Difficult Lessons on Social Prediction from Wisconsin Public Schools
Juan C. Perdomo, Tolani Britton, Moritz Hardt, Rediet Abebe

TL;DR
This study evaluates the long-term impact of Wisconsin's early warning system on student graduation rates, revealing it accurately predicts dropout risk but questions the necessity of individual risk scores for effective intervention targeting.
Contribution
It provides the first large-scale empirical evaluation of EWS impact on graduation and introduces a simple environment-based targeting mechanism that challenges the value of individual risk scores.
Findings
EWS accurately sorts students by dropout risk
EWS may increase graduation rates by a few percentage points
Environment-based targeting can match the effectiveness of risk score-based methods
Abstract
Early warning systems (EWS) are predictive tools at the center of recent efforts to improve graduation rates in public schools across the United States. These systems assist in targeting interventions to individual students by predicting which students are at risk of dropping out. Despite significant investments in their widespread adoption, there remain large gaps in our understanding of the efficacy of EWS, and the role of statistical risk scores in education. In this work, we draw on nearly a decade's worth of data from a system used throughout Wisconsin to provide the first large-scale evaluation of the long-term impact of EWS on graduation outcomes. We present empirical evidence that the prediction system accurately sorts students by their dropout risk. We also find that it may have caused a single-digit percentage increase in graduation rates, though our empirical analyses…
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Videos
Difficult Lessons on Social Prediction from Wisconsin Public Schools· youtube
Taxonomy
TopicsEducational Assessment and Improvement · School Choice and Performance · Early Childhood Education and Development
MethodsDropout
