Literature DB >> 29795823

Trends in Classroom Observation Scores.

Jodi M Casabianca1, J R Lockwood2, Daniel F McCaffrey2.   

Abstract

Observations and ratings of classroom teaching and interactions collected over time are susceptible to trends in both the quality of instruction and rater behavior. These trends have potential implications for inferences about teaching and for study design. We use scores on the Classroom Assessment Scoring System-Secondary (CLASS-S) protocol from 458 middle school teachers over a 2-year period to study changes over time in (a) the average quality of teaching for the population of teachers, (b) the average severity of the population of raters, and (c) the severity of individual raters. To obtain these estimates and assess them in the context of other factors that contribute to the variability in scores, we develop an augmented G study model that is broadly applicable for modeling sources of variability in classroom observation ratings data collected over time. In our data, we found that trends in teaching quality were small. Rater drift was very large during raters' initial days of observation and persisted throughout nearly 2 years of scoring. Raters did not converge to a common level of severity; using our model we estimate that variability among raters actually increases over the course of the study. Variance decompositions based on the model find that trends are a modest source of variance relative to overall rater effects, rater errors on specific lessons, and residual error. The discussion provides possible explanations for trends and rater divergence as well as implications for designs collecting ratings over time.

Keywords:  B-splines; Classroom Assessment Scoring System–Secondary (CLASS-S); classroom assessment; generalizability theory; rater drift; scoring trend; teaching quality

Year:  2014        PMID: 29795823      PMCID: PMC5965595          DOI: 10.1177/0013164414539163

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Educ Psychol Meas        ISSN: 0013-1644            Impact factor:   2.821


  1 in total

1.  Detecting score drift in a high-stakes performance-based assessment.

Authors:  Danette W McKinley; John R Boulet
Journal:  Adv Health Sci Educ Theory Pract       Date:  2004       Impact factor: 3.853

  1 in total
  2 in total

1.  What About the "Instruction" in Instructional Sensitivity? Raising a Validity Issue in Research on Instructional Sensitivity.

Authors:  Marsha Ing
Journal:  Educ Psychol Meas       Date:  2017-06-23       Impact factor: 2.821

2.  A Multivariate Generalizability Theory Approach to College Students' Evaluation of Teaching.

Authors:  Guangming Li; Guiyun Hou; Xingjun Wang; Dong Yang; Hu Jian; Weijun Wang
Journal:  Front Psychol       Date:  2018-06-26
  2 in total

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