Title: Update%20from%20ECO:%20Possible%20Approaches%20to%20Measuring%20Outcomes
1Update from ECO Possible Approaches to
Measuring Outcomes
Kathleen Hebbeler SRI International
Prepared for the OSEP Early Childhood Meeting
Washington, DC February 2005
2Todays presentation
- Update on the outcomes
- Approaches to measurement
- Next steps and timeline
3Update on the Child and Family Outcomes
- Have been gathering input for 12 months
- Input from advisors, work groups, presentations,
conference calls, public input solicited through
web site
4What should be in the outcomes?
- The outcomes should be statements of what EI and
ECSE are trying to do for families and children. - Statements at the most fundamental level of what
these programs are all about.
5Considerations and criteria
- Consistent with IDEA and legislative intent
- Apply to the entire birth to 5 age span
- Apply to all families and children in EI and ECSE
- Easily compatible with outcomes of other early
childhood initiatives/ programs
6Input Recieved
- 2 conference calls with gt200 participants total
- On-line survey (61 responses)
- Emails (35)
- On-line discussion forum (1)
7Who responded?
- Fairly equally divided between Part C and
Preschool - About half local and half state level
- About 10 family members
8Family Outcomes posted for comments
- Families know their rights and advocate
effectively for their child. - 2. Families understand their child's abilities
and special needs - 3. Families help their child develop and learn.
- 4. Families have the supports they want.
- 5. Families participate in desired services and
activities that are available to all families in
their community.
9Feedback from the field
- The word advocate in 1 has adversarial
connotations to some - 2 should include strengths
- Controversy over outcomes 4 and 5
- The word want in 4
- 4 and 5 (and some thought 3) went beyond the
requirements of Part B Section 619 Preschool
Programs
10Family Outcomes
- Families understand their childrens strengths,
abilities and special needs - Families know their rights and effectively
communicate their childrens needs. - Families help their children develop and learn
- Families feel they have adequate social supports
- Families are able to access services, programs,
and activities that are available to all families
in their communities
11Recommendations
- All five family outcomes apply to Part C
- Family outcomes numbers 1 and 2, and maybe 3,
apply to 619.
12Child Outcomes as posted for comment
- Children have positive social relationships
- Children acquire and use knowledge and skills
- Children take action to meet their needs
13Feedback from the field
- The child outcomes were supported by the majority
(gt80) of those providing comments, across Part
C, Part B 619, and families - Outcome 3 was the most difficult to understand
respondents suggested adding appropriate
14Child Outcomes
- 1. Children have positive social relationships
- 2. Children acquire and use knowledge and skills
- 3. Children take appropriate action to meet
their needs
15Recommendation
- All three child outcomes apply to both Part C and
619
16Feedback on the Preface
- Nearly all supported the concepts
- Many excellent suggestions for wording
refinements/ minor edits
17Measurement of Child Outcomes
18Definition of Measurement
- Measurement - Tools and techniques to quantify
the childs status on aspects of functioning for
example - Norm-based assessments
- Curriculum-based measures
- Rating scales
19Criteria and Considerations
- Children with disabilities already have
assessment data -- but not from the same
assessments - Highly probable most data will be collected by
local providers - Need to minimize burden try to incorporate into
existing procedures
20Criteria and Considerations
- Children with disabilities may be participating
in other assessment systems - Outcome measurement should be as valid and
reliable as possible - Quality of data will get better over the first
few years
21Pitfall Alert!
- What we want for children and families (desired
outcomes) reflects our values - What we want for young children may not be the
same as what can be easily measured - When what is valued and what can be measured
easily or well do not line up, EITHER - Outcomes will be determined by what can be
measured easily or well, OR - Some of the outcomes will be more easily measured
or more adequately measured than others
22- There is no perfect system
- but you get to choose the shortcomings you will
live with
23Standardized Assessment and Young Children
- Reliability
- Interested in behavior over multiple settings but
many assessments reflect behavior in one setting
(validity, generalizability) - Appropriateness of assessment for children with
disabilities - Accommodations
- Qualifications of assessors
24Measurement Options for Producing Aggregated Data
at the State Level
- All children in state assessed with same measure
- Different assessments are used and they are
converted to the same metric
25State
Local
Local
State
Local
OSEP
State
State
26So What Is the Metric?
- Some kind of scale
- Two alternative scales are possible
- Age-anchored
- Continuous progress
- Each has strengths and weaknesses
27Measurement Decision
- Givens
- Different children will have different kinds of
assessment data - The same child will have several different kinds
of assessment data - Challenge How to convert multiple pieces of
information (e.g., scores from several
standardized assessments, informed clinical
opinion, parent report) to a single score?
28 Assessment 1
Conversion Process
Assessment 2
Single Score
Parent Report
Informed Clinical Opinion
29How to get to a single score from multiple
sources of information
- Mathematical conversion from assessment data
- Mathematical conversion with an exception for
clinical judgment or parent input - Team rating that uses all information on the
child to derive a score
30Team derives rating
- Structured process to derive rating
- Guidance materials would be produced for how to
derive ratings incorporating mathematical
conversions for common (good) assessment
instruments - Training materials would be developed
31Team derives rating
- Pro
- IDEA places great value on team decision-making
(eligibility, service decision) - Literature suggests teams can produce reliable
ratings data - Could be part of IFSP or IEP process (does this
make it more acceptable to providers?)
32Team derives rating
- Consistent with best practices in child
assessment - Uses multiple sources of information
- Does not put undue weight on standardized
assessments - Develop systems of analyses so that test scores
are interpreted as part of a broader assessment
that may include observations, portfolios, or
ratings from teachers and/or parents. - - Natl Institute for Early Education Research
33Team derives rating
- Con
- Requires functioning team
- Requires some knowledge of typical child
development depending on rating scale - Would require lots of training
34Team derives rating Unanswered questions
- What would be required to get reliable ratings?
- Would the resulting data be seen as credible?
35Next steps
- Feb - Fall 2005 Collect input on measurement
approach - Spring 2005 Develop measurement approach and
accompanying materials. Small scale pilot work
on measurement approach for 1-2 child outcomes
and all family outcomes - Summer 2005 Continued development work and
pilot work on the other outcomes
36Next steps (continued)
- Fall 2005 Large scale field testing of
measurement of child and family outcomes - Winter 2005 Revisions based on field testing
- Early Spring 2006 Release of procedures and
materials for use by all states - Summer 2006 and onward Revision to materials
based on research on implementation. Ongoing
development of training materials.
37- All of this is very tentative
- Each next step assumes the previous step is
completed on time and the recommendation is
accepted.
38- Follow developments on the web site
- Contact us with questions