Work with local education agencies and state educator effectiveness advisory bodies to analyze, compare, and use data from identified high-quality educator evaluation systems to determine root causes of equity gaps in access to excellent teachers and leaders between and within districts.
Develop partnerships with key stakeholders (e.g., in an equity workgroup) to determine what metrics to use to continuously measure long-term access to excellent teachers and leaders.
Find out whether a regional educational laboratory serving a state education agency can analyze extant data to help the state understand key patterns of equity gaps.
Regional comprehensive center staff can assist state education agency and educator preparation program staff to develop a framework for analyzing data.
To ensure consistency in data collection, work with local education agencies and state educator effectiveness advisory bodies to implement high-quality educator evaluation systems that are approximately comparable across local education agencies.
Leverage federal resources, such as your regional educational laboratory or regional center, to develop a summary of the research and related policy requirements on issues of equitable access in your region and distribute to partners during in-person meetings or webinars.
Work with partners to produce maps using your state and district metrics of choice. These maps can be great communication tools to use when working with policymakers and stakeholders.
Develop protocols for sharing data across stakeholder groups to broaden understanding of the state context of student access to excellent teachers and leaders.
Develop partnerships with key stakeholders (e.g., in an equity workgroup) to determine what metrics should be used to measure student access to excellent teachers and leaders.
Access to important educational resources in California’s middle and high schools is not equal among schools that serve different student populations. Overall, the most disadvantaged populations of middle and high school students are likely to have the least access to the resources necessary for learning.