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Value-Added As A Screening Device: Part II

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It sounds to me like we may be trying very hard to find some use for what is basically unsound practice. Perhaps the effort to evaluate teachers would be more effective if we left VAM behind and moved on to evaluation methods that have proven to be successful. The issue of teacher training has been largely ignored in my state, Fla., and others too I suspect. As a retired NBCT, I wonder why states care so little for training, and why it is so easy to qualify for a teaching job in the first place. Pay obviously plays a role in that systemic weakness.

In response to Mike G - It seems pretty clear that value-added measures of student test score growth and classroom observations of teachers (typically using Danielson-based rubrics) are capturing different dimensions of teaching (see Rothstein, J. & Mathis, W.J. (2013). Review of “Have We Identified Effective Teachers?” and “A Composite Estimator of Effective Teaching”: Culminating findings from the Measures of Effective Teaching Project. Boulder, CO: National Education Policy Center. Retrieved [1/31/13] from http://nepc.colorado.edu/thinktank/review-MET-final-2013.) I don’t know a good reason why one would expect there to be a high degree of correlation between these measures. Unfortunately, policymakers and other elected officials, the overwhelming majority of whom lack the training and expertise to understand the myriad methodological issues involved, simplistically ASSUME that teacher value-added scores are the most valid measure of their effectiveness. It doesn’t help that so many academic studies engage in what many have noted is the circular reasoning of demonstrating that prior value-added is the best predictor of effectiveness, measured as current value-added. Despite being warned of this trap, Pennsylvania’s education policymakers are planning to rate principals, in part, based on the correlation between their classroom evaluations of teachers and the value-added scores the same teachers obtain (so much for the independence of these "multiple" measures.) I hope that more and more academics will be turning their attention to the evaluation systems that are live and going live very soon. One would hope that they would be very aggressive in their attempts to correct inappropriate and destructive practices.

Hi Doug--check out the new observation schedule from the TN DOE. They're now taking teachers' individual growth scores into account when deciding how frequently they should be observed in subsequent observation cycles. The scores are composites, but it's still a move toward a type of "screening" process...Hope this helps! See this chart: http://team-tn.org/assets/misc/Number%20of%20Observations%20Teacher%20List%20Template_12_13.pdf

First, thank you for all your thought on this - the book, last blog, this blog. All great reading. Can you comment on where you see VAM versus observations (and if you feel like it, student surveys)? How did you react to seeing the measly correlation of observations with VAM in the MET study, something like 0.2?

As for the origin of the proposal to use VAM as a screening device, it predates any of the citations offered in this blog entry. Consider the following quote: One can envision VAM results serving as a component of a multidimensional system of evaluation; however, this possibility would have to be evaluated in light of the specifics of such a system and the context of use. In the meantime, one can support the use of VAM results as a first screen in a process to identify schools in need of assistance or teachers in need of targeted professional development. Subsequent stages should involve interviews and/or direct observation since statistical analyses cannot identify the strategies and practices employed by educators. In some districts, VAM results have been used successfully in this manner by principals and teachers in devising individualized improvement strategies. From Henry Braun and Howard Wainer. (2007). “Value-Added Modeling.” Handbook of Statistics. Vol. 26, (Elsevier). p. 899.

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