3 tips for using data to drive instruction

Just like doctors checking a patient’s chart, teachers use assessment data as an academic temperature check. Teachers identify students’ needs, charting growth over time and ensuring that students get the ongoing support they deserve on their learning journey. But if teachers, like doctors, want to go beyond “do no harm,” they need tips for using data to drive instruction.

But what if we snoozed through the data-literacy portion of our teacher-training? I’m joking: like many teachers, neither I nor Ashley Cruz, NWEA professional learning consultant, received any such training—despite our medical counterparts doing so.

Assessment data is a prescription, and teachers need help reading the handwriting. I sat down with Ashley to talk through her best teacher tips to strengthen this teacher muscle and make it a more seamless part of the profession.

What is data-driven instruction?

Before I was ready to dive into the benefits of data-driven instruction, I asked Ashley to give me a definition. She explained that data-driven instruction is when teachers continually incorporate student assessment data into their instructional ecosystem to make district-wide and student-level shifts based on data over time. Let’s pull out some phrases to make this easier to understand:

While it can feel overwhelming, data-driven instruction is a muscle: after a bit of practice, using data to drive instruction will not only seem intuitive, but it will also save you time and yield real student gains.

A word about formative assessment

Peanut butter and jelly. Mario and Luigi. Data-driven instruction and formative assessment. When you hear about one, you’ll hear about the other.

Teachers, I don’t know about you, but whenever I hear the term “formative assessment,” I second-guess myself. I suddenly feel like a first-year teacher, nodding along about some new concept or acronym. So I had Ashley confirm what I do know:

Despite knowing these things, sometimes the fancy jargon hides what formative assessment is: it’s the ongoing temperature checks that we do each day with our students. And that’s why it is so important when it comes to data-driven instruction. Remember that your classroom is an ecosystem, with tiny dials and nodes shifting every day. Your star student, when really noticed, has thousands of opportunities for growth. Your student who needs a bit more support with fractions might be a whiz with solving variable equations.

Ready to get started using data to drive instructional shifts? Here are three doable, bite-sized tips to put your data to work.

Tip #1: Before anything, involve students in goal setting

There’s a reason this step is first. This isn’t a nice to have; it’s a must have. Involving students in the “why” and “what’s next” ensures learner agency and encourages buy-in, so students don’t feel as if an assessment is happening to them and compromise their performance because they’re unmotivated.

Often, teachers feel the pressure of dwindling class hours, but Ashley urges that even if there’s no time to conduct elaborate one-on-one student conversations, dedicated goal setting pays dividends. Involve students in using data to drive instruction. If you test with MAP Growth, review the Student Profile report with students and allow them to reflect on previous data to set an upcoming goal.

Try this: