WHAT AFFECTS STUDENT PERFORMANCE? S A NAND, G RAMENER.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
NIGB NATIONAL INFORMATION GOVERNANCE BOARD FOR HEALTH AND SOCIAL CARE Sams Story Information Sharing module.
Advertisements

Kids and Family Reading Report™ Harry Potter: The Power of One Book
Chapter 3 Graphic Methods for Describing Data. 2 Basic Terms  A frequency distribution for categorical data is a table that displays the possible categories.
ATLANTA SNOW/ICE EVENT January 2014 Laura Myers, PhD David Brown, PhD Center for Advanced Public Safety (CAPS) The University of Alabama August 19, 2014.
Florence L. Goodenough Draw-a-Man Theory
Modeling Data Use for Teacher and School Leader Candidates By: Dr. Jessica Zarian Assistant Professor, Metropolitan College of New York.
CHAPTER 11 Inference for Distributions of Categorical Data
1 Psych 5500/6500 The t Test for a Single Group Mean (Part 5): Outliers Fall, 2008.
1 Lesson Other Types of Graphs. 2 Lesson Other Types of Graphs California Standards: Statistics, Data Analysis, and Probability 2.3 Analyze.
WRITE THE QUESTION AND THE DATE: What makes some people so much better at things than other people? Where do you excel? (For the unit project, this could.
THE UNITED STATES SCHOOL SYSTEM PRINCE WILLIAM COUNTY SCHOOLS.
Women24 Parenting Survey October aims To investigate trends in parenting To test with data some assumptions frequently made by parents on parenting.
`.  The best place to journey through the world of words is your local library. Take advantage of your library’s reading programs, story hours and resource.
Agresti/Franklin Statistics, 1 of 63 Chapter 2 Exploring Data with Graphs and Numerical Summaries Learn …. The Different Types of Data The Use of Graphs.
Statistics Used In Special Education
Think of a topic to study Review the previous literature and research Develop research questions and hypotheses Specify how to measure the variables in.
Unit 1.4 Recurrence Relations
CHAPTER 1 Basic Statistics Statistics in Engineering
Divorce in Canada. 38% of marriages end in divorce Peaked in 1987 and now stable There are regional differences (highest in Quebec, lowest in Newfoundland/Labrador)
How Relative Age Effect Contributes to Becoming an Honors Student Shelly Schenewerk: Medical Laboratory Science, College of Arts and Sciences, and Honors.
Buddha has said this beautifully, "All that we are is the result of what we have thought". 100 Beliefs.
Investigation #1 Factors and Products.
I am ready to test!________ I am ready to test!________
FREQUENCY DISTRIBUTION
Sight words.
IFS When you are born matters: the impact of date of birth on child cognitive outcomes in England Claire Crawford, Lorraine Dearden & Costas Meghir Institute.
The Practice of Statistics, 5th Edition Starnes, Tabor, Yates, Moore Bedford Freeman Worth Publishers CHAPTER 11 Inference for Distributions of Categorical.
Chapter 11: Inference for Distributions of Categorical Data Section 11.1 Chi-Square Goodness-of-Fit Tests.
Lecture 8 Chi-Square STAT 3120 Statistical Methods I.
Good afternoon fellow classmates and Mrs.Morgado. The topic we were focusing on is Modes of Communication. We surveyed three classes: gr.1, gr.4, and.
1 Chapter 4 Numerical Methods for Describing Data.
KEY STAGE 2 SATS Session Aims To understand what SATs are and why we have them. What will be different in SATs 2016? To share timetable for SATs.
Sight Words.
Socialization and the Self
Starter 1- whiteboards Outline the difference between Gender Stability
High Frequency Words.
Chi-Square INCM Chi Square When presented with categorical data, one common method of analysis is the “Contingency Table” or “Cross Tab”. This is.
Custom Reports: SCGs and VCGs. Standard Comparison Group (SCG)
Safe and active life as pupils’ experience Survey study for 5th and 7th grade students in Turku.
KEY STAGE 2 SATS SESSION AIMS To understand what SATs are and why we have them. What will be different in SATs 2016? To share timetable for SATs.
The inference and accuracy We learned how to estimate the probability that the percentage of some subjects in the sample would be in a given interval by.
ALL DATA GATHERED OVER MXIT SOCIAL NETWORK
A review of academic research.  The ways parent education programs shapes their children’s well- being are multifaceted and complex  We summarize the.
Pupil Interviews. O We prepared written interviews made up of 13 questions. O We randomly selected 2 children from each class by their place on the register.
CHAPTER 11: INFERENCE FOR DISTRIBUTIONS OF CATEGORICAL DATA 11.1 CHI-SQUARE TESTS FOR GOODNESS OF FIT OUTCOME: I WILL STATE APPROPRIATE HYPOTHESES AND.
Matthew 2 By: Grace Albarez, Larkin Branch, Curtis Gremillion, and Brett Pike 6 th Hour.
@PSHEassociation | | Questions About Bullying to discuss in a planned PSHE lesson, or in tutor time or circle.
Teachers Doing Research : Relationship Building with Students Holly Tuft  Professional Development School Student Teacher  Riverside Elementary School.
Analysis of AP Exam Scores
CHAPTER 11 Inference for Distributions of Categorical Data
Exploratory Data Analysis
CHAPTER 11 Inference for Distributions of Categorical Data
Unit 1 Exploring Data: Distributions
Warm Up Check your understanding p. 687 CONDITIONS:
Demography: It’s All About People
4. Finding the Average, Mode and Median
Workshop for Parents and Carers
Role Models, Aspirations and Educational Attainment
Understanding Your PSAT/NMSQT Results
Contents How do I login? How do I make appointments?
CHAPTER 11 Inference for Distributions of Categorical Data
CHAPTER 11 Inference for Distributions of Categorical Data
CHAPTER 11 Inference for Distributions of Categorical Data
Selecting a Sample Notes
CHAPTER 11 Inference for Distributions of Categorical Data
CHAPTER 11 Inference for Distributions of Categorical Data
CHAPTER 11 Inference for Distributions of Categorical Data
CHAPTER 11 Inference for Distributions of Categorical Data
Presentation transcript:

