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OECD Review on Evaluation and Assessment Frameworks for Improving School Outcomes

OECD Review on Evaluation and Assessment Frameworks for Improving School Outcomes. Emerging findings and policy directions. www.oecd.org/edu/evaluationpolicy. Conference of Education International affiliates in OECD countries Framing Education for the Public Good 29-30 January 2013

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OECD Review on Evaluation and Assessment Frameworks for Improving School Outcomes

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  1. OECD Review on Evaluation and Assessment Frameworks for Improving School Outcomes Emerging findings and policy directions www.oecd.org/edu/evaluationpolicy Conference of Education International affiliates in OECD countries Framing Education for the Public Good 29-30 January 2013 Presentation by Paulo Santiago Directorate for Education, OECD

  2. 1. Key Features of the Review

  3. KEY FEATURES OF REVIEW • Comprehensive overview of national approaches to E&A • Overall framework and individual components student assessment, teacher appraisal, school evaluation, school leader appraisal, education system evaluation • High levels of participation • 26 education systems (25 countries) preparing a country background report (CBR) • 14 country reviews • A wide range of stakeholders involved • National co-ordinators and informal groups within countries to produce CBRs • 28 external reviewers involved in OECD-led Review teams • About 90 schools visited and over 2 500 persons interviewed • Links with other international organisations and key stakeholder groups (BIAC, TUAC, EC, Eurydice, the World Bank, SICI, UNESCO) • A range of outputs • 26 CBRs (10 to be published) • 14 Country Review reports (4 to be published) • 11 Background and commissioned papers (2 to be published) • Final Synthesis Report (to be published in April 2013)

  4. 2. Key themes

  5. 1 - The need to focus on the improvement of classroom practices Trends: • There is often focus on structures, programmes and resources in a top-down approach and less reflection on establishing the channels which foster improvement in the classroom Potential: • Impact on classroom practices, including the potential for E&A to drive innovation in education and promote new types of teaching and learning (T&L) • Supporting teachers and students in gathering information that can inform further T&L Challenges: • E&A have no value if they do not lead to the improvement of classroom practice and student learning • Improvement function accomplished more at a local level – difficult for policy to reach classroom • Risks that E&A procedures do not place adequate focus on T&L Options: • Design the E&A framework in order to facilitate impact on classroom practices • Ensure that the evaluation of T&L quality is central to evaluation procedures • Build on teacher professionalism

  6. 2 - The growing prominence of accountability as a purpose of evaluation Trends: • Public reporting of school results (greater transparency, reporting requirements); rewards and sanctions on the basis of E&A results (e.g. teachers, schools) Potential: • Creation of incentives for improved performance – opportunity to recognise and reward • Identification of underperformance • Information for parents and society Challenges: • Range of potential detrimental effects (e.g. “teaching-to-the-test”, “narrowing of curriculum”) • Accountability function of evaluation not to hinder the improvement function • Conveys a “control”, “compliance”, “measurement” concept of evaluation • It might constrain the ownership of E&A by school agents Options: • Communicate purposes of E&A • Build on a range of E&A components achieving a variety of functions • Publication of quantitative data to be perceived as fair by schools and set in a wider set of evidence • Avoid overemphasis on student standardised tests as an accountability instrument • Cautious with performance-based rewards (e.g. career advancement rather than bonuses)

  7. 3 - The rise of educational measurement and indicators development Trends: • The growing emphasis on measuring student outcomes; the proliferation of education indicators; and the establishment of education targets Potential: • Student outcomes as the focal point for analysis • Monitoring key student learning outcomes, including 21st century skills • Formative use of standardised tests • Holding stakeholders accountable Challenges: • Ensuring breadth of performance measures • Securing fair and meaningful comparisons • Avoiding detrimental effects of uses for accountability • Preventing dominance of the quantitative over the qualitative Options: • Ensure policy making is informed by high quality data, but not driven by their availability • Give a prominent role to qualitative analysis and research • Ensure a broad approach to national monitoring • Clarity of purposes for the uses of standardised tests results

  8. 4 - The imperative of building capacity for evaluation and assessment Trends: E&A policies often introduced with no due attention to capacity development Potential: • Reinforces effectiveness of E&A procedures, including use of results • Engages students as active learners • Strengthens teacher professionalism Challenges: Legitimacy of evaluators and accountability procedures; skills to benefit from E&A Examples of areas for capacity development: standardised test development; formative assessment; assessment against standards; running systems of externally-based student examinations; analytical capacity in education agencies to use system level information; data handling skills of school agents; formal evaluators of individual school agents; competencies for classroom observation. Options: • Sustain efforts to improve student and teacher capacity for E&A • Strengthen school leaders’ capacity for school development and instructional leadership • Ensure support from educational authorities and identification of best practice • Need for a strong capability at the national level to steer evaluation and to promote use of results for improvement

  9. 5 – The advantages of fostering synergies within the E&A framework Trends: • Most countries do not have an integrated E&A framework but instead a series of components operating at different levels that developed independently of each other over time Potential: • Build synergies • Generate complementarities • Avoid duplication • Prevent inconsistency of objectives Challenges and options: • Establish articulations within the E&A framework • Within specific components of the overall E&A framework e.g. teacher appraisal and teacher professional development; self- and external school evaluation • Between specific components of the overall E&A framework e.g. teacher appraisal, school evaluation and school development; school evaluation and system evaluation; school evaluation and the appraisal of school principals • Processes to ensure the consistency of E&A procedures e.g. moderation processes for teacher appraisal and teacher-based assessment • Clarify responsibilities across the framework

  10. TEACHER EVALUATION – POLICY OPTIONS • Governance • Establish teaching standards to guide teacher professional development and appraisal • Clarify the purposes of teacher appraisal and ensure that it fits national education objectives • Ensure links between the different appraisal types • Procedures • Develop distinct teacher appraisal processes for: (i) professional development; and (ii) career progression • Use multiple instruments and sources of evidence • Provide support for effective classroom observations • Establish safeguards against simplistic use of student results for teacher appraisal • Responsibilities and competencies • Build capacity for effective teacher appraisal • Reporting and use of results • Ensure that teacher appraisal (developmental appraisal) feeds into professional development and school development • Use the results of teacher appraisal (registration/certification or reward/promotion schemes) for career advancement decisions

  11. SCHOOL EVALUATION – POLICY OPTIONS • Governance • Develop nationally agreed criteria for school quality to guide school evaluation • Introduce an element of externality • Raise the profile of self-evaluation (e.g. set requirements) • Align school external and school self-evaluation • Procedures • Ensure the focus for school evaluation is the improvement of teaching and learning • Promote engagement of all school staff and students in school self evaluation • Ensure transparency in external school evaluation • Responsibilities and competencies • Promote and support capacity development for the external and internal evaluation of schools • Strengthen school leaders’ capacity for school development • Reporting and use of results • Promote the wider use of the results of school external evaluation • Report contextual information with school performance measures • Explore ways to reflect the value added and progress in student learning in school performance measures • Ensure and clarify procedures for the systematic follow up of external school evaluations

  12. Thank you for your attention! paulo.santiago@oecd.org www.oecd.org/edu/evaluationpolicy

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