Automated Data Entry System BringsSchools &Communities Together
        
        
        
        What makes one student stay in school and one drop out? If there is a                  behavior problem, what disciplinary actions should be taken? Are                  school leaders doing their jobs? Which teaching strategies are most                  effective? Is the grading system fair? These are just a few of the                  questions educators are faced with daily. The answers are critical if                  schools are to provide students with a quality education. But obtaining                  timely, accurate answers can be a challenge.                  In Ontario schools, as in many parts of the world, information-based                  decision making has come of age. Educational issues such as                  accountability, quality assurance and school profiles dominate the                  landscape. In an effort to make informed decisions, boards of education                  are constantly gathering information from parents, staff and students                  about curriculum, student attitudes, and evaluation techniques                  regarding a host of issues.                  The research department for the Durham Board of Education supports                  60,000 students in 113 schools. The schools routinely conduct surveys                  to gather information about a wide variety of school-related issues. For                  an average K-8 school of 500 students, the thought of conducting a                  25-item survey can be overwhelming. Such a survey returned by 400                  families can yield 10,000 item responses to enter, analyze and report. To                  enhance its ability to quickly design and interpret community surveys,                  the Board invested in a fully integrated, automated data entry and                  statistical analysis system.                  The Survey Process                  The research department receives requests from schools on a daily basis                  seeking assistance in survey design, construction and analysis. Much                  like customer satisfaction surveys in business, schools need to                  administer surveys to gauge the concerns and needs of students,                  parents and teachers. Survey research allows schools to open a                  dialogue with these audiences. Survey topics include student attitudes,                  literacy assessments, teaching practices, violence and drugs, and safety                  issues.                  The process begins with designing the survey. Teleform, a                  Windows-based, automated forms processing program, allows us to                  quickly design a survey to meet virtually any set of specifications a                  school provides. Page layout and design tools enable us to easily place                  text, graphics, artwork and data fields onto a form. Additionally, the form                  builder supports standard, legal, half-page, custom size and multi-page                  layouts in both landscape and portrait formats. When a school requests                  a survey, a research analyst briefly assesses their needs, then designs a                  form to collect the information. Each form is personalized with logos and                  graphics using Corel Draw. Within hours the form is designed.                  Teleform also supports hand print (Intelligent Character Recognition,                  ICR), typed text (OCR) and marks (OMR). These features are important                  to the Durham Board of Education because they help us avoid rewriting                  survey items to fit pre-printed forms and permits multiple scale and                  questionnaire formats. The software also has the capability to                  automatically read in data and export verified information into a                  statistical processing program called SPSS.                       Schools are able to take stock and set goals and                       objectives                       based on solid information.                  Prior to the use of Teleform, surveys were administered using                  pre-printed forms. This imposed obvious design limitations and                  produced unwanted costs having to keeping blank survey templates on                  hand. Now, once we produce a form and give it to the school, they make                  duplicates on a standard photocopier, eliminating the need to stock                  blank survey templates. The savings are very attractive.                  Once the surveys are created, they are "activated" by the software and                  assigned a specific and unique character symbol that identifies that form                  to Teleform. The software uses this form ID to distinguish between                  multiple forms and other faxed or scanned-in documents. Forms are then                  printed, copied and distributed to the school.                  Completed surveys are returned to the research department for                  processing. A Bell &Howell Copy Scan II Scanner is used to quickly                  scan--about 1,800 surveys per hour--verify and export the data into an                  SPSS database where, within minutes, the responses are descriptively                  analyzed and graphically represented.                  Durham schools are amazed by the wealth of data they receive. With the                  availability of organized research, the schools are able to take stock and                  set goals and objectives based on solid information. Principals and staff                  are now well aware of perceptions and understanding of school issues                  and programs. Decisions on school growth plans are no longer made                  with merely good intentions--they are substantiated by timely surveys.                  Teleform is a very useful diagnostic tool that has produced some rather                  unexpected results. The Durham Board of Education has yet to conduct                  a survey -- and we've done lots of them -- where we haven't had                  exceptionally strong positive support from the community. It's a nice                  validation for our teachers and schools.
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