THE STATE
EDUCATION DEPARTMENT / THE UNIVERSITY
OF THE STATE OF NEW YORK / ALBANY, NY 12234 |
TO: |
The Honorable the Members of the Board of Regents
|
FROM: |
Theresa E. Savo |
SUBJECT: |
Statewide Student Data
System |
DATE: |
June 1, 2005 |
STRATEGIC GOAL: |
Goals 1 and 2 |
AUTHORIZATION(S): |
|
Issue for
Discussion
The State Education Department (SED) is developing a statewide student
data system designed to reduce the local burden of data collection, provide
basic data analysis tools to local educational agencies and provide a consistent
and widely understood approach for collecting, storing, analyzing and using data
about students. Such a system will
give teachers and administrators access to analyses of assessment results. It is also intended to meet State and
Federal accountability requirements.
Required by Federal statute and regulation, and State statute and
regulation.
Further update on the implementation of a statewide unique identifier
system and the individual student record system will be presented at the
November 2005 and June 2006 Full Board meetings.
This is a Full Board update to the June 2004 presentation on the
implementation of a statewide unique identifier system and the individual
student record system.
SED lacks sufficient data needed to fully
inform policy related to programs, curriculum and instruction, and resource
allocation at the Federal, State, and local levels. Moreover, SED and school districts lack
sufficient data to examine the relationships among resource, demographic, and
student performance measures and to assess these relationships across time or
for highly mobile students.
In the 1997-1998 school year, SED began
electronic collection of individual student records at the elementary and middle
levels through the Local Education Agency Program (LEAP) data collection system.
The records include data on race/ethnicity, disability status, gender, income
status, English proficiency, and migrant status. LEAP annually collects data on
approximately 600,000 students in grades 4, 5 and 8. Beginning in 2003-2004, on limited
English proficient students in grades K-8.
Beginning with the 2001-2002 school year,
SED implemented the System for Tracking Education Progress (STEP) to collect
unit record data for students in grades 9-12. STEP collects demographic and
program participation data, State assessment scores, dropout and graduation
data. STEP annually collects data
on approximately one million students.
Through the LEAP and STEP systems, SED has
records for all students in grades 4, 5, and 8 beginning with the 1998-1999
school year and all students in grades 9-12 beginning with the 2001-2002 school
year. These records allow SED to meet the requirements of the State and Federal
accountability systems, including the aggregation of data by race/ethnicity,
disability status, English proficiency, and income status.
Concurrent with the work at SED outlined
above, the 12 Regional Information Centers (RICs), located at BOCES, have
implemented data repositories (called ‘data warehouses’) that collect individual
student data. These repositories
enhance the ability of school districts to meet local district data analysis
needs, and improve the ability of the districts to meet State data collection
requirements specified in the LEAP and STEP systems. The RICs have collected individual
records for approximately 685,000 unique students from 350 participating school
districts, including the cities of Buffalo and Rochester.
The work of the RICs, along with the best
practices identified in other states, provided the necessary background for SED
to identify data warehousing, along with a system of unique statewide
identifiers as an appropriate foundation for the statewide student data
system. Therefore, in 2004, SED
purchased a software license for a statewide data warehouse and is working with
school districts, including the Big 5 City districts, to expand the RIC data
warehouses to include all districts.
In 2004, SED also built the necessary computer program and system for
creation and application of unique student identification numbers, and began to
implement the system to assign statewide unique student identifiers in March
2005. We will complete
assigning identifiers to currently enrolled students by December
2005.
SED will contract with the Western New York RIC to maintain a single statewide repository of individual student data which will co-locate the data maintained in the existing RIC-based data warehouses and the warehouses that will house data for New York City Department of Education, Yonkers and Syracuse. Staff determined that a single repository would provide greater efficiency, consistency and ease of use than implementing three regional repositories as was described in the June 2004 proposal. The single statewide repository will be fully populated with student data by August 2006 providing data from the 2005-2006 school year. SED has also purchased a standardized software system from which summary reports and analytical reports will be developed on the grade-by-grade testing program as well as other data. Other work currently in process:
·
Staff are
developing plans with the New York City Department of Education to implement a
data warehouse solution dedicated to New York City’s public
schools.
·
SED will
contract with an outside vendor to provide a series of baseline reports and
analyses on student, building and district performance. These reports will be web-based and will
be available to all districts. The
reporting program will also include individual and summary reports on the
results of the grades 3-8 Math and English Language Arts testing
program.
·
Student
records collected with the STEP and LEAP systems for school year 2004-2005 will
be connected to a statewide unique student identifier. These collections occur during the
summer and fall, 2005.
·
By August
2006, all school districts will be using the data warehouses to store individual
student records and hold the statewide unique student identifier.
Major challenges:
·
Ensure there
is sufficient district support for the creation, maintenance and use of
high-quality data.
·
Concerns among
school district personnel and parents regarding the protection of student
privacy and confidentiality.
N/A
Timetable for Implementation
·
Student
records collected with the STEP and LEAP systems for school year 2004-2005 will
be connected to a statewide unique student identifier. These collections occur during the
summer and fall, 2005.
·
The single
statewide repository will be fully populated with student data by August 2006
providing data from the 2005-2006 school year.
· By August 2006, all school districts will be using the data warehouses to store individual student records and hold the statewide unique student identifier.