Opportunity-to-Learn Index
An opportunity-to-learn (OTL) index quantifies how much exposure students have had to the content and instructional resources they need to succeed on an assessment. Rooted in Carroll's model of school learning and developed through the IEA international studies, OTL measurement asks whether students were actually taught the material before being tested on it. Constructed from teacher reports, curriculum analysis, or instructional logs, OTL indices are used both as a fairness criterion for interpreting test scores and as a policy instrument for monitoring equitable access to the intended curriculum.
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Sources
- McDonnell, L. M. (1995). Opportunity to learn as a research concept and a policy instrument. Educational Evaluation and Policy Analysis, 17(3), 305–322. DOI: 10.3102/01623737017003305 ↗
- Schmidt, W. H., McKnight, C. C., Houang, R. T., Wang, H., Wiley, D. E., Cogan, L. S., & Wolfe, R. G. (2001). Why Schools Matter: A Cross-National Comparison of Curriculum and Learning. Jossey-Bass. ISBN: 9780787956844
How to cite this page
ScholarGate. (2026, June 22). Opportunity-to-Learn Indices for Measuring Content Exposure. ScholarGate. https://scholargate.app/en/education/opportunity-to-learn-index
Which method?
Set this method beside its closest kin and read them side by side — the library lays the books on the table; the choice is yours.
- Classroom Observation ProtocolEducation↔ compare
- Educational Hierarchical Linear ModelingEducation↔ compare
- Educational Production FunctionEducation↔ compare
- Opportunity to Learn AnalysisEducation↔ compare