1 / 30

OPI Student Information System

OPI Student Information System. Madalyn Quinlan Donna O’Neill Charlie Kratsch Gale Kramlick Dave Nagel Marc Butenko Bob Runkel . April 28, 2006. Purpose of Student Information System. To improve the collection, availability and use of high-quality education data

chaim-day
Télécharger la présentation

OPI Student Information System

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. OPI Student Information System Madalyn Quinlan Donna O’Neill Charlie Kratsch Gale Kramlick Dave Nagel Marc Butenko Bob Runkel April 28, 2006

  2. Purpose of Student Information System • To improve the collection, availability and use of high-quality education data • To track students’ academic progress over time • To reduce burden upon OPI, schools and districts, while increasing the value of the data systems • To provide tools for interactive querying and reporting of data to enable data to drive education policies and practices • Source of student counts for funding of K-12 public education

  3. Scope • State-level Student Information System (SIS), which includes a Special Education Records and Information Management System • Data Warehouse (DW)

  4. Student Information System (SIS) • Assign a unique student identifier to every student • Student-level enrollment, demographic and program participation information • Track individual students’ test records from year to year • Tracking academic progress of subgroups of students, including gifted and talented, migrant, limited English proficient, free and reduced price lunch, and homeless students • Management of school discipline information

  5. Data Warehouse (DW) • A Central Repository for Data • Pre-Defined and Ad Hoc Reporting • Analysis Tools • Embedded Security

  6. Special Education Records Information Management • Support teachers in completing and maintaining required paperwork • Help teachers manage special education work flow and timelines • Promote compliance with state and federal regulations through validation checks • Assist with data collection and reporting of student information and staff information

  7. Special Education Records Information Management • Permit electronic transfer of student records • Improve parent access to records • Allow for a secure, well-defined, and efficient method of exchange of data between the school, district, cooperative, state, and federal entities • Increase the reliability and validity of data • Support administrators by keeping track of services provided by staff and accountability for records management

  8. Special Education Records Information Management • Improve efficiency in monitoring for compliance • Provide a data base and tools for analysis of program effectiveness including approximately 20 predefined reports • Provide documentation used when billing Medicaid • Enhance communication between schools and parents

  9. Planned Timeline • Contract Award May, 2006 • Student IDs Assigned TBD • Fall Enrollment Count October 2, 2006 • Special Education Child Count December 1, 2006 • Registration of Students for Statewide Assessment January 2, 2007 • Spring Enrollment Count February 1, 2007 • Testing Cycle Enrollment March 20, 2007 • Special Education System Online April 30, 2007

  10. State’s “Single Sign On” solution • One Person – One Password • Good for Multiple eGovernment Services • Allows Personalization of Services Page

  11. Types of Users • Direct Access • Embedded Edition • District Edition • Existing SIS – SIF/Non-SIF

  12. Direct Access Users • No “District-Type” Functions • Grade Book • Scheduling • No District Hardware Required • Included with State Contract • Good for Schools That Don’t Need a SIS

  13. Embedded Edition • Separate SIS Database Hosted by OPI • Limited “District-Type” Functions • Grade Book • Scheduling • No District Hardware Required • Not Included with State Contract • ~$3/student annually • Good for Schools With Basic SIS Needs Who May/May Not Currently Have a SIS

  14. District Edition • Separate SIS Database Hosted by Each District • Fully-Featured District Functions • Automates State Reporting • District Hardware Required • Not Included with State Contract • ~$8/student annually • Good for Schools with Full SIS NeedsWanting to Replace Existing SIS

  15. Users With Existing SIS • District Continues Current Operation • State Reporting via Two Methods • SIF – If SIS is SIF-Compliant • File Upload – Non-SIF-Compliant • Included with State Contract • Method for Schools with Full SIS NeedsNot Wanting to Replace Existing SIS

  16. Screen Shots

  17. Training • School Clerical staff • School Counselors • Teachers and Support Specialists • School District Information Systems Staff • Directors of Special Education • Principals • Other Administrators

  18. Training • On-Site Training • Regional Training Sessions • Web-Based Training • Video Streaming • Video Conferencing • Computer Based Training • Other

  19. How Will My District Benefit? • Only Handle Information Once • Improved Data Quality • Easier tracking of student mobility and transfer of student information from school to school • Cost Savings to Schools • Easier reporting • All districts ensured basic functionality • Ability to track academic growth over time

  20. K-12 Education Data Systems 1. Set Academic Standards & Curriculum 4. Conduct Data Driven Analysis & Intervention 2. Administer Assessments Core Processes of OPI 5. Distribute Grants/Aid & Ensure Compliance 3. Certify Educators 6. Collect & Report Data

  21. K-12 Education Data Systems Decision Support Tools State Curriculum Inf. Management Data Warehouse State Assessment Results Management Facilities Information Data Collection Educator Certification Management EOY Finance Data Collection Staff Record Collection & HQE Grant & Program Data Collection Enterprise Directory & Administrator Security Safety & Discipline Data Collection Student ID Management & Record Collection

  22. K-12 Education Data Systems Decision Support Tools State Curriculum Inf. Management * Data Warehouse 1. Set Academic Standards & Curriculum * State Assessment Results Management 4. Conduct Data Driven Analysis & Intervention * Facilities Information Data Collection 2. Administer Assessments Core Processes of OPI Educator Certification Management 5. Distribute Grants/Aid & Ensure Compliance EOY Finance Data Collection 3. Certify Educators 6. Collect & Report Data Staff Record Collection & HQE Grant & Program Data Collection * Enterprise Directory & Administrator Security * Safety & Discipline Data Collection * Student ID Management & Record Collection *

More Related