Hawaii Goes Public with Growth Model Visualization

A new interactive Web site published by the Hawaii Department of Education lets users click among multiple data streams to compare the state's complex areas, schools, and student groups. The Hawaii Growth Model Visualization Tool, as it's called, generates bubble charts that display how those groups are faring according to two measures: proficiency and growth. (Hawaii organizes its schools into "complex areas," which consists of several "complexes"; each complex is a grouping of a high school, elementary school, and middle/intermediate school.)

The higher a bubble is in the chart, the higher the group's percentage of students scoring in the "Meets or Exceeds Proficiency" range on the state's math and reading assessments. The further to the right in the chart a bubble is, the higher that group's median growth. The location of a student group's bubble from left to right and from top to bottom informs the viewer about growth and achievement for that group at the same time. The size of each bubble indicates group size.

  Hawaii's Growth Model Visualization Tool shows what percentage of a group of students are meeting or exceeding proficiency on math and reading assessments, its median growth, and how big the group is at a glance.
Hawaii's Growth Model Visualization Tool shows what percentage of a group of students are meeting or exceeding proficiency on math and reading assessments, its median growth, and how big the group is at a glance.
 

The department worked with SchoolView Foundation to develop the visualization tool. SchoolView is a non-profit organization created to coordinate efforts among some two-dozen states to improve data access and data usage about student and school performance within and across states. The SchoolView work uses a student growth percentile (SGP) methodology developed by the Colorado Department of Education and released under a Creative Commons license that allows it to be shared for non-commercial purposes.

Since summer 2013 teachers and staff have been working with a private version of the growth model Web site to analyze student achievement data. The staff site is protected by federal and state regulations from being released publicly. To maintain student confidentiality, users of the public growth model site can't view data for populations of fewer than 20 students.

"The launch of the public Hawaii Growth Model data visualization Web site is an exciting step in the department's journey to provide better information about school performance, in timely, easy-to-access, user-friendly ways," said Deputy Superintendent Ronn Nozoe. "The ability to visualize growth data in context with how a school or complex is performing in relation to others over time is critical to building understanding and collaborative action."

Hawaii's Department of Ed serves approximately 185,000 students.

About the Author

Dian Schaffhauser is a former senior contributing editor for 1105 Media's education publications THE Journal, Campus Technology and Spaces4Learning.

Featured

  • interconnected nodes with currency symbols

    Report: Half of Gen AI Projects Could Exceed Budget by 2028

    Organizations may be underestimating the cost of generative AI as they move from experimentation to production, according to Gartner's "10 Best Practices for Optimizing Generative and Agentic AI Costs" report.

  • Man types on laptop in data center

    Microsoft Announces General Availability of Point-in-Time Restore for Windows 11

    Microsoft has made point-in-time restore generally available for Windows 11, giving users and IT administrators a built-in way to roll back PCs after bad updates, driver problems, app corruption, or other problems.

  • circuit patterns

    Anthropic Intros Lower-Cost Claude Sonnet 5

    Anthropic has launched Claude Sonnet 5, positioning the model as its most autonomous mid-tier offering to date and a lower-cost alternative to its flagship Opus 4.8 system. The company said the model can plan multi-step tasks, operate tools such as browsers and terminals, and complete agentic work at a level that previously required larger and more expensive models.

  • glowing circuit patterns

    Call for Speakers Now Open for Tech Tactics in Education Fall 2026

    The virtual conference from the producers of Campus Technology and THE Journal will return on Sept. 23, 2026, with a focus on emerging trends in with a focus on emerging trends in AI, cybersecurity, and more.