l ongitudinal d ata and h igher e ducation a ccountability tom schenk jr., consultant

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LONGITUDINAL DATA AND HIGHER EDUCATION ACCOUNTABILITY Tom Schenk Jr., Consultant

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Page 1: L ONGITUDINAL D ATA AND H IGHER E DUCATION A CCOUNTABILITY Tom Schenk Jr., Consultant

LONGITUDINAL DATA ANDHIGHER EDUCATION ACCOUNTABILITY

Tom Schenk Jr., Consultant

Page 2: L ONGITUDINAL D ATA AND H IGHER E DUCATION A CCOUNTABILITY Tom Schenk Jr., Consultant

National StudentClearinghouse

StudentRecords

StudentCourses

StudentAwards

Employee

Records

FacultyPositions

UnemploymentInsurance

Iowa College Student

Aid Commission

AS-28 [Program Information]

K-12[Project EASIER][Iowa Testing Services][CTE Plus]

Page 3: L ONGITUDINAL D ATA AND H IGHER E DUCATION A CCOUNTABILITY Tom Schenk Jr., Consultant

PROJECT LEAD THE WAYEVALUATION

Page 4: L ONGITUDINAL D ATA AND H IGHER E DUCATION A CCOUNTABILITY Tom Schenk Jr., Consultant

4 11th Grade ITED: Math

0 5 10 15 20 25 30 35 40 45 50 55 60 65 70 75 80 85 90 950%

2%

4%

6%

8%

10%

12%

14%

16%

18%

20%

NonparticipantsAverage = 65

ParticipantsAverage = 79

Page 5: L ONGITUDINAL D ATA AND H IGHER E DUCATION A CCOUNTABILITY Tom Schenk Jr., Consultant

5 11th Grade ITED: Science

0 5 10 15 20 25 30 35 40 45 50 55 60 65 70 75 80 85 90 950%

2%

4%

6%

8%

10%

12%

14%

16%

18%

20%

Page 6: L ONGITUDINAL D ATA AND H IGHER E DUCATION A CCOUNTABILITY Tom Schenk Jr., Consultant

6 Project Lead The Way

Page 7: L ONGITUDINAL D ATA AND H IGHER E DUCATION A CCOUNTABILITY Tom Schenk Jr., Consultant

7 Project Lead The Way

Page 8: L ONGITUDINAL D ATA AND H IGHER E DUCATION A CCOUNTABILITY Tom Schenk Jr., Consultant

8 Selection Bias

Socio-demographic Background

Cognitive ability

School-level factors}

Page 9: L ONGITUDINAL D ATA AND H IGHER E DUCATION A CCOUNTABILITY Tom Schenk Jr., Consultant

9 Propensity Score Matching

y = φ(x1,…,xn)

Binary outcome

Logit Function

Page 10: L ONGITUDINAL D ATA AND H IGHER E DUCATION A CCOUNTABILITY Tom Schenk Jr., Consultant

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Propensity Bins

0% - 25% 25.1% - 50% 50.1% - 75% 75.1% - 100%

Page 11: L ONGITUDINAL D ATA AND H IGHER E DUCATION A CCOUNTABILITY Tom Schenk Jr., Consultant

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Subsequent Analysis

z = β1x1,…, βnxn, βyy

Outcome Propensity Bins

Page 12: L ONGITUDINAL D ATA AND H IGHER E DUCATION A CCOUNTABILITY Tom Schenk Jr., Consultant

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Enrollment by Gender

84%

16%

49%50%

Participants

NonparticipantsFemale Male

Page 13: L ONGITUDINAL D ATA AND H IGHER E DUCATION A CCOUNTABILITY Tom Schenk Jr., Consultant

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Percentage of Whites by Cohort

2008 2009 2010 20110.0%

10.0%

20.0%

30.0%

40.0%

50.0%

60.0%

70.0%

80.0%

90.0%

100.0%Participants

Nonpartici-pants

Page 14: L ONGITUDINAL D ATA AND H IGHER E DUCATION A CCOUNTABILITY Tom Schenk Jr., Consultant

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8th Grade ITBS: Math

0 5 10 15 20 25 30 35 40 45 50 55 60 65 70 75 80 85 90 950%

1%

2%

3%

4%

5%

6%

7%

8%

9%

NonparticipantsAverage = 58

ParticipantsAverage = 80

Page 15: L ONGITUDINAL D ATA AND H IGHER E DUCATION A CCOUNTABILITY Tom Schenk Jr., Consultant

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8th Grade ITBS: Science

0 5 10 15 20 25 30 35 40 45 50 55 60 65 70 75 80 85 90 95

-1%

0%

1%

2%

3%

4%

5%

6%

7%

8%

9%

NonparticipantsAverage = 61

ParticipantsAverage = 79

Page 16: L ONGITUDINAL D ATA AND H IGHER E DUCATION A CCOUNTABILITY Tom Schenk Jr., Consultant

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Evidence of Selection Bias

Participants are more likely to be male, by a wide margin.

Participation by gender holds constant around 90 percent.

Students are in the 80th percentile in math and science.

