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Pennsylvania Value-Added Assessment System (PVAAS)
PVAAS Growth Standard Methodology:
Statewide Implementation
Questions about these materials and the Growth Standard Methodology can be directed to the PVAAS Statewide Core Team. See contact info on Slide 31.
Important Questions for Value-added Calculations1. What is a Growth Standard and
how is it set?
2. How can we compare scores across different years?
3. How do we estimate a student’s true level of achievment?
The Growth Standard: Key Metric in PVAAS
• The Growth Standard specifies the minimal designated academic gain from grade to grade for a cohort of students.
• The use of a Growth Standard creates the possibility that ALL schools can demonstrate appropriate growth.
PENNSYLVANIA
Value-AddedAssessment System
An Analogy
PENNSYLVANIA
Value-AddedAssessment System
An Analogy
• Doctors plot a child’s length/height over time.
• Each child may have a unique growth curve.
When growth “acceptable”?
• The length/height measurement is increasing over time.
• The length/height measurement maintains the approximate position in its length/height distributions as the child grows.
• The child’s length/height continues to increase in a consistent manner.
A significant deviation of the growth pattern or a change outside the “typical” range of values is an indication that further investigation is required.
What is the Growth Standard for a child’s length/height?
• The standard is that the child maintain the approximate same position each of the increasing distributions of length/heights as the child grows.
• A significant deviation from that pattern indicates a need for further investigation.
Growth Standard Charts for Academic Achievement
Let us build an Academic Achievement Growth Chart.
1. Collect the average performances of a large sample of students using a uniform assessment during each year of their career through school.
2. Plot curves to represent appropriate percentile patterns.
3. An example: Suppose the following table represents the means and SDs of a group of students on the PSSA beginning in 3rd grade and continuing through 8th grade and ultimately 11th grade.
In an ideal world…
• We would have a large body of longitudinal data from many cohorts to construct our growth charts.
• Since we do not, we will use the distributions from a base year for the creation of the growth curves.
• The base year distributions are approximates to the achievement distributions of a cohort from grade 3 to grade 8 and 11.
Using the Base Year 2006
Suppose the distributions from 2006 are given by
Grade 3 4 5 6
Mean 1270 1290 1300 1285
SD 250 310 255 276
Conversion to NCE scores will use the Base Year distributions in their calculations.
Suppose the means of a cohort in two consecutive years are:2007: 3rd 1390 and 2008: 4th 1450
NCE scores are calculated for both using the 2006 means and SD’s.
Grade 3 4
Mean 1270 1290
SD 250 310
2007: 3rd 1390
2008: 4th 1450
1390 12700.48
25050 21.06*0.48
60.11
z score
NCE score
1450 12900.52
31050 21.06*0.52
60.95
z score
NCE score
All future PSSA scaled scores will be converted to NCE scores using the 2006 Base year parameters for the comparison to calculate the mean gain of a cohort of students.
PENNSYLVANIA
Value-AddedAssessment System
The NCE Growth Curves
NCE PSSA Math
Grade Score SD <new>
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
3 50.00 21.06
4 50.00 21.06
5 50.00 21.06
6 50.00 21.06
7 50.00 21.06
8 50.00 21.06
11 50.00 21.06
3 71.06 0
20
40
60
80
100
Grade3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12
NCE PSSA Math Scatter Plot
PENNSYLVANIA
Value-AddedAssessment System
Some Thoughts…• This Growth Standard concept demonstrates the need
for longitudinal data when considering academic growth since each student has his/her own academic growth curve.But…
• The example also exhibits the remaining two issues for PVAAS value-added methods:
1. Comparing scores from year to year
2. Estimate the “true” level of achievement for input into the growth curve.
Calculation of Gain from year to year
Student growth is measured by difference in performance in consecutive years.
Grade 3 4 5 6
Score 1290 1310 1330 1365
Gain 20 20 35
But there is a problem with this!
These scores are not comparable!
