade
females to talk with either parent, compared to
their 6th and 12th grade peers
99Content Areas
- Traditional perspective, often based on our own
professional silos - MSS Trends report uses this approach
- Our categories
- Academics school connectedness
- School safety
- Violent and anti-social behavior
- Mental health, gambling
- ATOD
- Other health behaviors
- Sexual behavior
- Families
100Giving the Data Context
- What do these data reflect about your school,
your district, your community, your county? - Do they reflect significant changes in
programming over the past school year? Several
years? New community coalitions addressing
adolescent prevention issues? A significant
historical event?
101Consideration of Participation
- What sort of participation do these data reflect?
- Total students responding by grade/total
enrollment by grade gives a by-grade
participation figure
102Think, Pair, Share
- What was going on in your school, school
district, community or county at the time of the
survey? - The year or two before the survey?
- The month or two before the survey?
- How has your school, district, community or
county experienced changes since the survey was
administered? In what way(s)?
103Giving the Data Meaning
- What does the number mean?
- Is it more than or less than half of the
students? - How many of 10 students does it represent? 5
students? 60 is 3 out of every 5 students
104More Meaning
- How do we apply the percentage to the population?
- Although a prevalence may be low (3, 5),
applying it to the full student body (1,000), may
mean youd expect 30 or 50 students with this
experience. - How can we tell stories with the numbers?
- Draw upon your experiences to share real-life
stories of young people
105Data, Data Everywhere!
- If you have district data, you have at least 3
comparison options - County, prevention region, statewide
- Which comparison is most appropriate, given your
community and interests? - Would it be appropriate to compare your data to
other school districts?
106What to Do with All These Data?
- If you have county data, you have at least 2
comparison options - Prevention region, statewide
- Again, which comparison is most appropriate,
given your community and interests? - Would it be appropriate to compare your data to
other counties, not a set of counties?
107Continued Reflection on Data
- Use the next four pages of your worksheet packet
to compare your four local key indicators to
another set of data - Graph your own key indicator data next to the
other data selected - Local school district and county
- County and prevention region
108Limitations on Data
- Consider LIMITING the amount of data you present
- Male and female separately
- Separate grades presented
- Only a portion of the data
109Comparisons for Indicator 7 Male Seat Belt Use
When Riding
110Comparisons for Indicator 7 Female Seat Belt
Use When Riding
111Innovative Ways to Present
- WHY present the data?
- Denial breaker and myth buster
- Planning and prioritization
- Persuading communities, grantmakers,
policymakers, media - Using the data to spark collaboration and
communication
112Innovative Presentation
- HOW to present the data?
- Traditional presentations to the school board,
school teachers, administrators - Teaching with the data (part of prevention
curricula) - Other examples
113Presentation Considerations
- Who is the audience? Law enforcement? School
administrators? PTA members? Liquor store owners?
Clinic health care staff? - Whats important to the audience? Which issues?
Which age groups? Which perspectives? - How can you involve young people?
- How can we take care in our judgments?
114When Presenting, Remember
- Your audience can only take in 5 new pieces of
information before they need a break and time to
process. - Use simple blocks to build complexity.
- Allow for reflection, processing, or action after
each building block. - Weve tried to expose you to opportunities for
reflection, processing and action today. - Cooperative learning, reflection and sharing,
active presentations..
115Practice in Presenting
- In your small groups (based on your morning
meeting), select ONE indicator comparison you
would like to share with the greater group. - Prepare a short (3 minute) presentation about
that indicator for.. - Your regional safe drug free schools
coordinators - Members of your schools parent advisory board
- Your county commissioners
- A 10th grade health education class at the HS
- Nurses and doctors from the local hospital
- Community liaison officers from the local
police/sheriffs office
116Discussing Collaboration
- How have you used student survey data to spark
collaboration in your community? - What can you imagine about how you might use
student survey data for collaboration? What
unique groups might you ask to the table that you
have not previously considered?
117Lunch Time!
118Using the Data.
- Apart from using the data to spark collaboration,
entice interest in prevention, and challenge
perceptions, the data can be used specifically - For needs assessment
- For prevention planning
- For program evaluation
119Needs Assessment
- Minnesota Student Survey data can serve as a set
of social indicator data as you conduct a needs
assessment
120Benchmarks
- Consider the benchmarks against which you want to
compare the data - Healthy People 2010, Healthy Minnesotans
- CHS plans and other planning documents
- Community conversations about what is
acceptable and desirable - Other national surveys
- Monitoring the Future www.monitoringthefuture.org
- Youth Risk Behavior Survey www.cdc.gov/healthyyou
th
121Program Planning
- OSDFS Principles of Effectiveness
- www.ed.gov
- Minnesotas Four Principles of Prevention
- www.health.state.mn.us
- www.health.state.mn.us/alcohol (Alcohol Plan)
- School Improvement Planning Tool Stages
- www.k12.wa.us
- Western CAPT Program Planning
- http//casat.unr.edu/westcapt/
- CDC Framework for Program Evaluation in Public
Health - http//www.cdc.gov/eval/framework.htm
- CDC Planned Approach to Community Health PATCH
- http//www.cdc.gov/nccdphp/patch/index.htm
- NACCHOs Mobilizing for Action through Planning
and Partnerships - http//mapp.naccho.org/MAPP_Home.asp
122Program Planning
- Where these models and tools call for assessment
of need and evaluation to assess strategies,
student survey data can fit the bill
123Use Minnesota Student Survey data here
124Program Evaluation
Process
Impact
Outcome
125Program Evaluation Yes
- Minnesota Student Survey data can be considered
outcome data, especially if your program or
intervention was comprehensive and broad-based - All or almost all students were included as part
of the program
126Program Evaluation No
- These data cannot be considered process data or
impact data for program evaluation - You should be complementing student survey data
with other data (e.g., administrative records,
participant information, pre-post surveys) to
tell the full story about your program or
intervention
127Small Group Brainstorming
- What other local, regional or statewide data are
you using to complement student survey data? - How are you using these data to inform needs
assessment, program planning and/or program
evaluation?
128Time for a Transition. and Some Resources