1 / 35

CONNECTICUT STATE DEPARTMENT OF EDUCATION

CONNECTICUT STATE DEPARTMENT OF EDUCATION . Connecticut’s New Accountability System: Metrics and School Classification. No Child Left Behind Waiver (Approved by USDE on May 29 th ). The waiver enables the CSDE and districts to: Use Title I funding more flexibly

amaryllis
Télécharger la présentation

CONNECTICUT STATE DEPARTMENT OF EDUCATION

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. CONNECTICUT STATE DEPARTMENT OF EDUCATION Connecticut’s New Accountability System: Metrics and School Classification

  2. No Child Left Behind Waiver(Approved by USDE on May 29th) The waiver enables the CSDE and districts to: • Use Title I funding more flexibly • Replace annual yearly progress (AYP) under NCLB with CT-designed annual performance targets • Replace NCLB sanctions for schools and districts with more effective interventions

  3. NCLB Sanctions no longer in effect: • Schools will not be identified as “in need of improvement” based on this year’s data • Schools that have already been “in need of improvement” will not be required to implement certain NCLB sanctions: • Supplemental Education Services • Public School Choice • Corrective Action measures • Restructuring measures

  4. NCLB Requirements Waived: • No longer required to offer SES/NCLB Public School Choice(eliminated 20 percent reservation) • District and school improvement 10% reservations for professional development no longer required • For more detailed description of provisions waived, please see “Summary of NCLB Waiver Flexibilities document

  5. Timeline

  6. NCLB Waiver: First Step in Improving School Accountability

  7. Elements of school performance to capture in future years: • Cohort Growth • College and Career Readiness • Civics • Arts • Fitness/Wellness • School Climate If interested in partnering with the CSDE to develop metrics in any of these areas, please contact: Renee Savoie, renee.savoie@ct.gov.

  8. Elements of Accountability System • Measurement • Classification • Intervention • Recognition

  9. Why Connecticut needs a new system of accountability: • We should value improvement at all levels. • We should use metrics that give us a fuller picture of performance. • We should set meaningful goals for schools. • We should set the bar higher: the goal is ‘Goal’.

  10. Major shifts:

  11. NCLB Connecticut’s New Indicators

  12. Performance Index • Index between 0 and 100 • Counts performance in all tested grade levels • Captures performance across performance bands • Includes all tested subjects: reading, writing, math, and science • Incorporates all tested students, including students who take the MAS and the Skills Checklist • Provides subject-specific indices and overall index • Calculated for “all students” group and subgroups: ELL, SWD, Black, Hispanic, F/R lunch

  13. What’s the difference between the results released last week and the performance metrics?

  14. Performance Index Students who take CMT/CAPT

  15. Performance IndexStudents who take MAS or Skills Checklist *3% cap remains in place at the district-level. Standard raised from Proficient to Goal.

  16. Calculating District/School/Subgroup Performance Index • Step 1: Calculate an Individual Performance Index (IPI) for each student. • Example: 5th grader • Reading – G: 1.0 • Writing – P: .67 • Science – B: .33 • Math–P: .67 • Average these values (x100) to get Individual Performance Index: 67 • Example: 4th grader • Reading – B: .33 Writing – P: .67 Math–BB: 0.0 • Average these values (x100) to get Individual Performance Index: 33 • Step 2: Calculate the District/School/Subgroup Performance Index. • Example: • 5th grader IPI = 67 • 4th grader IPI = 33 • Average all students IPIs (in the relevant group) to get the Performance Index = 50

  17. Calculating Subject Performance Index • 97 students take CMT • 17 score A: 17 students x 1.00 = 17 SPI points • 20 score G: 20 students x 1.00 = 20 SPI points • 30 score P: 30 students x 0.67 = 20 SPI points • 15 score B: 15 students x 0.33 = 5 SPI points • 15 score BB: 15 students x 0.00 = 0 SPI points • 2 students take MAS • 1 scores G: 1 student x 1.00 = 1 SPI point • 1 scores B: 1 student x 0.00 = 0 SPI points • 1 student takes Skills Checklist • 1 scores I: 1 student x 1.00 = 1 SPI point Subject Performance Index = 64 % at or above Proficient = 69%

  18. How can a school increase its SPI? For a school with 100 students…. Increasing % Proficiency by 9% requires moving 9 students who were not Proficient to Proficient. Increasing the SPI by 3 points requires moving 9 students across any performance threshold (.33 for each student) 0.33 0.33 1.0 0.33

