Title: Scientific Based Research: Doing What Works
1Scientific Based ResearchDoing What Works
- Wendy Russell and Emily Crandall
- Region III Comprehensive Center
- May 8, 2003
2Todays Outcomes
- To raise awareness of the importance and
relevance of research for student achievement - To develop skills in using research to identify
what works. - Define SBR
- Assess research quality
- Use research in your decision making
3NCLB Shifts Emphasis
- The push towards scientifically-based research is
the federal governments most visible effort to
shift education practice in a different direction.
4How do you make decisions about programs and
practices?
External evidence
Professional Wisdom
5Where Are You On the Research Road?
6Why SBR?
- Schools have largely based their practice on
tradition, superstition, and anecdotes. - Too much money has been invested in education and
wasted in programs that do not get the intended
results. - Valerie Reyna, Deputy Director
- Office of Educational Research and Improvement
7Cargo Cult Science
- We really ought to look into the theories that
dont work, and science that isnt science.
Richard P. Feynman, 1985
8Primary Goal of SBR
- Ensure that programs have been proven effective
and are more likely to benefit others when used. - For students, afterschool, professional
development, school improvement, etc
9NCLB Legislation Goals
- One hundred percent proficiency for ALL students
in 12 years. - The method for achieving this goal is reasoned
decision-making and transforming education into
an evidence-based profession that utilizes SBR.
10NCLB Defines Scientific Inquiry
- Use scientific method with an emphasis on
experimental control (or comparison) groups - Replication of results, using multiple studies by
different investigators - Ability to generalize results from one sample to
others in the general population - Fulfillment of rigorous standards with an
emphasis on peer review - Convergence (or consistency) of results between
studies.
What makes research scientific is not the motive
for carrying it out, but the manner in which it
is carried out.
11Research 101
- Two types of research
- Collecting numbers quantitative
- Collecting observations qualitative
- Three purposes for research
- To assess the implementation and replicability of
the reform practice or program. - To test a theory behind a practice or program.
- To measure impact, effectiveness of the practice
or program. - The abstract will tell you the type and purpose
of the study.
12Different Research Designs for Different Purposes
- Implementation and replicability
- Type Quantitative or Qualitative
- Theoretical Base
- Type -- Quantitative or Qualitative
- Evidence of Effectiveness
- Type -- Quantitative
13Implementation and Replicability
- Asks
- How was practice or program implemented?
- In what setting?
- Under what conditions?
14Theoretical Base
- Asks
- What is the theory behind this practice or
program? - What are the theorys guiding principles?
- What does the theory explain?
15Evidence of Effectiveness
- Is there evidence showing that this practice or
program improves student achievement? - Core of SBR
16Hierarchy of Evidence
Randomized Trial
Quasi- experimental
Correlational study with statistical controls
Correlational study without statistical controls
Case Studies
Valerie Reyna, OERI
17Systematic Rigorous Methodology
- Gold Standard
- Random Assignment (Experimental)
- Silver Standard
- Control Group-Non Random (Quasi-experimental)
- Bronze Standard
- Case Study
- Lead Standard
- Testimonial, opinion, Intuition, Small sample,
Selective criteria
18Scientifically Based ResearchGold Standard
- Experimental study
- Research Type Quantitative
- Determines potential between practice or program
and student achievement - Controls all of the following
- Environment
- Intervention (practice or program)
- Subject selection (random sampling)
- Shows change in outcome as a result of treatment
19Promising ResearchSilver Standard
- Quasi-experimental study
- When it is not possible to control for at least
one of the three elements of experimental design
- Environment
- Intervention
- Assignment to experimental or control groups
- Cannot determine causality
20Bronze StandardSupplemental Research
- Reports the way things are
- Includes both quantitative and qualitative data
- Descriptive data summarized and simplified.
- Effects on student achievement cannot be
attributed directly to the intervention.
21Whose Research Findings Should I Use?
- Findings/Conclusions Based on
- Multiple studies
- Independent studies
- Peer Reviewed
- Published
- Strong criteria for SBR
22Available Evidence
Become a savvy consumer of research. Only 5 or
less of available research evidence is at Gold
SBR Standard
23Quality and Quantity Challenge
- Where you go to find research.
- Debate, discussion and the review process are
important. - Need for accumulation of studies in order to
establish scientific certainty. - Find quality of works while using the research
currently available. - Context matters.
24Components of all Research Studies
- Abstract
- Objective (problem/purpose
- Research procedure/methodology
- Findings
- Discussion Section
- Conclusion
25Professional Wisdom
- school leaders will need to rely on the best
available empirical evidence and some degree of
professional judgment in creating their programs.
CSR Program Guidelines
26Using Professional Judgment
- Being a critical consumer
- Examining research to determine whether it is
relevant to your context. - Synthesizing findings across studies
- Incorporating the evidence into the
decision-making process.
27Research-Based Decision Process
- Step One Gather relevant, quality research
- Identify research that is
- Of high quality
- Current (within 5 years
- Focused on your interest
- Researched in schools/programs like yours
- Make sure search is extensive to capture all
evidence and analysis
28Research-Based Decision Process
- Step Two Interpret Research for your Context
- Synthesize findings gathered
- Revisit needs
- Revisit and refine focus questions
- Narrow the range of possible solutions/interventio
ns - Make a judgment of the effectiveness of an
intervention from the studies.
29Research-Based Decision Process
- Step Three Make your case
- Make links between
- Identified needs
- Programs and practices that can address these
needs directly - Evidence from the highest quality research
available to support the effectiveness of these
interventions on student achievement.
30More information
- National Clearinghouse for Comprehensive School
Reform - www.goodschools.gwu.edu
- What Works Clearinghouse
- w-w-c.org
- e-mail updates wwcinfo_at_w-w-c.org
31Final Point
- Scientific research in education is about
accumulating knowledge. - Scientific understanding coalesces as it
progresses, to make sense of systems, experiences
and phenomena. - Science advances understanding of various
phenomena through sustained inquiry and debate.
NRC, Scientific Research in Education