VARC News

The State of Maine benefits from WCER's Value-Added Research Center (Maine Public Broadcasting, 22 January).

Chris Thorn, Associate Director of VARC, discusses the Pittsburgh merit pay plan (Post-Gazette, 13 December), and how the Bush Foundation is partnering with VARC to evaluate teachers in Minnesota, and North and South Dakota, based on student performance (Pioneer Press, 3 December).

Rob Meyer talks with Todd Finkelmeyer of The Capital Times about value-added models and the "race to the top" (11/10/09).

On November 9, 2009, Wisconsin Public Radio featured the story Metrics system strives to provide comparisons that are "apples-to-apples," about value-added measures and the Value-Added Research Center.

The VARC project is helping NYC schools manage their data (NY Times, 8 September).

Recent VARC Publications

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VARC: Value-Added Research

IRIS: Creating an Integrated Resource System to Assess Student, Teacher, Classroom, and School Effects on Value-Added Student Learning Gains and Support More Cost-Effective Budgeting

Under a grant recently funded by the U.S. Department of Education Institute of Education Sciences (IES) the IRIS project is creating an integrated resource information system (IRIS) for the Milwaukee Public Schools (MPS) that will enable leaders, board members, and teachers to:

  1. Assess student, teacher, classroom, and school effects on value-added student learning gains; and
  2. Connect resources at the school, classroom, and student levels to effectiveness in improving student learning.

IRIS will provide the kind of micro-detail currently not available in any standard state or district data system. It will allow MPS to determine in a systematic way "what works" in the Milwaukee education system in terms of factors related to students (e.g., tutoring, courses), classrooms (e.g., instructional quality, teacher content knowledge, content taught, class size), and schools (e.g., size, extent of professional community, use of instructional coaches, resources dedicated to instructional improvement). This goal can be achieved by using statistical modeling techniques to identify factors that have an impact on student learning gains, holding a variety of other factors constant at various levels of the education system.

Using IRIS, MPS will have the ability to collect the kind of data needed for "what works" analyses, such as:

  • Uses of resources by educational strategy at the school level;
  • Provision of professional development resources at the district and school levels;
  • Teachers' instructional practices and measures of the content that teachers actually teach; and
  • School-level factors such as the degree of professional community, instructional leadership.

The long-term objective of IRIS is not only to modify the MPS budgeting system so it is more effectively linked to outcomes and cost-effectiveness, but also to make it possible to evaluate district resource use initiatives through a link to student learning gains. IRIS can become a prototype for other districts—as well as states—looking to redesign their data systems to support data-driven strategies for improving student achievement.

IRIS is funded by the U.S. Department of Education-Institute of Science (Grant # R305A080038) through the Policy, Finance, and System Education Research Grants Program, Goal 5 (CFDA 84.305.A-1).

IRIS News

AEFA 2009

Sarah Archibald and Michelle Turner Mangan will be presenting at the 2009 American Education Finance Association conference in Nashville, TN on March 20. A draft of their paper, Connecting Spending to Educational Strategies through an Integrated Resource Information System (IRIS), is available.

NCES MIS 2009

Several IRIS project members attended and presented at the 22nd Annual MIS Conference in Seattle, WA.

  • Jeff Watson, of WCER, and Deborah Lindsey, of MPS discussed of the value of student-teacher linkages, analysed the ways in which student-teacher linkages can be compromised and detected, and identified factors that impact the quality of student-teacher data linkages in large urban districts. Microsoft PowerPoint presentation.

  • Jeff Watson and Sara Kraemer of WCER, and Deborah Lindsey, of MPS presented two perspectives of data use in large urban school districts that focused on identifying what works, with a special emphasis on methods, successes, and challeneges associated with extending the capacity of the MPS data warehouse. Microsoft PowerPoint presentation.

Contact

Jeff Watson
Phone: (608) 263-0436
Office: 772 Ed Sciences
jgwatson@wisc.edu