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Validation Engine for Observational Protocols
The Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation introduced the Measures of Effective Teaching (MET) project to develop and test multiple measures of teacher effectiveness. This document explores the overarching purpose and functionality of a validation engine, which was designed to help districts determine if their observation protocols routinely assign the highest ratings to teachers whose students grew the most, in terms of academic performance, and the lowest ratings to teachers whose students grew the least.
The United States has made progress in increasing postsecondary attainment – rising from rising from 38% in 2008 to over 53% today. There’s still work to be done, and this effort requires alignment across philanthropy, policy, and practice around a shared goal: ensuring more students complete credentials that lead to meaningful opportunity and mobility.
The “four-year college vs. everything else” frame around postsecondary education is both binary and unhelpful. A more helpful frame is to think about programs in terms of their purpose and payoff. A recent report from Excel in Ed shows a more holistic way of thinking about programs that expose students to a range of education and career options and outlines some essential ingredients for a quality, structured pathway.
At SXSW EDU, we talked about how real progress in higher education doesn’t happen overnight—it takes time, persistence, and commitments to long-term change. Developmental education reform is a great example: states are making smart updates to placement policies and support systems so more students can start—and succeed—in credit-bearing courses right away.
Mar 27, 2025
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