THE SPECIAL EDUCATION ELEMENTARY SCHOOL STUDY (SEELS)

 

The Office of Special Education Programs (OSEP) of the U.S. Department of Education has commissioned a design for the Special Education Elementary Longitudinal Study (SEELS), to be developed by SRI International, with support from the Research Triangle Institute.

As part of a comprehensive OSEP program of longitudinal research, SEELS will involve a large, nationally representative sample of students in special education who are ages 8 through 12 when the sample is selected (Fall 1999). Students will be selected randomly from rosters of students in special education; rosters will be provided by local education agencies (and special schools) that are selected for and agree to participate in the study. Statistical summaries generated from SEELS will generalize to special education students nationally as a group, to each of the 13 federal special education disability categories, and to each single-year age cohort. Information about students will be collected repeatedly as they transition from elementary to middle school and from middle to high school. Thus, SEELS will provide the first national picture of the experiences and outcomes of students in special education as they move through these crucial years of their educational careers.

 

Task Force Purpose

To enable SEELS to be maximally useful to the wide range of audiences that will be interested in it, OSEP is relying on the collective expertise of a task force whose members represent many of those audiences: parents; teachers, principals, and related service practitioners; researchers; local, state, and federal policy makers; and advocacy organizations. The task force is being asked to identify the range of information needs that could potentially be met by SEELS, translate those information needs into research questions, and help to envision a conceptual framework to guide the study in addressing those questions. Because the range of information needs the task force may articulate is likely to exceed the capacity of any single study to meet them, the task force also is being asked to suggest priorities among research questions.

The purpose of this paper is to provide background information to assist the task force in identifying the critical research questions that SEELS must address in order to be successful and in developing a conceptual framework that encompasses those research questions. The paper begins with an overview of the SEELS design process and current plans for the SEELS sample, timeline, and instrumentation. The remainder of the document is devoted to the SEELS conceptual framework and is intended to stimulate discussion about the relative importance of different conceptual issues, key study questions, and likely interrelationships among factors.

The SEELS Design Process

The design process will include developing the SEELS timeline, sample specifications, instrumentation, and data collection and analysis plans, as well as recruiting a sample of local education agencies (LEAs) and special schools from which students will be selected for the sample. The table below documents key study design activities and their associated completion dates.

 

Table 1

SEELS DESIGN ACTIVITIES AND SCHEDULE

Solicit input from research advisory panel

10/23 and following

Convene task force

11/23/98

Task force meeting summary

11/27/98

Draft project time line and data collection plan

12/24/98

Draft project sampling plan

12/24/98

Draft project data analysis plan

12/24/98

Final project time line and data collection plan

1/25/99

Final project sampling plan

1/25/99

Final project data analysis plan

1/25/99

Instrument analysis

2/8/99

First interim sampling report

2/24/99

Second interim sampling report

3/24/99

Conceptual outlines and item specifications for new instruments

3/24/99

Final sampling report

6/24/99

Drafts of instruments

5/7/99

Revise and pilot test instruments

6/24/99

Report of pilot test

7/8/99

Final sampling fractions

7/26/99

Final instruments and OMB clearance forms

8/24/99

 

SEELS Design Overview

Sample

The SEELS student sample, to be selected in the Fall of 1999, will be a nationally representative sample that will generalize to: students in special education ages 8 to 12 nationally as a group as they age, each of the five single-year age cohorts within the full sample, and students in each of the 13 federally defined special education disability categories in the full sample. Additional characteristics of the sample include the following:

 

The sheer size and wide geographic distribution of the student sample has important implications for the kinds and frequency of data collection that can be afforded. The wide range in age and disability characteristics of students also pose significant challenges in ensuring that measures and instrumentation are appropriate to that student diversity.

Timeline

The specific data collection schedule for SEELS is still under discussion. However, it is certain that SEELS will be longitudinal in nature so that it can track changes in student statuses and outcomes. There are three general options available in sequencing the main data collection activities:

 

Decisions regarding the study timeline depend in part on the specification of study’s conceptual framework and it’s associated research questions. So, recommendations of the task force regarding research questions will influence those design decisions. It is currently anticipated that the first SEELS data collection efforts will take place in the spring of 2000.

Instrumentation and Data Collection

SEELS is intended to be far-reaching in terms of conceptual domains that it will address. Thus, SEELS will collect data from multiple data sources (e.g., parents, teachers, principals) using several data collection methods (e.g., telephone interviews, collection or abstraction of school records, mail surveys, teacher assessments or reports of student performance, direct assessments). As the task force considers the SEELS research agenda, it is important to consider the validity and logistics of obtaining data from different sources and in different ways. Table 2 illustrates potential information sources for different conceptual domains. Table 3 indicates design-related questions to be considered by the task force.

Table 2

 

Possible DATA Sources

 

Conceptual Domains

 

Parent

 

Student

Special Education Teacher

General Education Teacher

 

Principal

Student records

Extant Sources

National context

           

X

State context

           

X

Community characteristics

       

X

 

X

LEA characteristics

       

X

 

X

School characteristics

O

O

O

O

X

 

O

School programs

   

X

X

     

Non-school factors

X

O

         

Household characteristics

X

           

Student characteristics/ experiences

X

X

X

X

     

Student performance

X

X

X

X

X

X

X

X Possible primary respondent for items relating to domain.

O Possible secondary respondent, providing some data relating to domain.

Table 3

Potential Design-Related Research Questions

 

What are the ages/grade levels that should be included in SEELS to best meet information needs? How long should SEELS follow students?

Are there key milestones or stages in students’ experiences that should be a focus of data collection?

Are the experiences of students in special (state-supported) schools of particular interest so that the study should supplement the student sample explicitly with students who attend such schools?

Is it important to collect data directly from students?

After considering all components of the current framework, is there something missing that we need to learn about students in special education that it does not encompass?

 

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