Using data to guide curriculum development : how curriculum developers use formative and summative assessment data to inform the written curriculum

This study examined how student achievement data are used to guide the development of curriculum documents in public school districts and within a commercial curriculum supplier. Two research questions guided this study: (a) How do public school districts in Central Texas use formative and summative...

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Main Author: Siler, Jill Marie
Format: Others
Language:English
Published: 2009
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2152/6636
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spelling ndltd-UTEXAS-oai-repositories.lib.utexas.edu-2152-66362015-09-20T16:53:26ZUsing data to guide curriculum development : how curriculum developers use formative and summative assessment data to inform the written curriculumSiler, Jill MarieStudent achievement dataCurriculum documentsPublic schoolsCommercial curriculum suppliersThis study examined how student achievement data are used to guide the development of curriculum documents in public school districts and within a commercial curriculum supplier. Two research questions guided this study: (a) How do public school districts in Central Texas use formative and summative assessment data to inform the written curriculum, and (b) how do commercially produced curricular programs use formative and summative assessment data to inform the written curriculum? A qualitative multiple-case study included curriculum developers from public school districts and a commercial entity. Data included semistructured interviews with curriculum developers from each organization as well as an extensive document review from each entity. The data were coded according to first-level coding and pattern coding. These themes were then analyzed through pattern matching and cross-case analysis. The research revealed that formative and summative assessment data were used to guide the development of the written curriculum in terms of guiding vertical alignment, determining the scope and sequence of the curricular content, adding specificity to the curriculum documents, identifying and correcting curriculum gaps, guiding development of formative assessment, and adapting to state and national change. In addition, the organizations utilized available resources in curriculum development and created a culture of data-rich dialogue. Findings also revealed that the ability of curriculum developers to use assessment data to inform the written curriculum is impacted greatly by organizational size and capacity. Sustainability of organizations to maintain a comprehensive, aligned curriculum is influenced by the rate of change coming from the state and national level. In conclusion, districts need to develop or obtain a guaranteed and viable curriculum that is strategically planned, comprehensive and aligned, as well as shaped by assessment data. The research reinforced that how data are created, presented, and used is important. Data sources need to be valid and reliable and shared in a risk-free culture that allows educators to move beyond elementary data uses to use data to inform the written curriculum as an integral part of school improvement.text2009-10-23T16:26:12Z2009-10-23T16:26:12Z2009-082009-10-23T16:26:12Zelectronichttp://hdl.handle.net/2152/6636engCopyright is held by the author. Presentation of this material on the Libraries' web site by University Libraries, The University of Texas at Austin was made possible under a limited license grant from the author who has retained all copyrights in the works.
collection NDLTD
language English
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Student achievement data
Curriculum documents
Public schools
Commercial curriculum suppliers
spellingShingle Student achievement data
Curriculum documents
Public schools
Commercial curriculum suppliers
Siler, Jill Marie
Using data to guide curriculum development : how curriculum developers use formative and summative assessment data to inform the written curriculum
description This study examined how student achievement data are used to guide the development of curriculum documents in public school districts and within a commercial curriculum supplier. Two research questions guided this study: (a) How do public school districts in Central Texas use formative and summative assessment data to inform the written curriculum, and (b) how do commercially produced curricular programs use formative and summative assessment data to inform the written curriculum? A qualitative multiple-case study included curriculum developers from public school districts and a commercial entity. Data included semistructured interviews with curriculum developers from each organization as well as an extensive document review from each entity. The data were coded according to first-level coding and pattern coding. These themes were then analyzed through pattern matching and cross-case analysis. The research revealed that formative and summative assessment data were used to guide the development of the written curriculum in terms of guiding vertical alignment, determining the scope and sequence of the curricular content, adding specificity to the curriculum documents, identifying and correcting curriculum gaps, guiding development of formative assessment, and adapting to state and national change. In addition, the organizations utilized available resources in curriculum development and created a culture of data-rich dialogue. Findings also revealed that the ability of curriculum developers to use assessment data to inform the written curriculum is impacted greatly by organizational size and capacity. Sustainability of organizations to maintain a comprehensive, aligned curriculum is influenced by the rate of change coming from the state and national level. In conclusion, districts need to develop or obtain a guaranteed and viable curriculum that is strategically planned, comprehensive and aligned, as well as shaped by assessment data. The research reinforced that how data are created, presented, and used is important. Data sources need to be valid and reliable and shared in a risk-free culture that allows educators to move beyond elementary data uses to use data to inform the written curriculum as an integral part of school improvement. === text
author Siler, Jill Marie
author_facet Siler, Jill Marie
author_sort Siler, Jill Marie
title Using data to guide curriculum development : how curriculum developers use formative and summative assessment data to inform the written curriculum
title_short Using data to guide curriculum development : how curriculum developers use formative and summative assessment data to inform the written curriculum
title_full Using data to guide curriculum development : how curriculum developers use formative and summative assessment data to inform the written curriculum
title_fullStr Using data to guide curriculum development : how curriculum developers use formative and summative assessment data to inform the written curriculum
title_full_unstemmed Using data to guide curriculum development : how curriculum developers use formative and summative assessment data to inform the written curriculum
title_sort using data to guide curriculum development : how curriculum developers use formative and summative assessment data to inform the written curriculum
publishDate 2009
url http://hdl.handle.net/2152/6636
work_keys_str_mv AT silerjillmarie usingdatatoguidecurriculumdevelopmenthowcurriculumdevelopersuseformativeandsummativeassessmentdatatoinformthewrittencurriculum
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