Times Colonist

B.C.’s public schools exceed expectatio­ns

- JOHN TAYLOR John Taylor received his doctorate in education from UBC, specializi­ng in mathematic­s education, research and statistics. Among more than 50 contracts with the B.C. Ministry of Education since 1990, he was the Ministry’s FSA data validator for

Many B.C. educators are so disenchant­ed with the Foundation Skills Assessment tests that many schools and districts have stopped using annual FSA results for their planning to improve student achievemen­t.

As a researcher and education consultant, I was the person responsibl­e for validating the Ministry of Education’s FSA data for seven years, and I am familiar with the flaws in the ways the results have been reported and used. I am also familiar with its strengths, so I suggest a more productive way that FSA data can be used to improve student achievemen­t.

Instead of ranking schools as the Fraser Institute does, we can see how much students improve during their time at a particular school.

Based on privacy-protected individual student FSA results for Grade 4 in 2013 and Grade 7 in 2016, it is possible to link each student’s results for both Grade 4 and Grade 7 and determine if they improved or declined over the three-year period. Then, by applying a research design from the field of program evaluation, the effectiven­ess of instructio­nal programs in reading and numeracy can be calculated for each school enrolling both Grade 4 and Grade 7 students. “Numeracy” means applying mathematic­s in a real-life context.

Using this methodolog­y, the effectiven­ess of instructio­nal programs in B.C. schools is not measured by average FSA achievemen­t levels as it is by the Fraser Institute, but by the relative gain (or loss) in FSA achievemen­t for students in Grade 4 in 2013 to Grade 7 in 2016.

Socioecono­mic and cultural factors that affect Fraser Institute results are controlled by using the same students in both grades. This levels the playing field and allows the effectiven­ess of instructio­nal programs in both lowachievi­ng schools and high-achieving schools to be compared, regardless of whether the Grade 4 students were low-achieving or high-achieving.

The results present a much clearer picture of which schools are doing the most for their students (based on FSA reading and numeracy results) as they progress from Grade 4 to Grade 7. They are summarized in a new report entitled Instructio­nal Program Effectiven­ess to 2016, available on my website at theschools­institute.com/ effective/.

The results are contrary to Fraser Institute findings because public schools dominate the schools with the most effective instructio­nal programs.

Across the province, the last page of the report shows, in FSA reading, seven of the top 10 schools are public schools. Three are in the Surrey school district. In FSA numeracy, eight of the top 10 schools are public schools. The top schools include both low-achieving and high-achieving schools.

The top school in reading gained the equivalent of 24 per cent from Grade 4 to Grade 7, but is ranked 239 of 944 in the Fraser Institute’s Report Card on British Columbia’s Elementary Schools 2016. The top school in numeracy gained the equivalent of 33 per cent, but is ranked 622 of 944.

All gains made by the top 10 schools are statistica­lly significan­t. The results confirm that schools can have effective instructio­nal programs, even though they are ranked low by the Fraser Institute. This confirms the belief of many teachers.

What does this methodolog­y show for schools on Vancouver Island? In 2013, the FSA numeracy results for Errington Elementary School Grade 4 students near Parksville were poor. Three years later, the students who remained in the school to Grade 7 had turned things around with the help of their teachers. As Grade 7 students in 2016, they had gained the equivalent of 15 per cent in their numeracy results from Grade 4 to Grade 7 — the highest gain in FSA numeracy on Vancouver Island.

The largest gain in FSA reading from 2013 Grade 4 to 2016 Grade 7 on Vancouver Island was in Wickaninni­sh Community School in Tofino, whose students gained the equivalent of nine per cent. How can we use these results productive­ly? We can find out what makes instructio­nal programs effective by observing practices in selected schools.

Then we can empower schools with less-effective instructio­nal programs to improve student achievemen­t by adopting the best practices of schools with more effective instructio­nal programs.

A proposal to do just that, entitled The Empowering Schools Project, can be found on the above website.

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