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Teachers College Record Volume 122, 120301, December 2020, 42 pages
Copyright © by Teachers College, Columbia University
0161-4681
Does Teacher Data Use Lead to Improved
Student Achievement? A Review of the
Empirical Evidence
JANA GRABAREK
Loyola University Chicago
LEANNE M. KALLEMEYN
Loyola University Chicago
Background/Context: The importance attached to practicing data use is evident in its
inclusion in federal law, competitive grant programs, state teaching license requirements,
and professional development (PD) workshops around the world. Yet, practitioners and
scholars have identified misconceptions clouding data use practice, questioned its utility,
and suggested its discontinuation. These tensions are linked to various conceptualizations
of data use, which include simple, linear, and complex, contextualized understandings.
Prior research on data use as sensemaking, data use intervention components and promising
practices, factors influencing data use, and using data to address equity suggest data use is
a complex endeavor.
Purpose/Objective/Research Question/Focus of Study: This study explored the link between
teacher data use, in its many forms, and improvements in student achievement.
Research Design: This study is a systematic review of 39 quantitative, qualitative, and
mixed methods studies.
Data Collection and Analysis: Descriptive details of each study were recorded, including the
sample and its demographics; study location, length, design, and measures; school subject
foci; type(s) of data used and type(s) of data strategies employed; school levels involved; and
findings/results. Data use efforts also were coded for their inclusion of data use intervention
components and promising practices; teacher, context, and assessment factors influencing
data use; and equity practices and principles. Study results were categorized as positive,
mixed, or null based on main effects, and shifts in proportions of study outcomes were noted
as results were analyzed through a variety of lenses.
Findings/Results: Fifteen studies identified positive relationships (38% of studies) between
data use and student achievement, 10 pointed to mixed relationships (26%), and 14 shared
no (or null) relationships (36%). No differences were evident when considering studies
by the school levels, subject areas, and study designs involved. Studies that had positive
impacts on student achievement more often than the sample overall incorporated the following
elements: ongoing professional development, comprehensive data use interventions targeting