Comparing scaled scores on the PSSA from different years
PSSA tests have different means and standard deviations at each grade and for different years. For example, in 8th grade:
Math Reading
Year Mean SD Mean SD
2005 1370 222.2 1360 274.3
2004 1350 208.1 1370 239.7
A Solution: Conversion to NCE Scores
• NCE scores indicate the position of a scaled score on a reference scale (mean = 50, sd = 21.06) so that the scaled scores from different distributions with different scales can be compared.
• The use of NCE scores does not impose a normal distribution on the data, nor does the use of NCE scores have any relationship to normed referenced tests.
• NCEs are excellent for looking at scores over time.Using Data to Improve Student Learning in High Schools
Victoria L. Bernhardt
NCE Scores Are About Position
To calculate an NCE score:1. Calculate the z-score of the data value of interest, that is,
the number of standard deviations the data value is from the mean of its distribution:
2. The NCE score is calculated using the following formula:
observed score meanz score
SD
50 21.06*( )NCE score z score
A Question…
• George scores a 655 on the SAT mathematics exam.
• George also scores a 28 on the ACT mathematics exam.
Which score should he report to his colleges if he wants to
provide the “better” score?
A Matter of Comparison
How do we compare George’s scores?
Mean SD George
SAT 520 110 655
ACT 20.7 5.0 28
The nature of each distribution is irrelevant to the question of interest:
A Solution
• Conversion of both scores to NCE scores allows for the identification of the position of each score on the same scale.
• This identification of position provides the capability of comparison since the converted scores will be based on the same distribution parameters.
Which Score Should George Choose to Report?
655 52050 21.06* 75.85
110NCE score
Using a NCE scale with mean 50 and standard deviation 21.06…
SAT score of 655 NCE score 75.85
ACT score of 28 NCE score 80.74
Clearly, he should report his ACT score!
ACTscore
SATscore
28 20.750 21.06* 80.74
5.0NCE score
Consider Another Hypothetical Scenario…
In 2006, Wilma was in 4th grade and scored as follows on the 4th grade PSSA:
Mean for 4th Grade – 2006 = 1303.24
Standard Deviation for 4th Grade – 2006 = 164.20
Wilma’s scaled score = 1425
In 2005, Wilma was in 3rd grade and scored as follows on the 3rd grade PSSA:
Mean for 3rd Grade – 2005 = 1356.75
Standard Deviation for 3rd Grade – 2005 = 126.20
Wilma’s scaled score = 1425
Do these scores indicated that Wilma progressed during 4th grade?
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Value-AddedAssessment System
Let’s Look at it Graphically…
Even though Wilma’s scaled scores were the same (both 1425), since the distributions were different, we really can’t compare the two scores…
Wilma Wilma
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Value-AddedAssessment System
A Tentative Solution: Conversion to Percentiles
In our example, Wilma score of 1425 was in the 66th percentile for 2005 but was in the 76th percentile for 2006. These percentiles focus on Wilma’s position in
each distribution.
WilmaWilma
But…
• We cannot calculate Wilma’s gain – the difference of percentiles does not make sense…
• Percentiles are not meaningful for calculating means for different years, gains, etc., since they are calculated from different distributions.
The Complete Solution: Conversion to NCE Scores
• To establish a basis of comparison for different distributions from different schools in different years, we convert the scaled scores to units in the SAME scale.
• The scale we will use is from the NCE distribution with mean 50 and standard deviation approximately equal to 21.06.
Mean
The NCE Distribution and Wilma
Wilma’s NCE score for 2005 (3rd grade) is 61 while her score for 2006 (4th grade) is 66.
Wilma2006
4th
Wilma20053rd
Wilma’s gain…
Wilma’s gain = 2006 NCE score – 2005 NCE score
(4th Grade) (3rd Grade)
= 66 – 61
= + 5
• The mean gain of all of the students in Wilma’s cohort can now be compared to the Growth Standard for growth for Wilma’s cohort.
