2012 SCORE Prize Winners: Ensuring Excellent Teaching (excerpts) | Page 8

USING DATA TO ENHANCE STUDENT LEARNING these data to design their own ongoing assessments and to tailor instruction and, in some cases, assessment, to specific groups of students. Rose Park’s educators and administrators deeply engage in data analysis and use it to drive school and student improvement. They use formal and informal assessment data to help determine the proper course for each of their students. Informal assessment data. Rose Park uses two sources of informal data to augment their formal performance measures. While they see this information as less official than the formal assessment results, teachers possess a sense of confidence from the supplemental knowledge about student performance supplied by the informal data. Currently, Rose Park uses the online programs Study Island and Think Through Math to supplement their knowledge of their students’ understanding and progress toward mastery. While typically used for intervention instruction or to provide supplemental information, Rose Park’s teachers use the information from these programs to identify student weaknesses and to motivate students to push harder. The school’s teachers and academic staff—including the numeracy and literacy coaches—evaluate student performance regularly to assess how well students are progressing. The information is used to make decisions about student placement in appropriate courses and ability groups that are altered based on student progress throughout the year. Formal assessment data. Rose Park uses three major formal data sources to assess academic develop- me