Hawaii

The following profile is a representation of the Hawaii public education state longitudinal data system (SLDS) as presented through publicly available resources of public primary, secondary and higher education, information made available to the public through the National Center for Education Statistics (NCES), the Data Quality Campaign, published research articles, other third party internet resources (as noted), and direct contact with state and federal public education officials. It is not a formal program evaluation.

The information provided is intended for use by academic researchers, state and federal public education policy makers, educators, and student households.

Introduction Evaluation Criteria Governance and Maintenance Data Providers
Funding Researcher Access Public User Portal Legal Statues
DQC Contact Schematic State Response
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Download State Profile DXP Dashboard DXP Website NCES Funding:
2009 2012
2015

Introduction

The Hawaii Data eXchange Partnership (Hawaii DXP)[1] is Hawaii’s public education state longitudinal data system (SLDS)[2] governed by the Hawaii DXP Executive Committee, an interagency executive committee that serves as the final decision making body for all matters that involve the Hawaii DXP. The Hawaii DXP, created for the purpose of collecting and analyzing Hawaii public education data at the individual, course, institution, and system level, aggregates data records from the breadth of the Hawaii public education systems. The combined data collection systems are part of a nation-wide effort to record granular public education detail over time in order to document the entirety of students’ education experience. This information is intended to be available for analysis and public policy consideration for the purpose of producing improvements in student learning at elementary, secondary, post-secondary, and higher education levels, and to optimize labor market outcomes, individually and generally.

Hawaii is one of the 47 states having received public funding to create a state longitudinal data system (SLDS). Despite state-to-state differences, each SLDS shares a common purpose of supporting research and analysis with the intent of informing individual, household, and public policy decisions based on standardized criteria.

[1] The Hawaiii Data eXchange Partnership enables state agencies to link education and workforce data to answer questions critical to understanding Hawai’i’s future education workforce needs http://hawaiidxp.org/#
[2] State longitudinal data systems are intended to enhance the ability of states to efficiently and accurately manage, analyze, and use education data https://nces.ed.gov/programs/slds/about_SLDS.asp
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Evaluation Criteria

This review assesses the overall quality of the Hawai’i DXP as an SLDS by considering the nature of the organization maintaining the data system, those agencies and institutions providing inputs to the data system, and to which agencies and institutions the data systems’ outputs are available. The assessment also considers the data system’s funding mechanisms, internal and external researcher data accessibility, the quality of the data system’s public user interface (dashboard), and the data system’s current Data Quality Campaign (DQC)[1] ranking. This report considers each of these criteria pertaining to the Hawaii DXP and provides contact information to the departments and individuals who maintain and manage the SLDS.

[1] The Data Quality Campaign is a national, nonprofit organization leading the effort to bring every part of the education community together to empower educators, parents, and policymakers with quality information to make decisions that ensure students excel http://dataqualitycampaign.org/
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Governance and Maintenance

The Hawaii DXP is governed by the Hawaii DXP Executive Committee, an interagency executive committee that serves as the final decision making body for all matters that involve the Hawaii DXP. The Executive Committee has a number of responsibilities that include resolving disputes involving the data system, allocating resources to sustain the data systems core functions, and approving all data governance policies developed by the Hawaii DXP Data Governance and Access Committee. The Executive Committee makes decisions through a consensus voting process which allocates voting power to the executive officer of each participating state agency or institution. It is comprised of members from the following state agencies and institutions:[1]