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The Evaluation Center at Western Michigan University Education Management Corporation
The Evaluation Center at Western Michigan University Data Collection and
Related Evaluation
° Michigan
Public
° Connecticut
Charter
° Michigan
Public School
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Capabilities and Related Experiences of the Evaluation Team
The Evaluation Center at Western Michigan University is an internationally known research and development center that provides leadership for advancing the theory and practice of evaluation as applied to education and human services. The Center's activities include (1) state-of-the-art research to study current evaluation practices and to formulate and test theoretical propositions about evaluation; (2) development to produce data-gathering instruments, reporting formats, and evaluation procedures; (3) dissemination to inform interested persons about relevant evaluation issues and the Center's contributions; (4) service to help a selected group of clients--including school districts, nonprofit agencies, government agencies, foundations, and colleges--to evaluate their programs; (5) instruction to provide evaluation training to students at Western and other interested parties; and (6) leadership to help develop evaluation as a field of professional practice. The Center, which is in the division of research at WMU, was originally founded at Ohio State University in 1963 and moved to WMU in 1973. Dr.Daniel Stufflebeam has continuously served as its director. Evaluation Center personnel, keeping with the Center's mission to advance the theory and practice of evaluation, are highly skilled professionals who are dedicated to providing sound, useful, and efficient evaluation services. The coming sections provide further information about The Evaluation Center, staff, and affiliated consultants who will work on this evaluation, related experience, evaluation resources, and data collection and management capabilities. Over the past two years, The Evaluation Center has been an active observer
and learner in the area of charter schools. Two of the evaluation
team members, Dr. Jerry Horn and Dr. Gary Miron have been engaged
in studies related to the development and operation of charter schools.
The Center is particularly interested in working on projects that have
potential for major impact on educational practice and for which evaluation
is seen as a viable tool for improvement and accountability.
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Research Staff Skills The Center is particularly strong in the areas of educational program evaluation and personnel evaluation. Members of the staff are prolific writers about the theory and practice of evaluation, and they are sought after for their services and to lecture internationally on their area of specialty, most recently in the Philippines, Malaysia, Spain, and Taiwan. They have served in a variety of university, state, and national leadership roles; have had many journal articles, monographs, books, and chapters published; and have participated in evaluation work in over 20 countries outside the United States. As appropriate, the Center engages consultants and collaborators on
a worldwide basis as their expertise is needed. Over the years, this
has included such persons as Carl Candoli, Joy Frechtling, Gene Glass,John
Hattie, Edward Iwanicki, Richard Jaeger, Jason Millman, Rita O'Sullivan,
William Sanders, Michael Scriven, Anthony Shinkfield, James Stronge, William
Webster, and Patricia Wheeler, among many others.
[top] Data CollectionandManagement Capabilities The Evaluation Center is located at WMU in Kalamazoo, Michigan. It occupies about 9,000 square feet of office, library, data processing,and conference space. Generally, the Center has 20-30 employees at onetime, with a consistent core of senior researchers. The Center is home to the national Joint Committee on Standards for Educational Evaluation. The Evaluation Center is equipped with the latest and most effective
statistical, database, and word processing packages and also has access
to the University's computing resources. The Center maintains, in
house, the equipment (NCS Opscan 5) and expertise for scanning large
data sets. The Center also utilizes the Survey Tracker Plus package.
This survey management software facilitates the production and distribution
of surveys via mail-based paper surveys as well as e-mail and web-based
surveys. The software package allows for data entry from computer
scannable forms and manual data entry as well as electronic forms. The
various sources of data are automatically integrated into the same database.
The Center's support staff provides word processing, editing, clerical,
accounting, and data encoding/processing services. Center staff are
experienced and adept at managing multiple, large-scale projects.
