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Webinar: What Is Student Engagement and How Do We Measure It? March 27, 2014

Webinar: What Is Student Engagement and How Do We Measure It? March 27, 2014

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Page 1: Webinar: What Is Student Engagement and How Do We Measure It? March 27, 2014

Webinar:What Is Student Engagement and

How Do We Measure It?

March 27, 2014

Page 2: Webinar: What Is Student Engagement and How Do We Measure It? March 27, 2014

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WebEx Instructions

Page 3: Webinar: What Is Student Engagement and How Do We Measure It? March 27, 2014

WebEx instructions

Attendees can provide non-verbal feedback to presenters utilizing the Feedback tool.

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Page 4: Webinar: What Is Student Engagement and How Do We Measure It? March 27, 2014

WebEx instructions

Feedback options:

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Page 5: Webinar: What Is Student Engagement and How Do We Measure It? March 27, 2014

WebEx instructions

Responses to poll questions can be

entered in the Polling Panel.

Remember to click “Submit” once you have selected your

answer(s).

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Page 6: Webinar: What Is Student Engagement and How Do We Measure It? March 27, 2014

WebEx instructions

Attendees should utilize the “Q&A” feature to pose questions to the speaker, panelists, and/or host.

The host will hold all questions directed toward the speaker or

panelists, and they will be answered during a Q&A session at the end of

each discussion.

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Page 7: Webinar: What Is Student Engagement and How Do We Measure It? March 27, 2014

Welcome and Overview

Lydotta M. Taylor, Ed.D.Research Alliance Lead, REL Appalachia

The EdVenture Group

Page 8: Webinar: What Is Student Engagement and How Do We Measure It? March 27, 2014

Agenda

1. Welcome and Overview

• What is a REL?

• REL Appalachia’s Mission

• Introductions and Webinar Goals

2. What Is Student Engagement?

3. Measuring Student Engagement

4. Using Student Engagement Data

5. Q&A

6. Wrap-up

7. Stakeholder Feedback Survey

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Page 9: Webinar: What Is Student Engagement and How Do We Measure It? March 27, 2014

What is a REL?

• A REL is a Regional Educational Laboratory.• There are 10 RELs across the country.• The REL program is administered by the U.S. Department of Education,

Institute of Education Sciences (IES).• A REL serves the education needs of a designated region.• The REL works in partnership with the region’s school districts, state

departments of education, and others to use data and research to improve academic outcomes for students.

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Page 10: Webinar: What Is Student Engagement and How Do We Measure It? March 27, 2014

What is a REL?

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Page 11: Webinar: What Is Student Engagement and How Do We Measure It? March 27, 2014

REL Appalachia’s mission

• Meet the applied research and technical assistance needs of Kentucky, Tennessee, Virginia, and West Virginia.

• Conduct empirical research and analysis.• Bring evidence-based information to policy makers and practitioners:

– Inform policy and practice – for states, districts, schools, and other stakeholders.

– Focus on high-priority, discrete issues and build a body of knowledge over time.

http://www.RELAppalachia.org

Follow us! @REL_Appalachia

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Page 12: Webinar: What Is Student Engagement and How Do We Measure It? March 27, 2014

Introductions and Webinar Goals

Lydotta M. Taylor, Ed.D.Research Alliance Lead, REL Appalachia

The EdVenture Group

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Page 13: Webinar: What Is Student Engagement and How Do We Measure It? March 27, 2014

Speaker

Jerry Johnson, Ed.D.

Associate ProfessorCollege of Education and Human Services

University of North Florida

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Page 14: Webinar: What Is Student Engagement and How Do We Measure It? March 27, 2014

Webinar goals

• Introduce participants to the construct of student engagement.• Increase participants’ understanding of the research around student

engagement, and how it can be measured.• Provide participants with best practices and tools that can increase

student engagement in their schools and classrooms.

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Page 15: Webinar: What Is Student Engagement and How Do We Measure It? March 27, 2014

What Is Student Engagement and How Do We Measure It?

Jerry Johnson, Ed.D.Associate Professor, University of North Florida

Page 16: Webinar: What Is Student Engagement and How Do We Measure It? March 27, 2014

What is student engagement?

• Student engagement has been defined variously by different researchers and theorists, but there is consistency around key ideas.

• A broad conceptual definition that reflects those varied perspectives:

Student engagement is a measure of the extent to which a student willingly participates in schooling activities.

• There is consensus among researchers and theorists that student engagement is a multidimensional construct with four elements:

– Academic engagement.

– Affective engagement.

– Behavioral engagement.

– Cognitive engagement.

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Page 17: Webinar: What Is Student Engagement and How Do We Measure It? March 27, 2014

What does existing research say about student engagement?

• Student engagement is closely associated with desirable schooling outcomes (higher attendance, higher academic achievement, fewer disciplinary incidents, lower dropout and retention rates, higher graduation rates).

(Appleton, Christenson, & Furlong, 2008; Finn, 1989, 1993; Fredricks, Blumenfeld, & Paris, 2004; Jimerson, Campos, & Grief, 2003; Jimerson, Renshaw, Stewart, Hart, & O’Malley, 2009; Shernoff & Schmidt, 2008)

• Student engagement is closely associated with general measures of well-being (lower rates of health problems, lower rates of high-risk behaviors).

(Carter, McGee, Taylor, & Williams, 2007; McNeely, Nonnemaker, & Blum, 2002; Patton et al., 2006)

• Student engagement levels can be effectively influenced through school-based interventions.

