- Using PVAAS for a Purpose
- Key Concepts
- PEERS
- About PEERS
- Understanding the PEERS pages
- Evaluation List
- Evaluation Summary
- Evaluation Forms
- Add Educator
- Add Evaluator
- Manage Access
- Add a school-level Educator to PEERS
- Add a district-level Educator to PEERS
- Add the Evaluator permission to a user's account
- Remove the Evaluator permission from a district user's account
- Add the Evaluator or Administrative Evaluator permission to a district user's account
- Remove the Administrative Evaluator permission from a district user's account
- Remove an Educator from PEERS
- Restore a removed Educator
- Assign an Educator to a district-level Evaluator
- Assign an Educator to an Evaluator
- Unassign an Educator from an Evaluator
- Assign an Educator to a school
- Unassign an Educator from a school
- Link a PVAAS account to an Educator
- Working with Evaluations
- Switch between Educator and Evaluator
- View an evaluation
- Use filters to display only certain evaluations
- Print the Summary section of an evaluation
- Understanding evaluation statuses
- Determine whether other evaluators have access to an evaluation
- Lock or unlock an evaluation
- Save your changes
- Mark an evaluation as Ready for Conference
- Release one or more evaluations
- Download data from released evaluations to XLSX
- Make changes to an evaluation marked Ready for Conference
- Reports
- School Reports
- LEA/District Reports
- Teacher Reports
- Student Reports
- Comparison Reports
- Human Capital Retention Dashboard
- Roster Verification (RV)
- Getting Started
- All Actions by Role
- All Actions for Teachers
- All Actions for School Administrators or Roster Approvers
- Manage teachers' access to RV
- Assign other school users the Roster Approver permission
- View a teacher's rosters
- Take control of a teacher's rosters
- Add and remove rosters for a teacher
- Copy a roster
- Apply a percentage of instructional time to every student on a roster
- Batch print overclaimed and underclaimed students
- Remove students from a roster
- Add a student to a roster
- Return a teacher's rosters to the teacher
- Approve a teacher's rosters
- Submit your school's rosters to the district
- All Actions for district admin or district roster approvers
- Assign other LEA/district users the Roster Approver permission
- Take control of a school's rosters
- View a teacher's rosters
- View the history of a teacher's rosters
- Edit a teacher's rosters
- Add and remove rosters for a teacher
- Copy a roster
- Apply a percentage of instructional time to every student on a roster
- Batch print overclaimed and underclaimed students
- Return a school's rosters to the school
- Approve rosters that you have verified
- Submit your district's rosters
- Understanding the RV Pages
- Viewing the History of Actions on Rosters
- Additional Resources
- Admin Help
- General Help
Misconception: PVAAS cannot measure the growth of students with missing data or highly mobile students.
PVAAS value-added analyses provide reliable and valid estimates of the effectiveness of LEAs/districts, schools, and teachers, including those with high mobility. This is because PVAAS can include students even if they have missing test data, so that the growth is representative of the students actually served by LEAs/districts, schools, and teachers.
PVAAS in Theory
Highly-mobile students are more likely to be students with a history of lower achievement, and it is important to include these students to avoid selection bias, which could provide misleading growth estimates to LEAs/districts, schools, and teachers. Although more simplistic value-added or growth estimates might require that students have the same set of prior test scores or that students have all prior test scores, this often has the result of excluding mobile student populations, and this would disproportionately affect educators serving those types of students.
Unlike simplistic approaches, PVAAS does not require that students have the same set of prior scores or all required prior testing scores, which means PVAAS can include more students in calculating the growth measures. When estimating students' entering achievement, the modeling considers the quantity and quality of information available to each student as well as student mobility among schools from year to year.
To accomplish this without imputing student test scores, PVAAS uses a sophisticated modeling approach that provides more reliable estimates of growth.§ The approach used by PVAAS for PSSA Mathematics and ELA estimates the means in each of these cells using relationships between students' test scores as if there were no missing test scores. In this way, the model provides more reliable and less biased growth measures without imputing any data. Furthermore, PVAAS uses much more student data to obtain these relationships in the growth estimates for LEAs/districts, schools, and teachers.
Furthermore, it is important from a philosophical perspective that as many students as possible are included in the system and school growth measures so that highly-mobile student populations receive the same level of attention as non-mobile ones.
PVAAS in Practice
For PSSA Mathematics 3-8 and ELA 3-8, all students can be included regardless of their testing history, their number of prior test scores, and which test scores they have. For PSSA Science grade 8 and the Keystones, all students can be included as long as they have three prior test scores in any test, grade, and subject.
For grade 4 Science, students need two prior test scores in any test, grade, and subject.
At the Pennsylvania Department of Education's request, students are excluded for other reasons, such as first-year EL status or not meeting the full academic year (FAY) requirement.
At the Pennsylvania Department of Education's request, student-level business rules are applied including not meeting the full acadmeic year (FAY) requirement.
Because PVAAS reporting is available statewide in Pennsylvania, students and their test history can be followed as they move within the Commonwealth.