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4 Principles of ESEA Flexibility

4 Principles of ESEA Flexibility. College-and-Career-Ready Expectations for All Students (  ) State-Developed Differentiated Recognition, Accountability, and Support (synthesizing feedback) Supporting Effective Instruction and Leadership (  )

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4 Principles of ESEA Flexibility

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  1. 4 Principles of ESEA Flexibility College-and-Career-Ready Expectations for All Students () State-Developed Differentiated Recognition, Accountability, and Support (synthesizing feedback) Supporting Effective Instruction and Leadership () Reducing Duplication and Unnecessary Burden () January 2012

  2. For Principle 2 • Annual Measurable Objectives • Subgroups and differentiated targets • Priority, Focus and Reward Schools January 2012

  3. ESEA: AMO Issue 1 A B Recommended

  4. ESEA: AMO Issue 2 A B Recommended Draft Jan 3, 2012

  5. Gap Closure Gap Closure over time.

  6. Understanding New AMOs 100 - 57.6 means 42.4% are not proficient. Decrease by half in equal increments over 6-years means 42.4/2 = 21.2. 21.2point improvement over 6 years 21.2/6 ≈ 3.5 point increase every year

  7. Understanding New AMOs Two important results of this method are Acknowledges that subgroups have different starting points Differentiated targets are ambitious and feasible

  8. ESEA: Priority, Focus, & Reward Priority Focus Reward • Determined by • Reading + Math Performance Composite < 50 % in 2010-11 school year and one of the two previous years (2008-09 or 2009-10) • Graduation rate • < 60 % • Determined by • Schools with the largest in-school gaps for 2010-11 school year and one of the two previous years (2008-09 or 2009-10) • Above state average 38.7% • Title I schools with a subgroup with proficiency score below 50% for 2010-11 school year and one of the two previous years • Determined by • Poverty rate at or above 50% and gap between highest and lowest performing subgroups below state average and • Schools made AYP and all subgroups have performance composite above state performance composite and graduation rate, if any, above state graduation rate • or • Schools in the highest 10% performance composite progress and graduation rate progress, if any, for “all students” over a 2-year period.

  9. ESEA: Priority, Focus, & Reward Priority Focus Reward • ~127 Schools • ~80 Schools ~130 Schools

  10. 3 potential levels of support Intensive Support and Intervention Moderate Support and Intervention Independent with General Support

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