Nora Gannon, Tysza Gandha & Katherine Ryan 2009 CREATE Conference October 9, 2009.

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Using Mixed Methods to Develop a Questionnaire on Accountability for Teachers and Principals Nora Gannon, Tysza Gandha & Katherine Ryan 2009 CREATE Conference October 9, 2009

Transcript of Nora Gannon, Tysza Gandha & Katherine Ryan 2009 CREATE Conference October 9, 2009.

Page 1: Nora Gannon, Tysza Gandha & Katherine Ryan 2009 CREATE Conference October 9, 2009.

Using Mixed Methods to Develop a Questionnaire

on Accountability for Teachers and Principals

Nora Gannon, Tysza Gandha & Katherine Ryan 2009 CREATE Conference

October 9, 2009

Page 2: Nora Gannon, Tysza Gandha & Katherine Ryan 2009 CREATE Conference October 9, 2009.

Accountability and Evaluation

Using Questionnaires in Evaluation

Using Mixed Methods in Questionnaire Development

Our Mixed Methods Design and

Implementation

Summary

Overview

Page 3: Nora Gannon, Tysza Gandha & Katherine Ryan 2009 CREATE Conference October 9, 2009.

No Child Left Behind (NCLB)

Credible Evidence

Improving Evaluation Methods

Accountability and Evaluation

Page 4: Nora Gannon, Tysza Gandha & Katherine Ryan 2009 CREATE Conference October 9, 2009.

Key Questions◦ What are the intended and unintended

consequences of the accountability assessments utilized in this state?

◦ What are the perspectives of teachers and principals on how these consequences influence: Instructional practices? Local assessment practices? Use of test data? School policies and practices? The Teaching profession?

Instate Assessment Consequences Evaluation (IACE)

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◦Illuminate large-scale patterns in schools reform as a result of accountability systems in place

◦Provide broad-based views of stakeholders’ perspectives (e.g., teachers and principals)

◦Time and cost efficient

Use of Questionnaires in Large-scale Educational Evaluations

Reference: Desimone & le Floch, 2004

Page 6: Nora Gannon, Tysza Gandha & Katherine Ryan 2009 CREATE Conference October 9, 2009.

Advantages to Using Questionnaires

Challenge for Researchers

• Administer to many people to learn perspectives of diverse stakeholders

How do we know if a respondent’s understand questionnaire items as we intended?

• Large scale survey study can examine a wide range of contexts (e.g., school settings)

How can we strengthen our inferences across contexts?

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Reduce response bias

Reduce response burden

Improve item clarity

GOAL: Understand thought process and improve data

interpretability

Reference: Czaja & Blair, 2005

Page 8: Nora Gannon, Tysza Gandha & Katherine Ryan 2009 CREATE Conference October 9, 2009.

◦Purposeful

◦Systematic

◦Comprehensive

Mixed Methods for Instrument Development

Page 9: Nora Gannon, Tysza Gandha & Katherine Ryan 2009 CREATE Conference October 9, 2009.

Questionnaire Development: Combination

Sequential/Concurrent Mixed Methods Design

qual Data analysis

qual Data collection

QUAN Data analysis

QUAN Data collection QUAL

Data analysis

QUAL Data collection

QUAN & qual

Phase 2

QUAL

Phase 1

Integration of Entire Analysis

Page 10: Nora Gannon, Tysza Gandha & Katherine Ryan 2009 CREATE Conference October 9, 2009.

PHASE 1: QUALITATIVE

qual Data analysis

qual Data collection

QUAN Data analysis

QUAN Data collection QUAL

Data analysis

QUAL Data collection

QUAN & qual

Phase 2

QUAL

Phase 1

Integration of Entire Analysis

PHASE 1: QUALITATIVE

Methods• Item Development• Cognitive Labs• Expert Review

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Literature Review◦ 5 dimensions: Instructional practices, Local assessment

practices, Use of test data, School policies and practices, Teaching profession

◦ Dimension Task Lists

Item development◦ Item Bank◦ Reverse engineering

Content Review

Item Development

PHASE 1: QUALITATIVE

Page 12: Nora Gannon, Tysza Gandha & Katherine Ryan 2009 CREATE Conference October 9, 2009.

