Statistics Pinpoint Problems in Paterson Schools
It's great to see these techniques being adopted:
Assistant school superintendents here are routinely summoned to a 10 a.m. Thursday meeting where they must answer for missing test scores, overdue building repairs and other lapses, which are presented in painful detail on PowerPoint slides. Excuses are not an option.
It is the latest evolution of Compstat, a widely copied management program pioneered by the New York Police Department in 1994. Paterson is one of a half-dozen school districts around the country that have embraced this confrontational approach, known here as SchoolStat, in an effort to improve school performance and overhaul bureaucracies long seen as bloated, wasteful and unresponsive to the public.
SchoolStat borrows the tactics of the Compstat program -- regular, intense meetings in which police officials famously pick apart crime data and, just as often, their subordinates -- to analyze police performance and crime trends, and to deploy resources to trouble spots. The school version taps into an ever-expanding universe of data about standardized testing and school operations to establish a system of accountability.
In Maryland, the process has been credited with reducing teacher vacancies and increasing student immunization rates in Baltimore schools. In Montgomery County, Md., it has pushed principals to come up with strategies like encouraging students to take the Preliminary SAT by offering a free pancake breakfast if they attend.
In Jackson, Miss., the state’s largest district has used it to increase food sales in high school cafeterias by adding salads and hot breakfast items, after the data showed that more than one-third of the students were not buying meals. In Philadelphia, where as many as 42 SchoolStat meetings are held each month at all levels in the district, officials say it has helped develop strategies to reduce the number of suspensions, increase attendance and raise standardized test scores.
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Statistics Pinpoint Problems in Paterson Schools
By WINNIE HU
December 2, 2007
www.nytimes.com/2007/12/02/nyregion/02stat.html <http://www.nytimes.com/2007/12/02/nyregion/02stat.html>
PATERSON, N.J. — Assistant school superintendents here are routinely summoned to a 10 a.m. Thursday meeting where they must answer for missing test scores, overdue building repairs and other lapses, which are presented in painful detail on PowerPoint slides. Excuses are not an option.
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