(Appleton, Christenson, Kim, & Reschly, 2006; Christenson et al., 2008; Fredricks, Blumenfeld, & Paris, 2004)

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Poll: Familiarity with measures of student engagement

Please take a moment to answer this poll question. Check your response and then click on “Submit.”

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Report on 21 instruments to measure student engagement

Measuring student engagement in upper elementary through high school: a description of 21 instruments

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Overview of the report

• Stated purpose of the report

• Content and structure• Definitions, instrument types, psychometric properties

• Instrument abstracts

• Tables for comparing instrument attributes (e.g., developer/availability, engagement dimensions assessed, intended purposes/uses)

• Potential uses for stakeholders

• Accessing the report http://ies.ed.gov/ncee/edlabs/regions/southeast/pdf/REL_2011098.pdf

Page 21: Webinar: What Is Student Engagement and How Do We Measure It? March 27, 2014

How is student engagement measured?

• Three primary data collection strategies are available for measuring student engagement:• Student self-reports.

• Teacher reports.

• Observational measures.

• Three dimensions of engagement are assessed via available instruments:• Behavioral (i.e., the student’s involvement in academic, social, and

extracurricular activities).

• Affective/emotional (i.e., extent of the student’s positive [and negative] reactions to teachers, classmates, academics, and school).

• Cognitive (i.e., the student’s level of investment in his/her learning).

Note: Academic engagement is measured using traditional outcome data, such as student achievement results.

(Fredericks et al., 2011)

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Page 22: Webinar: What Is Student Engagement and How Do We Measure It? March 27, 2014

What are the intended uses of these measures?

• Research purposes:• Research on motivation and cognition.

• Research on dropping out.

• Evaluation of interventions.

• Diagnosis and monitoring:• Teachers, school, or district level.

• Student level.

• Needs assessment.

(Fredericks et al., 2011)

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Highlighting three measures of student engagement

• The three measures of student engagement we are about to discuss were selected for this session because they:– Represent the three types of student self-report instruments available

(unidimensional, bidimensional, and multidimensional).

– Demonstrate strong psychometric properties.

– Are explicitly linked to the extant research on factors associated with student success.

– Are designed for use in reporting school and/or district level results.

Page 24: Webinar: What Is Student Engagement and How Do We Measure It? March 27, 2014

Highlighting three measures of student engagement

1. Identification with School Questionnaire (ISQ):• Student self-report survey; developed using a sample from grade 8.

• Measures affective/emotional engagement (unidimensional).

• Designed for use with research on dropping out; evaluation of class size interventions; and evaluation of magnet school interventions.

• 16 items; approximately 15 minutes to complete.

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Highlighting three measures of student engagement

2. Student Engagement Instrument (SEI):• Student self-report survey; designed for grades 6‒12.

• Measures affective/emotional and cognitive engagement (bidimensional).

• Designed for use with research on dropping out; evaluation of dropout prevention interventions; monitoring engagement levels at the teacher, school, or district level; and diagnosing/monitoring at the student level.

• 33 items; approximately 15 minutes to complete.

Page 26: Webinar: What Is Student Engagement and How Do We Measure It? March 27, 2014

Highlighting three measures of student engagement

3. High School Survey of Student Engagement (HSSE):• Student self-report survey; designed for grades 9‒12.

• Measures behavioral, affective/emotional, and cognitive engagement (multidimensional).

• Designed for use in monitoring engagement levels at the teacher, school, or district level.

• 121 items; approximately 30 minutes to complete.

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Page 27: Webinar: What Is Student Engagement and How Do We Measure It? March 27, 2014

How are these measures used by school districts?

• Background: Understanding engagement as a continuum:• Dropping out of school is not an event but a process.

• Engagement can be understood as a marker for where a student is on the continuum from dropping out to being fully engaged/successful (including measures of college and career readiness).

(Appleton et al., 2008; Jimerson et al., 2009; Sinclair, Christenson, Evelo, & Hurley, 1998; Sinclair, Christenson, & Thurlow, 2005)

• Applied use of student engagement measures by schools and school districts:• Needs assessment and targeting of interventions at the classroom, school, and

district levels.

• Needs assessment and targeting of interventions at the student level.(Christenson et al., 2008)

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Page 28: Webinar: What Is Student Engagement and How Do We Measure It? March 27, 2014

REL AP work with stakeholders on student engagement• Proposed REL Appalachia technical assistance project: Using Student

Engagement Survey Data to Inform School-wide Programs and Strategies.

• Kentucky:• Participating school districts will attend a one-day workshop to identify an

appropriate instrument (from those described in Measuring student engagement in upper elementary through high school: a description of 21 instruments) and to build capacity with regard to survey administration.

• School district will collect data and submit to REL Appalachia.

• REL Appalachia staff will analyze the data and prepare school data memos.

• REL Appalachia will then host a debriefing workshop to share/discuss results, help identify appropriate interventions, and assist in planning next steps.

• West Virginia:• The state will be using its own survey instrument, with REL Appalachia staff

conducting analyses, preparing data memos, and facilitating the debriefing workshop.

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Page 29: Webinar: What Is Student Engagement and How Do We Measure It? March 27, 2014

Wrap-up and Closing Remarks

Stakeholder Feedback Survey

Lydotta M. Taylor, Ed.D.Research Alliance Lead, REL Appalachia

The EdVenture Group

Page 30: Webinar: What Is Student Engagement and How Do We Measure It? March 27, 2014

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Stakeholder Feedback Survey access information

Please visit

https://checkbox.cna.org/StudentEngagement.aspx

to provide feedback on today’s webinar event.