A volume in The MARCES Book Series
Series Editor: Robert W. Lissitz, University of Maryland
Modeling student growth has been a federal policy requirement under No Child Left Behind (NCLB). In
addition to tracking student growth, the latest Race To The Top (RTTP) federal education policy stipulates the
evaluation of teacher effectiveness from the perspective of added value that teachers contribute to student
learning and growth. Student growth modeling and teacher value-added modeling are complex. The
complexity stems, in part, from issues due to non-random assignment of students into classes and schools,
measurement error in students' achievement scores that are utilized to evaluate the added value of teachers, multidimensionality of the measured
construct across multiple grades, and the inclusion of covariates. National experts at the Twelfth Annual Maryland Assessment Research Center's
Conference on "Value Added Modeling and Growth Modeling with Particular Application to Teacher and School Effectiveness" present the latest
developments and methods to tackle these issues. This book includes chapters based on these conference presentations. Further, the book provides
some answers to questions such as what makes a good growth model? What criteria should be used in evaluating growth models? How should outputs
from growth models be utilized? How auxiliary teacher information could be utilized to improve value added? How multiple sources of student
information could be accumulated to estimate teacher effectiveness? Whether student-level and school-level covariates should be included? And what
are the impacts of the potential heterogeneity of teacher effects across students of different aptitudes or other differing characteristics on growth
modeling and teacher evaluation?
Overall, this book addresses reliability and validity issues in growth modeling and value added modeling and presents the latest development in this
area. In addition, some persistent issues have been approached from a new perspective. This edited
volume provides a very good source of information related to the current explorations in student
growth and teacher effectiveness evaluation.