Item DevelopmentExample of Partial Task List for Changes in Instructional Practices

Test Preparation Kinds of test preparation strategies and frequency of use o Test taking tips (marking answers correctly,

eliminating wrong answers etc) o Using tests of similar format to state test o Using items of similar format of items on

state test o Using old test items from state test o Using entire tests from past as practice o Commercial test prep o Focus on content that is likely to be tested

Teachers’ perspectives in test preparation (i.e. ethics) o Easy to understand and pull information from o Teachers receive training in reading reports

PHASE 1: QUALITATIVE

Page 13: Nora Gannon, Tysza Gandha & Katherine Ryan 2009 CREATE Conference October 9, 2009.

Literature Review◦ 5 dimensions: Instructional practices, Local assessment

practices, Use of test data, School policies and practices, Teaching profession

◦ Dimension Task Lists

Item development◦ Item Bank◦ Reverse engineering

Content Review

Item Development

PHASE 1: QUALITATIVE

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What is the purpose of a cognitive lab?◦ Gain insight into participant understandings.

How do you sample for cognitive labs?◦ Choose participants that represent your

population.

Implementation: the think-aloud process◦ Be careful not to influence responses!

Cognitive Labs

PHASE 1: QUALITATIVE

Page 15: Nora Gannon, Tysza Gandha & Katherine Ryan 2009 CREATE Conference October 9, 2009.

Single vs. Dual Rating Scales

Cognitive Lab Findings

PHASE 1: QUALITATIVE

How have you changed your instructional strategies as a result of NCLB testing?

Overall, my use of this strategy has… In

crea

sed

a

lot

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ease

d

som

ewh

at

Not

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d

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at

Dec

reas

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lot

I do

n’t

use

this

st

rate

gy

a. Project-based assignments

5 4 3 2 1

Page 16: Nora Gannon, Tysza Gandha & Katherine Ryan 2009 CREATE Conference October 9, 2009.

Single vs. Dual Rating Scales

Cognitive Lab Findings

PHASE 1: QUALITATIVE

Since NCLB testing began in grades 3-8, how have you changed your instructional strategies? To what extent were the changes a result of NCLB testing? [Please rate the item on both scales]

Overall, my use of this strategy has… To what extent was it a result

of NCLB testing?

Incr

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Incr

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d

som

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a m

oder

ate

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all

exte

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Not

at

all

a. Project-based assignments

5 4 3 2 1 4 3 2 1

Page 17: Nora Gannon, Tysza Gandha & Katherine Ryan 2009 CREATE Conference October 9, 2009.

Global Questions

Cognitive Lab Findings

To what extent, and how, have NCLB testing changed your instruction since it began in all grades 3-8?

Changed it a lot,

for the better

Changed it somewhat,

for the better

Did not change

it

Changed it somewhat,

for the worse

Changed it a lot, for the worse

5 4 3 2 1

PHASE 1: QUALITATIVE

Page 18: Nora Gannon, Tysza Gandha & Katherine Ryan 2009 CREATE Conference October 9, 2009.

Cognitive Lab Findings

1. To what extent has NCLB testing had positive effects on your instruction since it began in grades 3-8?

To a great

positive extent

To a moderate positive extent

To a small positive extent

Not at all

4 3 2 1

2. To what extent has

NCLB testing had negative effects on instruction in your school since it began in grades 3-8?

To a great

negative extent

To a moderate negative

extent

To a small negative

extent

Not at all

4 3 2 1

PHASE 1: QUALITATIVE

Page 19: Nora Gannon, Tysza Gandha & Katherine Ryan 2009 CREATE Conference October 9, 2009.

Language

What does “test preparation materials” mean?

Cognitive Lab Findings

PHASE 1: QUALITATIVE

Since NCLB testing began in grades 3-8, how has the use of the following instructional strategies changed in your school? To what extent were the changes a result of NCLB testing?

[Please rate each item on both scales]

My school’s use of this strategy has… To what extent

was it a result of NCLB testing?

Inc

reas

ed

a

lo

t

Inc

reas

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s

om

ew

ha

t

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at

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ll

a. Using test preparation materials to help students prepare for the NCLB test

5 4 3 2 1 4 3 2 1

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Language

◦ Strategies for Addressing Language Issues

Examples

Alternate words

Multiple questions

Cognitive Lab Findings

PHASE 1: QUALITATIVE

Page 21: Nora Gannon, Tysza Gandha & Katherine Ryan 2009 CREATE Conference October 9, 2009.

