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Special Report
Education Funding

Finding the Funding

By Rhea R. Borja 鈥 May 02, 2006 4 min read
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Getting to this high-desert town from Los Angeles means driving due east until the glut of big-box stores lining the freeways thins out, then navigating hairpin turns through a stretch of sere, squat hills called the Badlands.

Feature Stories
Delving Into Data
District Initiative

Aware of All Students

Finding the Funding

Voices of Experience

Monthly Checkups

Tip of Their Fingers

Rising to a Challenge

Risk & Reward
鈥楴ational Effort鈥
State Analysis
Executive Summary
Table of Contents

But while the 6,000-student Beaumont Unified School District seems isolated, it has something that many bigger, metropolitan districts lack: an integrated computerized system for producing, analyzing, and storing test scores and other student data.

A system for data management, analysis, and warehousing doesn鈥檛 come cheap. It can run in the millions of dollars, and requires upkeep by trained information-technology specialists. Small districts often lack that kind of money and manpower.

Still, this fast-growing community has found a way around those obstacles. At the start of this school year, it contracted with Achieve Data Solutions LLC, a San Bernardino, Calif.-based data company founded and run by former educators.

Darrell W. Brown, Beaumont鈥檚 coordinator of data assessment and accountability and its adult education principal, says the company鈥檚 data system is affordable compared with others he鈥檚 looked at.

Achieve Data Solutions charges $2.90 per student, plus $1 extra per student if a district uses the company鈥檚 item bank of test questions. Brown found that the going rate is typically upwards of $8 a student. 鈥淲e鈥檝e walked in [educators鈥橾 shoes,鈥 says Linda Ricchiuti, the vice president of Achieve Data Solutions. 鈥淲e don鈥檛 make money off the little districts, but that鈥檚 part of our mission.鈥

Small-District Squeeze

The company鈥檚 DataDirector Web-based tool allows Beaumont educators to see, sort, and analyze student demographic information, grades, and state standardized-test scores, as well as scores from the district鈥檚 periodic 鈥渇ormative鈥 assessments. It can track test scores over time, and easily produce reports.

In addition, a 1,000-item bank of test questions linked to California state standards is embedded into DataDirector, which helps Beaumont teachers craft their own periodic assessments rather than buy them from outside vendors.

Beaumont has experienced growing pains over the past five years. The district鈥檚 enrollment zoomed from 3,774 students in 2001 to more than 6,000 students today, straining resources amid an economic downturn that sliced school budgets statewide. The district, within a half-day鈥檚 drive of the Mexican border, also has a 20 percent population of English-language learners and students who, though considered English-proficient, still need continuing language help.

The enrollment increase set off seismic shifts that include the opening of three new schools; switches to K-5 elementary schools from those separately serving K-1, grades 2-3, and grades 4-6; and changes in attendance boundaries that led to transfers of teachers and students between schools.

鈥淲hen you do all that, the informal structures teachers and schools have suffer,鈥 Brown says.

Perhaps not surprisingly, Beaumont鈥檚 scores on California鈥檚 Academic Performance Index, a test-based accountability measure, took a hit as enrollment soared. From 2003 to 2004, for example, the district鈥檚 API score fell 7 points, from 699 to 692 on a 1,000-point scale.

While that drop may seem minor, it masked sharper declines in some individual schools, Brown says. One elementary school鈥檚 showing on the API fell 21 points, while another鈥檚 score dropped 9 points.

鈥淭eachers panicked,鈥 Brown recalls. Some of them questioned the validity of the state tests, and principals called to ask why their students鈥 scores had dropped and what they could do to help raise them.

鈥楢 Culture of Inquiry鈥

So, starting in the fall of 2004, the district piloted various data-management and -analysis tools, and offered six-day data-training workshops so teachers and principals could learn how to get a better read on their students. Most important, teachers started using the data to fine-tune their instruction and reteach their students in areas of academic weakness, according to Brown.

Beaumont鈥檚 performance on the API quickly rebounded, rising from 692 to 726 points from 2004 to 2005. That increase was the largest in Riverside County, which contains 23 school districts, including Beaumont.

鈥淛ust looking at data does nothing to improve student scores,鈥 Brown says. 鈥淚鈥檇 attribute [the increase] to teachers鈥 making modifications in their classrooms by looking at data. That was key.鈥

The district hopes to do even better this year, following its decision to start using Achieve Data Solutions鈥 DataDirector last fall, as educators quickly outgrew the previous data system.

鈥淲e鈥檝e always based solutions on hunches,鈥 Brown says. 鈥淣o more. Now there鈥檚 a districtwide culture of inquiry.鈥

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