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Friday, August 16, 2013

Does the U.S. Education Department Have a Dirty Data Problem? - Politics K-12 - Education Week

Does the U.S. Education Department Have a Dirty Data Problem? - Politics K-12 - Education Week:

Does the U.S. Education Department Have a Dirty Data Problem?

Dirty Data

Over at Charters and Choice, my colleague Katie Ash wrote about a newGovernment Accountability Office report finding big problems with charter schools reporting accurate enrollment numbers for English-language learners.
The headline could have just as easily been: "GAO: U.S. Department of Education Fails to Provide Data Oversight".
You could argue over which is more alarming: that charter schools aren't appropriately reporting enrollment numbers of ELLs, or that the U.S. Department of Education does not examine the quality of data on a "regular basis," as the GAO found?
The problem with the ELL data was that too many charter schools left the field blank when they were supposed to report the number of ELLs. Thirty-seven percent of charters, in fact, in school year 2010-11, had blanks in the field capturing ELL enrollment counts. Leaving a data field blank is very different than reporting a zero for enrollment.
In fact, in five states, the GAO found that between 80 percent and 100 percent of charter schools left ELL enrollment counts blank. That includes very-populous states such as New York and Ohio that are likely to have ELLs in charters.
The federal Education Department, for its part, did not perform any comprehensive data-