Consultant: shut down CALPADS now
CALPADS, the new comprehensive student data system on which huge hopes for school and student improvement are riding, is hobbled by serious problems.
Acting on a consultant’s report bluntly critical of state managers and of IBM, the system vendor, Superintendent of Public Instruction Jack O’Connell has shut CALPADS down for two months and ordered all efforts focused on fixing it. The hiatus will put data collection from the state’s 1,000 districts months, if not a year, behind schedule. (See correction: CALPADS is continuing to accept some data — dropouts, enrollments — while system is being overhauled.)
O’Connell had little choice but to act quickly. After studying the system for a month, Sabot Technologies of Folsom predicted a “high probability of system failure should the project continue on the current path” as a result of “anomalies, errors and defects throughout” the system.
The California Longitudinal Pupil Achievement Data System will be the nation’s largest database of information on individual students. By collecting information on demographics, student grades and test results, course enrollments and completion and discipline incidents, CALPADS can provide answers to important policy questions: who drops out and why, which school strategies work best with certain student groups, which university programs produce the best teachers, which high school indicators best predict success in college and the workplace.
But from the day it launched in October, local districts, which had to marry their own data systems to CALPADS, have been frustrated by glitches and delays in feeding information. They weren’t just whining. The Sabot Technologies report (only 24 pages and very readable) confirms that the system hasn’t operated “issue-free” for any length of time.
Costing tens of millions of dollars, CALPADS has been in development since November 2007. While too soon to place CALPADS in the pantheon of California computer fiascos, one can hear echoes of past problems – technically overmatched state management, for one – in the Sabot report.
On the bright side, the consultants found that the overall system architecture is sound. But little else was reassuring in the report.
Among the findings:
- There are quality defects in the system software, custom software, database and hardware architecture elements.
- IBM understaffed the project, and its workers are “less experienced than needed for a project of this size,” contributing to a backlog of work.
- On the Department of Education side, there is a “distinct lack of technical leadership and engineering resources,” resulting in IBM making decisions on its own with “little transparency and oversight.” The contractor project manager is filling too many other roles; managing the project demands full attention.
- Engineering processes – patching software, releasing new software versions, responding to errors – are “ad hoc, chaotic” and often undocumented. IBM “bears much responsibility” for the disorganized procedures, the report said, but the state and the outside project managers failed to keep IBM to account.
Among the recommendations beyond an immediate full-scale review:
- Clarify roles among the project manager, the Department of Education and vendors, to stop confusion and inefficiency;
- Standardize procedures so that responses are less reactive and more thoughtful;
- Hire more oversight staff with technical expertise.
The state will spend tens of millions of dollars on CALPADS between building the system and training district staff on using it (cost estimates differ). IBM and partners are to be paid $15 million for their work.
California has been counting on federal grants to finish the project.






Wow – a consultant’s report that recommends hiring more oversight staff – what a surprise!
I have been involved with state IT projects with multiple layers of oversight and all they added were redundant and duplicative costs. Success depends on basic competency of project staff.
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And now CDE has awarded the software development bid for CALTIDES (CALPADS sister system) also to IBM, knowing full well that CALPADS was in serious trouble and that there were other qualified and less expensive software vendors.
What are they thinking?
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More staff… Districts need more staff also.
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Seems to me they have the technical oversight staff ready and waiting to be included in the conversation (CSIS staff). All CDE needs to do is to actually allow CSIS to direct IBM on the project, but CDE didn’t see fit to do that the first time around.
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Perhaps it’s time to reconsider whether it even makes sense to have a massive statewide database like CALPADS–and for that matter the related CALTIDES system too.
Each of California’s 7,000+ schools and 1,000 districts has its own take on the data and the quality and interpretation of the data varies widely–often for legitimate reasons. Much of the data being fed into the system is of poor and/or inconsistent quality. As a result, the data is virtually useless for any high stakes purposes and likely never will be ready for “prime time.” Only dilettante researchers and clueless data geeks take it seriously.
Before sinking millions more into this mess, it’s time to reconsider whether an education data “Ministry of Truth” is either possible or desirable.
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Someone should look into the millions being spent on having CSIS support the CALPADS system. With all of the budget problems California and the education community is experiencing, taxpayers should insist on shutting down CSIS and having existing state staff support CALPADS.
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I actually find the support from CSIS on CALPADS to be excellent. Without CSIS assistance CALPADS would be unbearable.
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Over-commit and understaff: this is IBM’s Global Services business model
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