[top] Evaluation Center staff have been involved in developing and evaluating numerous evaluation systems at the local, state, and national levels. The Center has provided evaluation services to a number of state departments of education, including Michigan, Hawaii, Alaska, Ohio, Texas, and Kentucky, as well as the U.S. Department of Education. From 1991-96, the federally funded research and development Center for Research on Educational Accountability and Teacher Evaluation (CREATE) was operated by The Evaluation Center. From that effort, a new professional organization, the Consortium for Research on Educational Accountability and Teacher Evaluation (CREATE) was formed to continue the work of the R & D Center; it will conduct the 9th annual National Evaluation Institute in Traverse City, Michigan, in July 1999. The Evaluation Center has a long history of providing the types of services relevant to this project. The first three projects described deal directly with charter schools. Each of the other selected projects demonstrates the capability of The Evaluation Center to conduct the activities detailed in the proposal. |
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The Initial Study of Pennsylvania Charter Schools. The Evaluation Center was contracted by the Pennsylvania Department of Education (PDE) to provide an initial formative evaluation of the state's charter school law (Act 22). Evaluation questions included charter school start-up; finance; student, staff, and parent characteristics; teacher professional opportunities; innovations in curriculum, instruction, and assessment; student achievement; and customer satisfaction. |
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Cleveland Charter Schools. The Evaluation Center is evaluating charter schools in Cleveland, Ohio, and addressing a variety of research questions related to the charter schools as well as their impact on local public schools and local communities. As part of the project, center staff are providing technical assistance to strengthen the accountability plans of the participating charter schools and develop their capacity to use evaluation to improve their operation and instruction. |
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| Education Management Corporation | Education
Management Corporation
Education Management Corporation (EMC) was established in 1989 and is incorporated under the laws of the state of New Jersey. EMC is a small, minority, woman owned corporation certified in SIC (Standard Industrial Classification) 8744 and certified by the states of Pennsylvania and New Jersey and the city of Philadelphia as a Minority Business Enterprise/Woman's Business Enterprise DBE.; The principals of the company, Mrs. Valaida W. Randolph and Mr. A.A. Androlewicz, possess a combination of over 60 years of experience in working with agencies on the municipal, state, federal, and international levels. Much of their experience was acquired while working for two Fortune 500 companies with responsibilities for the overall management of the Education Services Division. The EMC team is dedicated to serving at-riskyouth and adults and inassisting our nation in moldingthe work forceof tomorrow. EMC has a strong track record in education. Its management of Job Corps centers across the country and its experience in operating alternative education programs in correction institutions demonstrates the company's superior qualifications. As a small minority/woman-owned business, EMC is constantly looking at diversifying within the education field. The opportunity to be associated with Western Michigan University in this type of study presents an opportunity for EMC to utilize its skill base and expand its business base. [top] |
| Capability
EMC is a professional and education technical services company that provides the following types of service to Job Corps operators and youth correctional programs: assessments of center operations, staff training, research and proposal development, curriculum development, workshop coordination, center operating procedures development, operation of academic and/or vocational training units, operation of correctional schools, and management planning. With a commitment to nurturing, empowering, and enhancing the skills of today's at-risk youth so that they may become productive, tax-paying citizens of tomorrow, the staff selected to represent EMC are highly skilled and qualified in ensuring the corporation meets its goals. EMC has more than 50 professional staff. In addition to the Job Corps, the EMC staff have been involved in thedevelopment and operations of other types of educational programs. [top]°Job Training Partnership Act: While employed by a Fortune 500 corporation, key EMC staff members developed and operated major JTPA Programs in Oregon, California, New Jersey, and New York. These programs dealt with youth and adults in vocational training, placement, and, adult math and literacy. [top]° Youth Corrections. The experience of the EMC staff in this phase of education is almost as great as its experiencein Job Corps. The programs they operated were Rhode Island Youth Intensive Care Center, Weaversville Intensive Care Unit in Pennsylvania, and the Bensalem School at the Bensalem Youth Development Center, Bensalem, Pennsylvania. These programs served emotionally disturbed and adjudicated youth. Services rendered included residential, counseling, education and training and facilities management. EMC also operated the education unit of the Bensalem youth corrections facility from 1989-1994. [top]° U.S. Army Basic Education . The staff were responsible for the development of new basic reading and math curriculum for the Army as well as redesigning Army manuals at a more appropriate reading level. [top]° International Programs. As a result of their experience in Job Corps and other domestic education programs, EMC staff members also became involved in the development of international education programs in six different countries: Egypt, Indonesia, Turkey, Jamaica, Haiti, and Belize. They provided services in curriculum development, identification and acquisition of vocational equipment, setting up schools patterned the after Job Corps, and arranging for fellowship training of government officials, teachers, and program operators in the United States. [top] EMC received the Directors Appreciation Award in October 1990 from theU.S. Department of Commerce, Minority Business Development Agency for Distinguished Achievement and Performance. The award was presented by Secretary of Commerce, Robert A. Masbacher, and Director of the MBDA, Kenneth E.Bolton, in Washington, DC, during the National Celebration of the Minority Enterprise Development Week conducted by the U.S. Department of Commerceandthe U.S. Small Business Administration. EMC was honored in October 1990 in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, by MayorWilson Goode and Mr. Alfonzo Jackson, Regional Director, MBDA, during the Philadelphia Minority Enterprise Week. In June 1990 EMC was recognized by the Minority Business Development Agency, U.S. Department of Commerce, as an outstanding minority firm. |