Page 17: L ONGITUDINAL D ATA AND H IGHER E DUCATION A CCOUNTABILITY Tom Schenk Jr., Consultant

17

LABOR SUPPLY

Page 18: L ONGITUDINAL D ATA AND H IGHER E DUCATION A CCOUNTABILITY Tom Schenk Jr., Consultant

18 Wages for employees in most sectors.

Provided on a quarterly basis.

Includes multiple jobs.

Excludes workers in some sectors (e.g., military).

Does not include hourly wages or full-time status.

Only includes employees within Iowa.

Unemployment Insurance

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Matching Wage Data

• Educational data

MIS

Page 20: L ONGITUDINAL D ATA AND H IGHER E DUCATION A CCOUNTABILITY Tom Schenk Jr., Consultant

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Human Capital Theory

WagesCompleters

Direct Costs

Time

Leavers

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Returns on Investment

Σ yi - xi (1+r)t

t=1

T

- C

Page 22: L ONGITUDINAL D ATA AND H IGHER E DUCATION A CCOUNTABILITY Tom Schenk Jr., Consultant

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Returns on Investment

Track wages over a set period of time, T.

Find the difference between wages between completers and leavers on the student level.

Find the cost of tuition.

If you assert an interest rate, r, then solve to find Net Present Value.

If the interest rate if left unknown, then solve to find the Internal Rate of Return.

Page 23: L ONGITUDINAL D ATA AND H IGHER E DUCATION A CCOUNTABILITY Tom Schenk Jr., Consultant

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Methodology

Assemble a cohort of graduates (completers) and those who left college without a degree (leavers).

Stagger the cohorts so completers are finishing their final year in college as leavers are in their first year in the workforce.

Exclude students who are found in any postsecondary institution.

Estimate the tuition expenses for completers in their final year.

Cohorts from 2002 and 2006.

Page 24: L ONGITUDINAL D ATA AND H IGHER E DUCATION A CCOUNTABILITY Tom Schenk Jr., Consultant

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Wages by Year

Net Present Value for Completers was $3,131.Internal Rate of Return was 6 percent.

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Returns by ClusterN

PV

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Returns by Select Clusters

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In-state Retention Rate

Page 29: L ONGITUDINAL D ATA AND H IGHER E DUCATION A CCOUNTABILITY Tom Schenk Jr., Consultant

In-stateOut-of-state

Working

School

WorkingSchool

Page 30: L ONGITUDINAL D ATA AND H IGHER E DUCATION A CCOUNTABILITY Tom Schenk Jr., Consultant

HIGHER EDUCATIONACCOUNTABILITY

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Slightly over 52 percent of first-time, full-time students entering in 2006 either transferred or graduated within three years (by 2008).

Success Rate

2005 20060%

10%

20%

30%

40%

50%

60%

Page 32: L ONGITUDINAL D ATA AND H IGHER E DUCATION A CCOUNTABILITY Tom Schenk Jr., Consultant

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Page 33: L ONGITUDINAL D ATA AND H IGHER E DUCATION A CCOUNTABILITY Tom Schenk Jr., Consultant

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The three year graduation rate for first-time, full-time students rose slightly to 39.1 percent for the 2006 cohort. The graduation rate has fluctuated, but stayed ahead of the national graduation rate (33 percent).

Graduation Rate

2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 20060%

10%

20%

30%

40%

50%

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Time-to-degree rose slightly to 2.4 years for the 2004 cohort from 2.3 years.

Time to Degree

2003

2004

0 1 2

Page 35: L ONGITUDINAL D ATA AND H IGHER E DUCATION A CCOUNTABILITY Tom Schenk Jr., Consultant

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Accountability Systems

Measuring the effectiveness of institutions through student outcomes.

Desirable qualities of accountability measures:1. Specifically measures the effectiveness of the institution,

not other factors.2. Measures improvement.3. Flexible to accommodate a variety of outcomes.

The current traditional measures cannot capture these elements.

Page 36: L ONGITUDINAL D ATA AND H IGHER E DUCATION A CCOUNTABILITY Tom Schenk Jr., Consultant

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Accountability Systems

Issues with graduation/success rate:1. Denominator debate.2. Selection bias.3. Positive feedback mechanism.

Solutions: Use the same methods that assist with Project Lead The Way evaluations.

Page 37: L ONGITUDINAL D ATA AND H IGHER E DUCATION A CCOUNTABILITY Tom Schenk Jr., Consultant

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50%

Estimating Success

50%

50%

50%

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Simulated Example

Page 39: L ONGITUDINAL D ATA AND H IGHER E DUCATION A CCOUNTABILITY Tom Schenk Jr., Consultant

OBTAININGDATA

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Obtaining Data

Contact your major professor and/or the Department of Education.

Education data can be obtained from the Department of Education, other data (e.g., UI records) will need special permission.

Data is distributed de-identified and must be returned or destroyed at the completion of the research study.

Obtaining data is relatively low-cost, nominal fee (<$100) for a secure flash drive.

Page 41: L ONGITUDINAL D ATA AND H IGHER E DUCATION A CCOUNTABILITY Tom Schenk Jr., Consultant

Tom Schenk Jr.Consultant – Institutional Effectiveness &

AccountabilityIowa Department of EducationPhone: 515-281-3753E-mail: [email protected]