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2011-12: Universe Collection Civil Rights Data Collection

Civil Rights Data Collection

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2011-12: Universe Collection. Civil Rights Data Collection . CRDC Presentation. How CRDC Data is Used. Lessons Learned. CRDC Purpose. Update on the 2011-12 CRDC. Introductions: Rebecca Fitch, OCR Abby Potts, OCR Ross Lemke, CRDC Partner Support Center (PSC). CRDC Purpose. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Civil Rights Data Collection

2011-12: Universe Collection

Civil Rights Data Collection

Page 2: Civil Rights Data Collection

CRDC Presentation

Update on the 2011-12 CRDC

CRDC

PurposeLessons Learned

How CRDC Data is Used

Page 3: Civil Rights Data Collection

Introductions: Rebecca Fitch, OCRAbby Potts, OCRRoss Lemke, CRDC Partner Support Center (PSC)

Page 4: Civil Rights Data Collection

• The purpose of the U.S. Department of Education (ED) Civil Rights Data Collection (CRDC) is to obtain data related to the nation's public school districts and elementary and secondary schools' obligation to provide equal educational opportunity.

• To fulfill this goal, the CRDC collects a variety of information, including student enrollment and educational programs and services data that are disaggregated by race/ethnicity, sex, limited English proficiency, and disability.

CRDC Purpose

Our hope and expectation is that by ensuring that the data collected by the CRDC covers the critical issues in civil rights in education, the department and all stakeholders will have the information they need to ensure that school districts and schools are living up to the promise of providing equal educational opportunity. -Arne Duncan

Page 5: Civil Rights Data Collection

CRDC

Fre

quen

tly A

sked

Que

stion

sWhen was the CRDC first conducted ?The CRDC has been conducted regularly since 1968, primarily as a biennial

collection. The CRDC included the universe of all districts in 1976, 2000 and

2011. CRDC is a longstanding part of the Office for Civil Rights’ (OCR) overall

strategy for administering and enforcing civil rights statutes prohibiting

discrimination on the basis of race, color, national origin, sex, disability and

age.

Who participates in the CRDC?The CRDC is primarily collected from school districts except in Florida and

Hawaii where the state provides the data on behalf of its school districts.

Does the CRDC leverage EDFacts Data?Starting in the 2009-10 SY, the CRDC stopped collecting high school completers

and child counts by disability category. This data is now provided by EDFacts.

Page 6: Civil Rights Data Collection

CRDC Schedule for 2011-12

Advance Website (AWS)

• Complete: Advance Website for participating school districts to enter in primary point of contact and update list of schools required to report.

Pre-collection

of Data

• Currently (June – August): Districts collect their LEA and School level data for the 2011-12 year. LEAs may choose to store the data in “pre-collection tools” for use when the survey opens in September.

Survey Open

• Upcoming (September – December): Districts enter/upload and validate their data via the web-based survey tool, and submit their data to the Department of Education through a certification process.

Data Quality Review

• Post-collection review: OCR reviews LEA CRDC data to identify possible errors; contacts the LEA to discuss possible errors; and allows the LEA to amend, as necessary, CRDC data.

Page 7: Civil Rights Data Collection

AWS Phase: Guiding Principles

• Every student is counted at the school that he or she attends.– Students are not reported back to a home school,

even if assessment results, grades, and/or funding is linked back to the home school.

– Every school reports students that receive more than 50% of instruction at that school.

Page 8: Civil Rights Data Collection

AWS Phase: Defining the Universe

• Step #1: Defining the Universe– All educational programs serving students :

• “Regular” PK-12 schools • Preschools operated by, or on behalf of, LEAs• Alternative schools• Charter schools• Virtual schools• State or locally operated programs serving school age

children including students who are deaf/blind• Juvenile justice facilities

Page 9: Civil Rights Data Collection

AWS Phase: Updating data

• Step #2: Pre-populating Data– Collaboration across offices: Common Core of

Data, Programs for Neglected and Delinquent Youth, Migrant Education Programs, EDFacts

– Coordination across agencies: Department of Justice, Department of Health and Human Services.

• Step #3: School District Contact Info and School List Review

Page 10: Civil Rights Data Collection

Communication• Early and frequent communications to

school districts and state education agencies

• Involve SEAs in CRDC communication to ensure state education agencies are aware of key CRDC milestones

• Coordination across offices in the Department is critical

Universe Collection• Consider the complexities in defining the

universe where categories and types of schools are changing and evolving

AWS Lessons LearnedParticipating

School Districts

Office for Civil Rights

State Education

Agencies

Partner Support Center

Page 11: Civil Rights Data Collection

PRE-COLLECTION PHASENEW FOR THE 2011-12 CRDC

June - August

Page 12: Civil Rights Data Collection

Pre-collection Phase

Guiding Principles• Offer school districts the opportunity to prepare

early for the 2011-12 CRDC survey open period.• Provide a way for smaller districts to store CRDC

data before the school year ends and the data system rolls over to the next school year.

