Feb 23 2022
Data Analytics

How Can Student Data Drive Positive Learning Outcomes?

Data analysis allows educators to teach with agility, but they need data security and training to pivot confidently.

In the digital education landscape, modern technology collects a large amount of data. While it’s important to protect student data, it’s also important to note that there is more digital data available to educators than ever before. With the right mindset — and proper professional development — educators can use this data to drive positive outcomes in the classroom.

Data has always been available to educators, says Mariana Aguilar, senior director of education at GoGuardian. From how long an assignment takes students to complete to how many students hold up their hands to answer a question, “analog data points have been around for a really long time,” she says. The difference now is that educators and other stakeholders have access to digital data.

“This enables us to have real-time insights into how students are doing, which can accelerate the ability for educators to adjust instruction to serve students’ needs in the best way possible,” Aguilar says.

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The availability of digital data in real time can help academic growth and success, as long as the right stakeholders have access to the data and know how to use it in a productive and meaningful way.

“Data can be one of the most powerful resources that educators have at their fingertips to accelerate learning, and so we need to treat that data with care and respect as we leverage it to drive positive learning outcomes,” Aguilar says.

Student Data Facilitates Educator Agility

Having access to student data allows educators to teach with more agility and shift their instruction in ways that support academic growth and success.

Tools like GoGuardian’s Edulastic, which can provide real-time insights on how students are performing on a formative assessment as they take it, show teachers where students might need more support. Instead of waiting until the assessments are collected and graded, the data allows educators to pivot and reinforce concepts as soon as the assessment period is over.

Mariana Aguilar, GoGuardian
Data can be one of the most powerful resources that educators have at their fingertips to accelerate learning, and so we need to treat that data with care and respect as we leverage it to drive positive learning outcomes.”

Mariana Aguilar Senior Director of Education, GoGuardian

This allows teachers to make education more equitable as well. “We’re hopeful that the data points we’re currently working to provide teachers are going to be those that are not only important now, but continue to help increase equity and opportunity,” says Teddy Hartman, head of privacy at GoGuardian.

He adds that making any type of educational pivot in the classroom used to take a lot of forethought and a careful analysis of the students, their behavior and academic success.

“The more the data in teachers’ hands is agile and accessible and usable, the more time teachers can spend on what they really love doing: teaching and interacting with kids,” Hartman says.

Appropriate Levels of Access Keep Student Data Safe

One of the ways educators can create positive outcomes with student data while maintaining the privacy and safety of this information is through access management. IT administrators in K–12 should be sure they are choosing tools that take access and privacy into account.

READ MORE: What is identity and access management for K–12?

By making sure that the right stakeholders have access to the right data, IT staff can strengthen the safeguards protecting students’ information.

“The way we mitigate risk is by thinking about who the personas are, who would be using that aspect of the tool and the data, and then giving access to that data to that particular role,” Hartman says. One example is different users having different levels of visibility within their unique dashboards. “If a teacher has access to valuable data, an administrator or a school counselor would see a different view of the data itself.”

Professional Development Helps Educators Make Powerful Changes

To get the most out of the available student data at educators’ fingertips, they need to know how to access it and interpret it. This requires professional development that addresses data literacy and data analysis.

“Often, teachers are left in a position where they have a bunch of data, but they don’t feel like they have the time or the expertise to be confident in leveraging it,” Aguilar says.

Instead, IT leaders and ed tech companies should be sure educators are equipped with the skills necessary to use student data in a meaningful way. This accelerates learning and spurs academic growth. “If data analysis is not embedded into how teachers go about teaching and designing their lessons, then it becomes an appendage,” Aguilar adds.

DISCOVER: How can professional development increase teacher confidence?

Additionally, this training and consideration should happen when educators have the time to engage with it. Hartman shares an example where, during his time as an English teacher, new technology was brought into the classroom in the middle of February. “I’m the middle of five classes; I had 125 students. I was a wrestling coach. I had zero time in my life,” he says.

Adding new tools or data literacy training to an educator’s to-do list in the middle of a semester with no plan to support ongoing responsibilities likely won’t result in meaningful data analysis. Instead, educators should be brought to the table where stakeholders are making these decisions to create the most positive impacts in their classrooms.

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