Transcript Slide 1
Personalize It!
Advisories &
Individual Learning Plans—
Keys to Unlocking
Student Potential
Belinda Wilkerson
& Patricia Nailor
Rhode Island School Counselor Association
ASCA 2005 Annual Conference
What We Will
Discuss Today
Student Learning Needs to be More
Personal
School Counselors as the
Infrastructure for Personalization
Reaching Students through Advisories
Helping Students Plan for Their Futures
(Individual Learning Plans)
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What Is Personalization?
Personalization is a learning
process in which schools help
students assess their own talents
and aspirations, plan a pathway
toward their own purposes, work
cooperatively with others on
challenging tasks, maintain a
record of their explorations, and
demonstrate learning against
clear standards in a wide variety
of media, all with the close
support of adult mentors and
guides (Clarke, 2003)
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RI Policy & Regulations
The Regents’ (High School) Regulations
require strategies for responding to,
recording, and planning for each individual
student’s social/emotional, academic, and
career needs beginning no later than grade
five. The Regents sought a minimum starting
point at grade five to support student success
in middle and high schools. Ideally, all
districts will have a comprehensive K-12
school-counseling program. In addition,
social/emotional needs referenced by the
Regents encompass the personal/social
domain of the National Model for School
Counseling Programs.
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What Is an Advisory?
Student advisories foster meaningful,
sustainable student-adult and studentstudent relationships that support student
achievement, improve student behavior, build
community, and enrich the lives of all
involved. Advisors meet with student on a
regular basis for the purpose of academic,
career, and personal-social advising.
Advisory activities:
―
help students with self-assessment in the academic,
personal/social, and career domains
―
help students set goals and monitor their progress
toward those goals in each of the domains
―
give students a chance to develop a meaningful
relationship with a caring adult
Source: RI Department of Elementary & Secondary Education, Guidelines on Regents’ High
School Regulations (2004)
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Advisories Come
in Many Forms
Various Forms of Organization
Varying Amounts of Time Spent
with Students
Different Levels of Involvement
by School Counselors in Advisories
Different Results Expected for
Student Participation
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Examples of Advisories
East Providence High School
Narragansett High School
Cranston West High School
Davies Career & Technical Center
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The Future of Advisories in
Rhode Island Public Schools
Issue: Attempts to use advisories
to replace counselors
Need data to show the impact of
counseling via the advisory
system
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What Is an
Individual Learning Plan?
The Individual Learning Plan (ILP)
program provides middle and high
school students with guided and
self-reflective opportunities to plan
for their academic, career and
personal/social development
annually
Students use the ILP process to
demonstrate their progress toward
ASCA counseling standards
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Student Planning
in the ASCA National Model
Individual student planning consists of
school counselors coordinating
ongoing systemic activities designed to
help individual students establish
personal goals and develop future
plans. School counselors coordinate
activities that help all students plan,
monitor and manage their own
learning as well as meet competencies
in the areas of academic, career and
personal/social development. (page
41)
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Individual Learning Plans in
Providence Public Schools
Some Critical Aspects of ILP’s
― Based on ASCA Model Standards
― Clearly-defined Student Outcomes
― Essential Counseling Curriculum Focused
on ILP’s
― Established Protocols for Delivery of the
ILP Program
― Indicators of Success
― Meaningful Opportunities for Students to
Demonstrate Knowledge and Skills and
Document Evidence of Their Progress
toward Counseling Standards
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Sample ILP Tools
Planning for Success
Course Audit
Portfolio Checklists
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The Future of ILP’s in
Rhode Island Public Schools
A RI State Department of
Education Requirement
Increasing Focus on Students’
Need to Plan for Their Academic,
Career and Personal/Social
Futures
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Planning Toolkit
Tool#1—Getting Started
Tool #2—Planning for Results
― 2A—Results Statement Planning Tool
― 2B—Action Step Planning Tool
― 2C—Plan Summary Tool
Tool #3—Personal Action Plan
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Tool #1
Getting Started
This tool helps you identify:
― Who Needs to Be Involved
― What They Can Contribute to the
Success of Your Initiative
― What Results You Expect to
Achieve
― Contact Information
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Tool #2
Develop a Plan
A results statement (goal) specifies an
observable and measurable outcome
An action plan is developed for each
results statement
Three data gathering templates:
― 2A—Results Statement Planning Tool
― 2B—Action Step Planning Tool
― 2C—Plan Summary Tool
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Tool #2A
Results Statements Tool
This tool organizes information
about results statements:
― Results Statement
― Action Step
― Begin & End Dates
― Owner
― Cost
― Funding Source
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Tool #2B
Action Step Planning Tool
This tool offers the
opportunity to take
one action step from
Tool #2A and write
the steps needed to
achieve the result
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Tool #2C
Plan Summary Tool
This tool organizes your results
statements into a plan summary :
― Results Statement
― Action Steps
― Begin & End Dates
― Indicators
― Owner
― Cost
― Funding Source
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Next Steps
Continue promotion of counseling
role in advisories as important to
student success
Gather data on the impact of
counselors involved in advisories
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Contact Information
Belinda Wilkerson, East Providence
(RI) Public Schools, Counselor-inResidence at Providence College
― [email protected]
Patricia Nailor, Director, Department of
Counseling & Social Services,
Providence (RI) Public Schools
― [email protected]
RISCA Website
―
www.rischoolcounselor.org
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