Transcript Slide 1

Components of School
Improvement in New
Mexico
New Mexico Administrator Conference
Albuquerque, New Mexico
July 2007
Dr. Karen Kay Harvey
Assistant Secretary for Quality Assurance and Systems Integration
Dr. Beverly Johnson
Director, Priority Schools Bureau
New Mexico Public Education Department
Session Goals
Gain understanding of:
• The New EPSS Process
• Mandates
• District and PED Roles
• Available Support
School Improvement
Focuses on the Success
of All Students
The Situation in 2006-07
Corrective Action &
Restructuring
98
247
No designation,
but missed AYP
School Improvement
84
372
No designation
The Projection for 2007-08
Corrective Action &
Restructuring
196
200
No designation,
but missed AYP
School Improvement
100
305
No designation
Comprehensive
Approach to School
Improvement
• Align all systems and processes to focus on
school improvement.
• Build a sustainable capacity for high-quality
leadership in districts and schools.
• Different levels of monitoring and support for
schools according to NCLB status.
• Share responsibility with districts for
monitoring and supporting their schools.
• Focus and intensify support by drawing on a
wide variety of partners.
Creating Standards for
Systems Alignment
Aligning systems to focus on school
improvement
The Education Plan For
Student Success (EPSS)
The EPSS Process
The EPSS Process
The EPSS Process
Scaffolded Mandates
and Responsibilities
Shared Responsibility: State PED
Involvement Increases with NCLB
Status
Provided by State
PED and partners
196
200
Provided by District and
partners; summary report
to State PED
Provided by District and
partners; individual
reports to State PED
100
305
Self-monitored:
Core Educational
Expectations
Schools Must Focus on
Making AYP Every Year
School conducts internal needs assessment,
including data analysis and identification of gaps
and target groups
District/School Improvement Plan
Aligned programs, short-cycle assessments,
professional development, and curriculum
District involvement in alignment and monitoring
of plan
100 schools projected to
miss AYP for the first time
New requirements are triggered when a
school is in School Improvement status.
District conducts an External Needs Assessment and develops a Technical
Assistance Plan
Common curriculum
Systems check: evaluating system for effectiveness
Analysis of performance data
EPSS (with action plan) submitted to the district must include:
Focused professional development for teachers and principal
Required interventions for students/subgroups not at proficiency
Aligned programs, short-cycle assessments, professional development and
curriculum
Alignment of budget to EPSS goals.
Regular progress reporting to district; district reports progress to state.
200 schools will be
designated “School
Improvement” schools
For Corrective Action and Restructuring
schools, PED involvement becomes much
more intense, focused and directive.
State Technical Assistance Team conducts an external needs assessment,
and the district/school conducts an internal self assessment.
Common curriculum
Analysis of performance data
Systems check: evaluate system for effectiveness
Education Plan for Student Success (with action plan) submitted to state
PED must include
Aligned programs, short-cycle assessments, professional development, and
curriculum
Required interventions for students/subgroups not at proficiency
Required modifications for school/district operations
Required professional development for superintendent, principal, and teachers
Quarterly progress reports
Quarterly Tech Assistance Team visits
Alignment of budget to EPSS goals
196
schools in
Corrective Action,
Restructuring, or
Alternative
Governance.
Alternative
Governance Plan
Alignment Remains Vital
Focused and Intensive
Support from a Variety of
Partners
196
200
Intra- and Interagency
Coordination
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Indian Education Bureau
Title I
Special Education
Rural Education
Bilingual Education
Assessment and Accountability
Charter Schools
Instructional Services
Office of Educational Accountability
. . .and others
Consultants for CA
Schools
• Consultants trained in a
systems approach
• Visit Schools
• Write a report and
review with leadership
team
Technical Assistance
Teams
• Composition:
– Lead From Priority Schools Bureau
– PED Educational Administrator
– Education Partner, REC, OEA, vendor
coaches
• Process:
– Visit 3 times per year to monitor data,
plan, and progress
– Work with CA schools in the district to
identify areas of need
– Work to reallocate budgets to meet the
needs identified in the data
School Improvement
Framework Revised for
2007-2008
Key Changes:
1. Revised to eliminate repetition of
concepts
2. Focuses on Plan, Do, Study, Act
(PDSA)
3. Mandates for interventions for
students not proficient in reading
and/or math
4. No recommendations on class size
based on lack of research in this area
The Process is
Focused on . . .
• Data
• Quality Instruction
• Assessment
• Interventions
• Professional Development
It is of no use saying, ‘We are doing
our best’. We have to succeed in
doing what is necessary.
-Winston Churchill
New Mexico is
doing what is
“necessary” for
ALL STUDENTS
based on data
sources.
Questions?
Contact:
• Dr. Karen K. Harvey
827-6517
[email protected]
• Dr. Beverly A. Johnson
Director of Priority Schools
827-6420
[email protected]