I'm taking some time off right now to do a Master's degree through Harvard Extension, and I'm also taking multiple classes through Coursera, EdX, Kennedy School ExecEd, UC Irvine, etc. Everything from educational policy & leadership to quantitative research & data analysis to non-profit management & financial accounting. This blog is a place for me to collect my learnings from this adventure I'm on! Most of the time, I'll just be cutting and pasting from various assignments or papers to be able to easily reference them later, but sometimes I'll do specific blog posts knitting my thoughts together from the different coursework. :-)

Sunday, September 14, 2014

Forum Post for Saving Schools

** Based on the material presented in this section, what do you feel is the appropriate role that empirical evidence should play when making educational policy decisions? Do you believe policy makers primarily rely on empirical evidence?

Empirical evidence should play a huge role in policy decisions, assuming that the research has been done well, is reproducible, and has external validity showing that the results are likely to apply to the general population. Unfortunately as mentioned in the videos, it's often hard to get good research. Educational experiments on children may be unethical or just infeasible. Observational studies may have confounding factors that are actually responsible for the differences in results. Quasi-experiments don't always happen for the factors you're trying to study, or the results may not transfer to a more general set of students.

Also any policy changes need to made after looking at the whole research base, not just one or two studies. As we often see in medicine, one study will show that Vitamin X increases lifespan, and then a year later, another study shows that Vitamin X decreases lifespan. Perhaps more research needs to be done to figure out the actual effects of Vitamin X, or to see if it affects different people differently. But policy should not dictate that everyone gets huge doses of Vitamin X.

I think the policy makers are starting to rely more on empirical evidence. More groups are gathering research together in ways that non-researchers can better understand -
http://coalition4evidence.org/
I feel like the main issues are not so much with getting policy makers to recommend evidence-based practices, but rather with getting schools to implement evidence-based practices with fidelity. Scaling up programs that work is the hard part. And unfortunately when programs aren't scaled effectively, then the next set of research shows that the intervention doesn't work – e.g. Head Start.

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