WHAT AFFECTS STUDENT PERFORMANCE? S A NAND, G RAMENER

D OES YOUR NAME MATTER ? When I was young, I thought I was unlucky. My name starts with "A". I used to get called very early for questions, submissions, etc. in class. Often I was unprepared, and didn't do as well as classmates whose name started with "V". Later, I was told this was an advantage, as I'd always learn to be prepared. Does the first letter of the name actually affect the marks? “

2005 First letter marks APVDSNKRBGMAPVDSNKRBGM VAPDSKNBRGMVAPDSKNBRGM 59.2% 59.9% 58.9% 58.8% 57.9% 56.3% 56.2% 56.1% 55.4% 54.5% 54.4% 66.5% 65.9% 65.8% 65.2% 64.3% 64.0% 63.4% 62.8% 62.6% 61.5% 61.1% 2011 First letter marks Why is this? Is this pattern distinguishable from randomness? Source: Karnataka State Board exams (8 – 8.5 lakh students per year)

Jain Harini Shweta SnehaPooja Ashwin Shah Deepti Sanjana Varshini Ezhumalai Venkatesan Silambarasan Pandiyan Kumaresan Manikandan Thirupathi Agarwal Kumar Priya

WHAT ABOUT ASTROLOGY?

Based on the results of the 20 lakh students taking the Class XII exams at Tamil Nadu over the last 3 years, it appears that the month you were born in can make a difference of as much as 120 marks out of 1,200. June borns score the lowest The marks shoot up for Aug borns … and peaks for Sep-borns 120 marks out of 1200 explainable by month of birth An identical pattern was observed in 2009 and 2010… … and across districts, gender, subjects, and class X & XII. “It’s simply that in Canada the eligibility cut- off for age-class hockey is January 1. A boy who turns ten on January 2, then, could be playing alongside someone who doesn’t turn ten until the end of the year—and at that age, in preadolescence, a twelve-month gap in age represents an enormous difference in physical maturity.” -- Malcolm Gladwell, Outliers

Pattern of “births” in India is skewed This is a birth date dataset that’s obtained from school admission data for over 10 million children. When we compare this with births in the US, we see none of the same patterns. For example, Is there an aversion to the 13 th or is there a local cultural nuance? Are holidays avoided for births? Which months have a higher propensity for births, and why? Are there any patterns not found in the US data? Very few children are born in the month of August, and thereafter. Most births are concentrated in the first half of the year We see a large number of children born on the 5 th, 10 th, 15 th, 20 th and 25 th of each month – that is, round numbered dates Such round numbered patterns a typical indication of fraud. Here, birthdates are brought forward to aid early school admission More birthsFewer births … on average, for each day of the year (from 2007 to 2013)

This adversely impacts children’s marks It’s a well established fact that older children tend to do better at school in most activities. Since many children have had their birth dates brought forward, these younger children suffer. The average marks of children “born” on the 1 st, 5 th, 10 th, 15 th etc. of the month tend to score lower marks. Are holidays avoided for births? Which months have a higher propensity for births, and why? Are there any patterns not found in the US data? Higher marksLower marks … on average, for children born on a given day of the year (from 2007 to 2013) Children “born” on round numbered days score lower marks on average, due to a higher proportion of younger children

P ERFORMANCE : B OYS VS G IRLS

What do the children in schools know and can do at different stages of elementary education? Have the inputs made into the elementary education system had a beneficial effect or not?

The report studies response distribution Number of siblingsComputer usage Number of books readPrivate tuition

LET’S STUDY WHAT AFFECTS THEIR ABILITIES

Having books improves reading ability Having more books at home improves the performance of children when it comes to reading. (But children typically only have only 1-10 books at home) Number of students sampled What is the impact? How many more marks can having more books fetch? Circle size indicates number of students with this response. Few students have no books. Is this response (“25+ books”) good or bad? Small red bars indicate low marks. Large green bars indicate high marks. Students having 25+ books tend to score high marks. The most common response is marked in blue. This is also the circle. The graphic is summarized in words Indicates whether the best response is the most popular. Blue means that it is not. Green means that it is. Red means that the worst level is the most popular response.

… but the impact in science is less While having more books improves the reading % score by 8%, it only increases the science % by 4%

Having more siblings doesn’t help reading Children with 1 sibling do much better than children with many siblings

… but helps a lot in mathematics Children with 4+ siblings do very well, children with 1 sibling fare poorly

Tuitions help a little … but not children with 4+ siblings

Tuitions help a little … but not children of illiterate parents

Children like games, and they’re good … but playing daily hurts reading ability

Watching TV occasionally is good Children who watch TV every day don’t do as well as children who watch TV only once a week. But children who never watch TV fare the worst. Watching TV every day helps improve children’s reading ability a little bit more… … but mathematical abilities fall dramatically at that point

Reading books every day is not good Reading magazines every day seems to be

But having educated parents helps most This table shows the % improvement in score due to each factor

Its impact is less with more children The same holds for mother’s education

Fathers help their boys study … but mothers help the girls … except in mathematics

We have a website that you can explore GRAMENER.COM/NAS

WHAT NEXT? How does school / teacher behaviour affect marks? What topics pose hurdles to different segments? Group questions into topics based on similarity of student answers? Group students into segments based on similarity of answers? EXPLORE & LEARN FROM DATA