• Support the development of flat files with new tools and resources for smaller school districts.

Page 13: Civil Rights Data Collection

Pre-Collection: Tools

Excel TemplatePDFFlat File

• PDF – Geared toward districts with a single school. A four-part printable document containing all survey questions (data groups).

• Excel Template – Geared toward districts with 2-10 schools. Separate Excel files, one for each CRDC Form, containing all survey questions (data groups) for that form. Creates a flat file that can be uploaded into the web submission system.

• FFS (Flat File Submission) – Geared toward districts with a large number of schools and the ability to extract data from their district data systems. District uses the provided flat file specifications to create their own data files.

The pre-collection tools can be used separately or in combination, in the way that best suits your CRDC data collection needs.

Page 14: Civil Rights Data Collection

Pre-collection Phase: PDF Survey Forms

• Geared toward districts with a single school.

• A four-part printable document of the survey questions (data groups).

• The district manually fills in their answers on the printed form.

• Once the survey opens, the district will manually enter the data into the online collection tool.

Page 15: Civil Rights Data Collection

Excel Template tools• Geared toward districts with 2-10 schools.• Four separate Excel files, one for each CRDC Form, containing all survey questions :

• LEA and school snap shot/point in time data and • LEA and school cumulative and end of year data.

• The district completes the templates in Excel. When finished, the user can also save the files as .csv files.

• Once the survey opens, the district can upload the files into the online collection tool.

Page 16: Civil Rights Data Collection

Flat File Submission

• Geared toward districts with a large number of schools and with more sophisticated IT capability.

• The district extracts data from its district databases into the files.• New for 2011-12: Specifications and instructions provided for district to create its

own data files, in either fixed width or .csv format. Once the survey opens, the district can upload the files into the online collection tool.

Example of Fixed Width specifications

Page 17: Civil Rights Data Collection

• Multiple partial file uploads supported

• Multiple formats (fixed width and .csv)

• One unified data check system for flat files and web-submitters

• Combine submission types: web survey and flat file. – LEAs can upload partial flat

files into the web survey tool and fill in remaining data through the web tool

Improvements to Flat File Submission from 2009-10: Flat File Submission

Lesson Learned from the 2009-10 CRDC

Page 18: Civil Rights Data Collection

Survey Open Period

September to December

Page 19: Civil Rights Data Collection

Survey Open Period

• Survey Opens in September and Closes in December

• Single survey open window to collect both Part 1 and Part 2 data.

• Student data will be collected under the seven race/ethnic categories

• New data on preschool suspensions will be collected on the 2011-12 CRDC

Page 20: Civil Rights Data Collection

Submission System Updates

• Web Survey tool to enter data through survey tool screens

• Upload flat files created either through FFS or excel template.

Page 21: Civil Rights Data Collection

Submission System Improvements

• Partial Flat Files in multiple formats• Web survey tool with skip logic so districts

only complete data relevant to each school• Single data check that provides

instantaneous feedback about the status of your data

Page 22: Civil Rights Data Collection

Combining Submissions

– School district using the Excel/Flat File Tool and Web Tools to collect data from individual schools

• ABC school district includes 7 schools, including 2 high schools.

• Most of the data is stored in a centralized district data system. However, the interscholastic athletics data is only available at the high schools.

• The CRDC coordinator might create a flat file for the majority of the data in the centralized district data system and use this to “pre-populate” the school-level forms.

• To fill in the missing interscholastic data housed only at high schools, the CRDC coordinator may have the high schools enter data through the web survey tool.

Flat File and Web Survey Tool

Author
Should remove "s" from Tools.
Page 23: Civil Rights Data Collection

Key Data Quality Tips

• Students must always be counted in the school where they actually attend for more than 50% of the school day.

• For discipline tables, report the number of students who received suspension, expulsion, corporal punishment, school-related arrests, or referral to law enforcement. Please do not report the discipline incidents in these tables.

• Collecting SAT and ACT data early is strongly suggested.

Many more tips are available at crdc2011.org

Page 24: Civil Rights Data Collection

Explore 2009-10 Data: OCRDATA.ED.GOV

Page 25: Civil Rights Data Collection

Find Success Stories

Page 26: Civil Rights Data Collection

On the Horizon• Data Quality Review of 2011-12 Submissions• Releasing the 2011-12 CRDC data • 2013-14 Collection

Page 27: Civil Rights Data Collection

More Questions? Check the FAQsThis document is updated regularly and aims to answer all general questions. The FAQ document can be accessed by clicking the FAQs / Additional Resources tab on the toolbar at the top of the CRDC website http://crdc2011.org. Contact the Partner Support Center (PSC) Web form http://www.crdc2011.org/LEA/help.aspxTelephone* 1-855-320-6459Fax 1-888-FAX-EDEN (1-888-329-3336)TTY/TDD1-888-403-3336 (888-403-EDEN)* 8am - 6pm ET