Why use Expert Reviewers?

Expert Reviewers

PHASE 1: QUALITATIVE

When to engage expert reviewers?

Early• Can solicit broad, big picture feedback

• Have time to make major changes with feedback

Later• Can solicit highly specific (item-level) feedback

• Useful for final review of instruments in almost-final draft

Reference: Ramirez, 2002

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PHASE 2: QUANTITATIVE and qualitative (concurrent)

qual Data analysis

qual Data collection

QUAN Data analysis

QUAN Data collection QUAL

Data analysis

QUAL Data collection

QUAN & qual

Phase 2

QUAL

Phase 1

Integration of Entire Analysis

Methods• Pilot Questionnaire• Cognitive Lab

Focus Group

PHASE 2: QUANTITATIVE AND qualitative

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Teacher and Principal Questionnaires◦ Approximately 200 items; 60% shared between

teacher and principal versions

Sample- 383 principals - 2415 teachers

(1940 online, 475 mail)

Proportionate Probability Sample (N=400 schools)

◦ Stratified by geographic region and school type (i.e. elementary schools and middle schools)

◦ Sampling Criteria (AYP Subgroups)

Pilot QuestionnaireAdministration

PHASE 2: QUANTITATIVE AND qualitative

Page 24: Nora Gannon, Tysza Gandha & Katherine Ryan 2009 CREATE Conference October 9, 2009.

Teachers: 37% (902)

◦ Online: 44%◦ Paper-and-pencil: 9%

Principals: 44% (175)

Pilot QuestionnaireResponse Rates

PHASE 2: QUANTITATIVE AND qualitative

Population proportions

Response rate

proportions

Elementary 60% 57%

Middle School

40% 43%

Page 25: Nora Gannon, Tysza Gandha & Katherine Ryan 2009 CREATE Conference October 9, 2009.

Pilot QuestionnaireFindings

Page 26: Nora Gannon, Tysza Gandha & Katherine Ryan 2009 CREATE Conference October 9, 2009.

Refine content of Questionnaire based on◦ Low response endorsement◦ Low response rates◦ Low variance on scaled items

Pilot Questionnaire Findings

PHASE 2: QUANTITATIVE AND qualitative

Page 27: Nora Gannon, Tysza Gandha & Katherine Ryan 2009 CREATE Conference October 9, 2009.

IMPLEMENTATION: Cognitive lab in small group setting (4-6 people)

PURPOSE: Group narrative

SAMPLE: Depends on what you want to know

Cognitive Focus Group

Strengths Limitations• Group setting allows for

conversations that elicit normal narrative

• Cost-efficient way to learn about potentially different interpretations

• Have to use smaller number of items than individual cognitive lab

• Group relations need to be considered (e.g., include teachers and principal?)

PHASE 2: QUANTITATIVE AND qualitative

Page 28: Nora Gannon, Tysza Gandha & Katherine Ryan 2009 CREATE Conference October 9, 2009.

To what extent is the change in local assessment due to the state accountability assessment?

Mr. Smith: I think assessment is just a component of good teaching.

Ms. Brown: I think you are naïve…it’s all about preparing for the state test.

Ms. Rogers: Well, it depends on how you look at it, I guess… if you are cynical everything is because of accountability assessment!

Cognitive Focus Group

PHASE 2: QUANTITATIVE AND qualitative

Page 29: Nora Gannon, Tysza Gandha & Katherine Ryan 2009 CREATE Conference October 9, 2009.

Goal Method• Refine scope of

questionnaire• Comprehensive

literature review • Expert reviewers• Pilot administration

• Improving the interpretability of the questionnaire

• Cognitive labs• Cognitive focus groups

• Strengthen capacity to warrant inferences within and across contexts

• Cognitive labs• Purposeful sampling for

cognitive labs• Deliberate sample frame

in pilot

Summary: the value in using mixed methods

Page 30: Nora Gannon, Tysza Gandha & Katherine Ryan 2009 CREATE Conference October 9, 2009.

Questions?Thank you!