Our data room will change that focus. We are going to put every single student's data up for all teachers to see. Every time teachers give a benchmark test, they will add that data to the student's data profile. This should allow us to easily look at student progress or lack thereof.
The important thing to remember is the reason for looking at data. It's not to shake our fingers at those who aren't doing well. It's to know immediately who's not doing well, to look at why they're not doing well, and to redirect instruction before it's too late. Additionally, we must understand that the role of the teachers is to question each other. In other words, if they notice a trend that everyone in Ms. Smith's room is doing well on fractions, they need to see what techniques Ms. Smith is using to ensure student success and to take those "best practices" back to their own classrooms. This is the true purpose of data-driven instruction. It's to see who's doing what well and to improve our own practice by learning from our colleagues.
In this video, educators from one school district talk about how they became more data driven and what it's done for their school system.