WORKSHOP TO EXAMINE CURRENT AND POTENTIAL USES OF NCES LONGITUDINAL SURVEYS BY THE EDUCATION RESEARCH COMMUNITY
The National Center for Education Statistics (NCES) provides a highly important resource for the nation through its longitudinal surveys of student growth and achievement. These surveys have yielded evidence to support a wide range of scientific investigations of learning and development for more than 40 years. Over this time, however, significant changes have occurred in the demography of the U.S. student population, in the technology available for research, and in the data available beyond the national surveys.
With funding from the Institute of Education Sciences, the National Academy of Education and NCES convened a workshop in November 2013 to explore ideas regarding how NCES surveys could better align with changing needs of education researchers and maximize the potential of evolving research methodologies. The workshop resulted in a rich collection of papers (linked below) that examine opportunities to improve NCES longitudinal surveys from a variety of research perspectives.
STEERING COMMITTEE MEMBERS
- Adam Gamoran (Chair)
William T. Grant Foundation - W. Steven Barnett
Rutgers University - Laura Desimone
University of Pennsylvania - Pascal (Pat) Forgione
ETS - Pat Rubio Goldsmith
Texas A&M University - Jennifer Lee
Indiana University - Sean Reardon
Stanford University - Barbara Schneider
Michigan State University
Introduction
Introduction from Workshop Chair
Adam Gamoran
William T. Grant Foundation
Commissioned Papers
Testing Causal Hypotheses Using Longitudinal Survey Data: A Modest Proposal for Modest Improvement
Thomas D. Cook
Northwestern University & Mathematica Policy Research, Inc.
Building Better Longitudinal Surveys (on the Cheap) Through Links to Administrative Data
Susan Dynarski
University of Michigan
Using NCES Surveys to Understand School Violence and Bullying
Dorothy L. Espelage
University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign
Collecting Evidence of Instruction with Video and Observation Data in NCES Surveys
Pam Grossman
Stanford University
Linking NCES Surveys to Administrative Data
Susanna Loeb
Stanford University
Improving Outcome Measures Other Than Achievement
Kristin Anderson Moore, Laura Lippman, and Renee Ryberg
Child Trends
New Tools for Measuring Context
Chandra Muller
University of Texas at Austin
Using NCES Surveys to Understand the Experiences of Immigrant-Origin Students
Rubén G. Rumbaut
University of California,Irvine
Summary & Reflections
The Future of NCES’s Longitudinal Student Surveys: Balancing Bold Vision and Realism
John Robert Warren
University of Minnesota