韩女秀

Student growth: Using data walls to drive learning

Student data can be used to identify gaps in learning, to monitor progress over time, and develop targeted teaching strategies.

With a goal to strengthen their use of data to drive learning and teaching, 韩女秀 FCJ College joined the Eastern Region Data Collective.

The Collective is an initiative funded and supported by Catholic Education Melbourne (CEM) that brought together four schools from the eastern suburbs of Melbourne 鈥 韩女秀, St Michael鈥檚 Parish School in Ashburton, St Francis Xavier’s Catholic Primary School in Box Hill and St Kevin鈥檚 Catholic Primary School in Lower Templestowe.

Each school came up with their own critical challenge and then collaborated with each other to tackle the challenges over a two-year period. This involved meeting face-to-face at each other鈥檚 schools, as well as interactions via their Google+ community. Throughout the process, staff were supported by Canadian academic and author Dr Lyn Sharratt, who acted as their critical friend.

韩女秀鈥檚 Head of Junior School, Mary Jones, says the opportunity to work with Sharratt as a mentor was a big drawcard for her. 鈥榃e had a Skype session with her, she had sent us some prompt questions and we had to respond to those. In our teams we chatted around what the responses to the questions were and we had a big Skype session.

鈥楢ll the schools came together and we each presented where we were at with our work in this area and what our questions were. She gave us some feedback around that and some challenge too; she was giving us feedback in terms of 鈥渢his is what you鈥檝e done but had you thought about this?鈥 or 鈥測ou could take it further by doing that鈥, which was great.鈥

Working in the Collective

The schools were also supported by two Learning Consultants from CEM. Julie Stewart is a Learning Consultant in Literacy, and she worked with colleague Karilyn Gumley to build the capacity of schools in the Collective to analyse student learning data and to implement high impact processes and practices to address their students’ learning needs.

鈥楩or me, in particular, this involved providing customised, specialist literacy support, tailored to each school’s individual scenario,鈥 Stewart says. 鈥業 have also been responsible for maintaining the online platform, via a private Google+ Community, and encouraging ongoing collaboration among the schools in between termly meetings.鈥

Stewart says the Collective was part of a wider school improvement strategy at CEM that highlighted how highly collaborative, accountable and supportive partnerships can be a powerful enabler for school improvement.

Stewart says that this approach to improvement has not only benefitted the schools in the Collective. Other school leaders and teachers have visited the schools to observe the high impact strategies in action, and talk with staff to gain a greater insight. 鈥榃hilst the teachers and leaders have benefitted, the real benefit is ultimately to the students of these schools.鈥

Digging into the data to identify a critical challenge

The critical challenge that 韩女秀 was trying to address was 鈥楬ow can we use data and evidence to target teaching in Numeracy more effectively to increase the percentage of students achieving high growth in Years 5, 6 and 7?鈥

Jones says they came up with it after recognising that while students generally performed well, they weren鈥檛 experiencing the high growth that teachers were hoping them to. 鈥極ften, they were our girls who were quite high achieving to start with, so they were doing well in Year 3 and well in Year 5, but they weren鈥檛 doing as well as we would have liked them to be. So our question was really around, 鈥渉ow do we support those middle- to high-achieving girls, how do we really ensure that they鈥檙e getting high growth and they鈥檙e not just cruising along?鈥濃

The school used data from NAPLAN tests,  in both reading and mathematics, and a self-assessment they did using ACER鈥檚 .

Creating a data wall

To begin to address the challenge, staff at Genezzano created a data wall for Mathematics, which included the faces of all 180 students from Prep to Year 6.

鈥榃e did quite a lot of analysis of our data to see if we could see any patterns around what were the things, particularly in Numeracy, that the girls weren鈥檛 doing as well in,鈥 Jones explains.

Working in professional learning teams and with the help of a Maths Coach, staff worked together to plan learning and teaching, track student growth and progress, and enact case management. The Maths coach also went into classes and worked alongside teachers, either mentoring the teacher or role modelling an effective lesson.

Jones says the data wall became a great impetus for conversation. 鈥楽o, to be able to look at the wall and say, 鈥淥ver this 12 month period, that student had achieved great growth and this one here, I鈥檓 a bit worried about, she鈥檚 on the radar because her growth isn鈥檛 as strong as we鈥檇 like it to be.鈥 So it really is a very strong visual prompt.鈥

She adds this also helped with case management meetings where staff would look closely at an individual student. 鈥楢 teacher would bring that student to the table and we鈥檇 be able to sit around and say, 鈥淥kay, well what strategies have you tried?鈥. And using that collective expertise of everybody, what are some other strategies you could try? And also people who taught her the year before, they taught her two years ago, bring all that knowledge to the table about a particular student and how we can really boost her learning.鈥

A shared responsibility

Jones says this approach to student growth has built a shared ownership of each student and every staff member is invested in boosting the performance of every student.

The data wall is physically located in a meeting room that only staff have access to. Jones says students don鈥檛 see the wall for a range of reasons, but mainly because they don鈥檛 have training in how to read the data effectively. Jones says having a tangible, physical data wall that staff can see visually is very powerful.

鈥極ur teachers get together at the end of each year and are physically moving those girls along the wall. We colour code them for their growth with coloured dots so it鈥檚 very, very in your face. And then you can鈥檛 hide from that kind of data,鈥 Jones say, adding that it鈥檚 not just a case of looking at raw data, but rather the story behind it.

鈥楾here鈥檚 always a story to the data, you can鈥檛 just look at it and do a cold read, you need to know the story of the student and there鈥檚 all sorts of things that make up that scale score. There鈥檚 lots of things to think about that might contribute to that,鈥 she says.

鈥楤ut when it鈥檚 right there in front of you, and I think having the students鈥 face on it is incredibly powerful, it鈥檚 very motivating. You know that student, you want her to do well, you want her to be achieving her potential and growing. So I think there鈥檚 something very powerful about that human face.鈥

Jones says that through this work with data, teacher practice was unquestionably more targeted and, overall, they hope to see some significant shifts in the distribution of their growth data over the next two-to-three year period.

She says the results to date also speak to the increased capacity of staff to work with data in a meaningful way.

鈥楾his is due to the time that has been dedicated to this, the availability of data in one easy accessible place and the collaborative construction of the data walls, which have provided the impetus for many conversations and much learning about the data and its implications,鈥 Jones says.

Continuous improvement

Given the success of the Collective during 2017 and 2018, three of the four schools were keen to continue with it into 2019.

鈥楴ow, this year, we鈥檝e all decided to focus on writing and that鈥檚 sort of grown out of looking at our data and again going, 鈥渋t鈥檚 good, strong data but the growth isn鈥檛 as great as we鈥檇 like it to be鈥 and that鈥檚 common to each of the three schools,鈥 Jones says.

In shifting their focus to writing, staff at Genezzano have been tracking and monitoring progress across the Junior School.

鈥業 guess our ultimate goal is to really develop a writing continuum that we feel works for our three schools so that we can really have a look at how our students are growing and knowing what the next steps are,鈥 Jones says.

She says the most powerful thing she鈥檚 experienced from working with the Collective is getting together with other school leaders to ask questions of them.

鈥業t鈥檚 been such great professional learning for us and the most powerful thing about getting together is just being able to ask those questions of each other. 鈥淗ow do you do this? How are you managing that? What about this? Have you tried that?鈥. All of those questions that you mull over and chew over, you鈥檙e able to actually ask a really supportive environment where there鈥檚 some great expertise.鈥

Article originally published by  on Monday 27 May 2019, written by Rebecca Vukovic. 

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