What’s in a score? Problematizing interpretations of observation scores

Journal article by Mark White & Kirsti Klette in Studies in Educational Evaluation.

Abstract

Several recent, large-scale observations of naturally occurring classroom instruction have found consistent patterns in how teaching quality systematically varies across domains of instruction, patterns not found in student survey measures. Teaching quality is highest when examining aspects of classroom management; moderately high when examining aspects of student support; and low when focusing on the quality of the instructional support provided to students. This paper problematizes this interpretation, arguing that observed data patterns could result from dilemmas inherent in measuring teaching quality through observation. In problematizing these conclusions, we highlight the complexity of trying to measure instruction at scale, arguing for the need for caution and consideration of the complexity of measurement when interpreting scores from observation systems.

Full info

Mark White, Kirsti Klette (2023). What’s in a score? Problematizing interpretations of observation scores, Studies in Educational Evaluation, Vol. 77, June 2023. First online February 2023.
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.stueduc.2023.101238

Published Feb. 13, 2023 11:18 AM - Last modified Feb. 27, 2023 3:49 PM