  19. Graduation Metrics for High Schools • Federally defined • The percentage of incoming 9th graders who graduate from 12th grade within 4 years with a standard diploma • Counts students who stay enrolled in high school for longer than 4 years • Counts students who receive certificate of completion • Does not count students who dropped out or transferred to another school district but never enrolled or have an unknown status 4-year cohort graduation rate Extended graduation rate

  20. Connecticut State Targets: following 2018

  21. School Performance Index Performance Targets: Ambitious yet Achievable School Performance Index 88

  22. Subgroup Performance Index Performance Targets: Ambitious yet Achievable Subgroup Performance Index 88

  23. 4-year Cohort Graduation Rate Performance Targets: Ambitious yet Achievable 94% 4-year graduation rate

  24. Extended Graduation Rate Performance Targets: Ambitious yet Achievable Extended graduation rate 96%

  25. School Classification: • Excelling • Progressing • Transition • Review (inc. Focus) • Turnaround Met all state targets Meeting annual targets Not meeting annual targets Need the most support: eligible for Commissioner’s Network; otherwise, district-led interventions and redesign

  26. Sample Schools with Subject Performance Index = 88

  27. Sample Schools with Subject Performance Index = 64

  28. Excelling Schools Performance Targets Meet state targets: • SPI > 88 • 4yr grad > 94% • Ext. grad > 96% • Maj. of subgp. gaps < 10 and • > 25% Adv. In three of four subjects • Maintain SPI > 88 • Maintain 4yr grad > 94% • Maintain Ext. grad > 96% • If subgp. SPI < 88, increase so that ½ way to 88 by 2018 • Drive own improvement Interventions Description

  29. Progressing Schools Performance Targets • Increase SPI so ½ way to 88 by 2018 • Increase subgroup SPIs so ½ way to 88 by 2018 • Increase 4yr grad so ½ way to 94% by 2018 • Increase Ext grad so ½ way to 96% by 2018 • SPI >88 and miss one of: • Maj. of subgp. gaps < 10 • 4yr grad > 94% • Ext. grad > 96% OR • 64 < SPI < 88 and meet all of: • Performance target for SPI • 4yr grad > 90% • Ext. grad > 93% • Maj. of subgp. gaps < 10 • Self-review Interventions Description

  30. Transition Schools Performance Targets • Increase SPI so ½ way to 88 by 2018 • Increase subgroup SPIs so ½ way to 88 by 2018 • Increase 4yr grad so ½ way to 94% by 2018 • Increase Ext grad so ½ way to 96% by 2018 • 64 < SPI < 88 and miss one of: • Performance target for SPI • 4yr grad > 90% • Ext. grad > 93% • Maj. of subgp. gaps < 10 • District-led review Interventions Description

  31. Schools in need of the greatest support Performance Targets • Increase SPI so ½ way to 88 by 2018 or 3 pts. • Increase subgroup SPIs so ½ way to 88 by 2018 • Increase 4yr grad so ½ way to 94% by 2018 • Increase Ext grad so ½ way to 96% by 2018 • SPI < 64 OR • 4yr grad < 60 OR • Part. rate < 95% OR • Subgroups among lowest performing in state (Focus Schools) • Eligible for Commissioner’s Network • Otherwise, district-led focused and/or comprehensive School Redesign Plans and interventions Interventions Description

  32. Schools in need of the greatest support Focus • Lowest performing subgroups: eligible for F/R lunch, SWD, ELL, Black, Hispanic • 4-yr grad rate < 60% • Interventions must occur in 2012-13; identified based on 2011 data • SIG Schools • Lowest 5% of Title I Schools • CSDE will be involved in interventions in these schools • School Performance Index lower than 64 for “all students” • Interventions occur in 2013-14 and 2014-15 Review Turnaround

  33. Schools of Distinction

  34. Schools of DistinctionSustained high performance for subgroups or sustained progress for the “all students group” • Recognition Other ideas for consideration: • Option for teacher or administrator to take sabbatical to join Turnaround Team for one year • Monetary grants

  35. Please contact the SDE if you have further questions: New performance indicators: Gil Andrada: gilbert.andrada@ct.gov Incorporation of future performance metrics: Renee Savoie: renee.savoie@ct.gov Waiver flexibilities: Marlene Padernacht: marlene.padernacht@ct.gov

More Related