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Using Predicted Academic Performance to Identify At-Risk Students in Public Schools

Measures of student disadvantage—or risk—are critical components of equity-focused education policies. However, the risk measures used in contemporary policies have significant limitations, and despite continued advances in data infrastructure and analytic capacity, there has been little innovation in these measures for decades. We develop a new measure of student risk for use in education policies, which we call Predicted Academic Performance (PAP). PAP is a flexible, data-rich indicator that identifies students at risk of poor academic outcomes. It blends concepts from emerging early warning systems with principles of incentive design to balance the competing priorities of accurate risk measurement and suitability for policy use. In proof-of-concept policy simulations using data from Missouri, we show PAP is more effective than common alternatives at identifying students who are at risk of poor academic outcomes and can be used to target resources toward these students—and students who belong to several other associated risk categories—more efficiently.

Education level
Document Object Identifier (DOI)
10.26300/jzv6-da20

EdWorkingPaper suggested citation:

Fazlul, Ishtiaque, Cory Koedel, and Eric Parsons. (). Using Predicted Academic Performance to Identify At-Risk Students in Public Schools. (EdWorkingPaper: 22-520). Retrieved from Annenberg Institute at Brown University: https://doi.org/10.26300/jzv6-da20

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