PENNSYLVANIA
Value-AddedAssessment System
PVAAS Statewide Methodology
Student ATest
Score(2009)
Student ABase YearNCE Score
(2006)
2009 Observed School Mean NCE Scores
The Problem with the Mean of the Observed Scores
The mean of the observed NCE scores at best represents a single snapshot in time of student achievement of the PSSA Anchors…
Is it the most comprehensive assessment of the school’s TRUE level of achievement?
How about the Bad Day syndrome?
Observed vs. Composite Estimate…Which is better?
What if we combined the new, observed data with all of the prior PSSA assessment information that we have for this cohort of students?
Would not a longitudinal view of the cohort’s performance yield a more precise and reliable estimate of the true level of achievement?
This is the essence and power of the PVAAS methodology!
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Consider an Example…
Determine the percent of candies that are blue…
If you were to open only one bag and find that 13% of the candies are blue, how much confidence would you have in your estimate of the true percentage of blue candies for all candies?
PENNSYLVANIA
Value-AddedAssessment System
Only One Sample? A Bit Risky…
Let’s open 50 bags and look at the distribution of the percents of blue candies…
Looking at these 50 bags, what would you estimate the “true” percent of blue candies for all candies?
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Value-AddedAssessment System
What If?
Let’s open 50 more bags and add them to the 50 selected earlier…
Distribution with n = 50
Distribution with n = 100
With this additional data, we can make a better estimate of the true percent of blue candies!
PENNSYLVANIA
Value-AddedAssessment System
PVAAS Statewide Methodology
Computer
2009 Observed School Mean NCE Scores
2008 Estimated
School Mean NCE Score
2007 Estimated
School Mean NCE Score
2006 Estimated
School Mean NCE Score
2009 Estimated School Mean NCE Scores
Gain =2009 Estimate – 2008 Estimate
Compare to Growth Standard
School Rating
How to Measure Growth of a School?
Using a Growth Standard
• Student scaled scores are converted to NCE scores (2006 parameters).
• The mean NCE score for each school is calculated.• PVAAS revises all earlier estimates based on the addition of the
current data. • PVAAS calculates an estimated NCE mean score.
Estimated Mean NCE Gain = Current Estimated NCE mean – Previous Estimated NCE mean
• Gain is compared to Growth Standard for School Effect Rating.
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Here is the Fall 2006 PVAAS District/School Report
PENNSYLVANIA
Value-AddedAssessment System
Gain RatingsMean NCE Gain for a cohort in a given year represents the progress of students in that cohort relative to the Growth Standard of 0.
Color ratings:
Green – mean gain greater than or
equal to the Growth Standard
favorable indicator
Yellow – mean gain less than one SE
below the Growth Standard
warning sign
Light Red – mean gain is between
one and two SE’s below the Growth
Standard stronger caution
Red – mean gain less two SE’s
below the Growth Standard most
serious warning
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Level of Evidence – The Role of Standard Error
The color-coded ratings on the mean gain of cohorts are based on the level of confidence we have that the gain of the cohort is truly below the Growth Standard…
More than 2 SE’s below Growth
Standard
Between 1 and 2 SE’s below
Growth Standard
Less than 1 SE below Growth
Standard
At or above the Growth Standard
Significant Evidence of Lack
of Progress
Greater Evidenceof Lack
of Progress
Slight Evidenceof Lack
of ProgressTHE GOAL
The Power of PVAAS
The power of this methodology is that it produces:
– Accurate estimates of the true level of achievement of the students in this school.
– Updated estimates of all prior mean performance estimates simultaneously as new data is input into the longitudinal data structure.
– Over time, more accurate and reliable estimates of the true level of understanding of the students in this grade or school.
Gerald L. Zahorchak, D.Ed. Secretary of Education
Commonwealth of Pennsylvania
www.pde.state.pa.us
333 Market Street Harrisburg, PA 17126