March 1, 2003
No Child Left Behind: Methodological Challenges and Recommendations for Measuring Adequate Yearly Progress
Authors:
Yeow Meng Thum
The recent federal push under the No Child Left Behind Act to finalize means for gauging school improvement has stoked public anxiety, but especially for public school officials who are charged with crafting and implementing defensible accountability systems. Other than the omnipresent political issues attending any proposal for shaping educational change, the methodological challenges of an accountability system are indeed daunting. Although not explicit in this paper in terms of specific references, this paper sketches a conceptual analysis and outlines recommendations for a viable accountability system that is based on recent research. Readers familiar with the issues will find a number of not-so-familiar answers to many of their concerns, including (a) what is value-added “productivity,” (b) what data structure is sensible, (c) what might the minimum school-size be in order to attain the minimum level of precision, (d) how to define and estimate “adequate yearly progress”, and (e) how to evaluate compliance under the so-called “safe-harbor” provisions.
Thum, Y. M. (2003). No Child Left Behind: Methodological challenges and recommendations for measuring adequate yearly progress (CSE Report 590). Los Angeles: University of California, Los Angeles, National Center for Research on Evaluation, Standards, and Student Testing (CRESST).|Thum, Y. M. (2003). No Child Left Behind: Methodological challenges and recommendations for measuring adequate yearly progress (CSE Report 590). Los Angeles: University of California, Los Angeles, National Center for Research on Evaluation, Standards, and Student Testing (CRESST).