Can Progress 8 survive coronavirus?

School performance tables will be affected by the coronavirus pandemic – but one statistician offers a solution
21st May 2020, 12:09pm

Share

Can Progress 8 survive coronavirus?

/magazine/archive/can-progress-8-survive-coronavirus
Ofsted & Accountability: Most Parents Have Not Heard Of Progress 8, The Performance Measure For Schools, Dfe Research Shows

The cancellation of this year’s Sats tests could make the government’s main secondary school performance measure impossibleto calculate, a leading statistician has pointed out.

Progress 8 is a value-added measure that compares the progress that pupils make between their key stage 2 testsand GCSE results. Sothe lockdown cancellation of this year’s Sats will make itimpossible to calculate Progress 8 in the usual way in 2025.

Dave Thomson, ofFFT Education Datalab, that “maybe things will never be the same again” andstates: “One obvious answer is to do nothing. After all, there are well-known issues with Progress 8 and what can be inferred from it.”


𲹰:Northern schools ‘penalised by Progress 8 tables

Education Datalab:Pupil background ‘levels out North-South divide’

Exclusive: Progress 8 ‘penalises schools in white working-class communities’


But then he offerspossible solutions, including the use of data from CAT tests (cognitive abilities tests) at the start of Year 7 -although he says that scaling up to a full national collection of such data is “unlikely to be a good use of anyone’s time following the disruption”.

The impact of coronavirus on Progress 8

Another alternative, says Thomson, is to use of data from key KS1 Sats, but he says this is far less satisfactory than using KS2 data because:

  • There is a nine-year gap between KS1 and KS4.
  • There will be missing data for a small but not insubstantial number of pupils who arrived in England during KS2.
  • Teacher assessment levels are not as granular as test results.
  • There are comparability issues between the KS1 results of infant schools and all-through primary schools.

However,taking some of these factors into account, Thomsonused 2018 KS4 data for students in state-funded mainstream schools and linked it to their KS1 data -to see if it could work as an alternative way of calculating Progress 8.

He says the correlation between scores was high, but thatthe results “masked quite large differences” for some schools, and that schools in London appeared particularly affected, with 10 per cent changing by more than 0.5 (equivalent to half a GCSE grade) and another third changing by more than 0.25.

He concludes: “What we have here is a way of calculating an alternative Key Stage 4 value-added measure that produces results that are more similar to Progress 8 than perhaps you might expect for many schools.

“But, nonetheless, it would probably still be considered unsuitable for school performance tables even if it produced results that more closely mirrored Progress 8. Just because a measure could be produced, it doesn’t mean it should.”

You can read the blog.

Want to keep reading for free?

Register with Tes and you can read two free articles every month plus you'll have access to our range of award-winning newsletters.

Register with Tes and you can read two free articles every month plus you'll have access to our range of award-winning newsletters.

Keep reading with our special offer!

You’ve reached your limit of free articles this month.

/per month for 12 months
  • Unlimited access to all Tes magazine content
  • Save your favourite articles and gift them to your colleagues
  • Exclusive subscriber-only stories
  • Over 200,000 archived articles
  • Unlimited access to all Tes magazine content
  • Save your favourite articles and gift them to your colleagues
  • Exclusive subscriber-only stories
  • Over 200,000 archived articles
Recent
Most read
Most shared