posted by:
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Charlene Czerniak
on May 16, 2003
at 9:50AM
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subject:
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data
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I think the "hard data" you refer to is often the key given pressures for success on high-stakes proficiency tests. We're just now (after 5 years) getting statistically significant results that proficiency scores ARE higher for those students of teachers who participated in the NSF project. We presented it to the president of the school board (who was a little more convinced that kits work...but who would still like textbooks back). I think the pressure for test results (without data to support our programs) is a hard sell.
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