1 / 16

Marshall Public Schools

Marshall Public Schools. World’s Best Workforce September 2014. World’s Best Workforce. WBWF means striving to: Have all students meet school readiness goals Have all 3 rd grade students achieve grade-level literacy Close all achievement gaps Have all students graduate from high school

Télécharger la présentation

Marshall Public Schools

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. Marshall Public Schools World’s Best Workforce September 2014

  2. World’s Best Workforce WBWF means striving to: Have all students meet school readiness goals Have all 3rd grade students achieve grade-level literacy Close all achievement gaps Have all students graduate from high school Have all students attain career and college preparedness

  3. World’s Best Workforce Success for WBWF is measured by: National Assessment of Education Progress (NAEP) results Reduction of achievement gaps Performance on MN Comprehensive Assessments College and career readiness (WorkKeys, Compass, ACT) Other locally utilized assessments/measures

  4. World’s Best Workforce • Focus on continuous school improvement • Locally developed (owned) plan • Developed with input from stakeholders • Supported by the MDE guidance and technical assistance

  5. MPS Vision and Mission V=To work as one in the pursuit of excellence. M=MPS develops the potential of each learner for success in a changing world.

  6. MPS Core Values Committed to student centered excellence. Continue to focus on the future. Utilize data driven process and decisions focused on results. Embrace ethical responsibility for the students and community served by the district. Value an engaged and learning workforce and embrace partnerships.

  7. MPS District Goals Improve student performance for all students. Improve constituent satisfaction. Commit to ongoing and continuous employee development. Align support systems throughout the district to provide optimum learning environments and experiences. Improve and maintain fiscal stability, accountability, and alignment.

  8. Striving to Attain Goals District goals Systems for School Improvement Team Site Leadership Teams School Improvement Plans ATPPS or Q Comp Committed and dedicated staff

  9. Focuses of Site Goals District academic goals (reading and math) Constituent satisfaction Percent of students reading at grade level by 3rd grade Percent of students reading at grade level by 6th grade Percent of students enrolled in and passing AP/CIS/PSEO courses

  10. Goal #1 • Improve student performance for all students • Results from the Minnesota Comprehensive Assessments • Math for all grades (3-8 and 11) increased from 2013 to 2014 • Reading for all grades (3-8 and 10) dropped slightly from 2013 to 2014 • Science for all grades (5, 8, and high school) dropped from 2013 to 2014

  11. MPS Academic Goals • As measured by NWEA/MAP testing, 85% of students will be at or above the spring mean RIT norm score (by the end of 2015-2016) • 68.2% of students in math • 65.3% of students in reading • As measured by NWEA/MAP testing, 70% of students will meet, or exceed, their annual [typical] growth • 61.4% of students in math • 52.4% of students in reading

  12. Goal #2 • Improve constituent satisfaction • Park Side = 96% satisfaction (student survey) • West Side = 94% satisfaction (student survey) • Middle School = 96% satisfaction (student survey) • High School = 95% satisfaction (parent survey) • MA-TEC = 96% satisfaction (student survey)

  13. Goal #3 • Commit to ongoing and continuous employee development • Focus on standards based grading and formative assessment • Organization of Professional Learning Communities (PLCs) that meet weekly during early dismissals • Participation in FLY Consortium and commitment to provide [common] professional development for staff • Staff development set-aside • Teacher evaluation, development, and peer coaching plan • Teacher induction

  14. Goal #4 • Align support systems throughout the district to provide optimum learning environments and experiences • ATPPS/Q Comp Plan • Curriculum review cycle • District goals • District Improvement Plans • English Language Learners (ESL) • Literacy Plan • FLY Consortium • Gifted and Talented • Integration Plan • Online grading and communication • Principal Development Plan • Ramp Up To Readiness • Response to Intervention • Site Leadership Teams • Staff Development Plan • Teacher Development, Evaluation, and Peer Coaching Plan • Title I

  15. Goal #5 • Improve and maintain fiscal stability, accountability, and alignment • “Clean” annual audits • Detailed annual budget book presentation • Increasing enrollment • Policy #714 – Fund Balances • Q Comp • Various awards received by the business office/district for financial reporting (Comprehensive Annual Financial Report, Meritorious Budget Award, Certificate of Excellence, School Finance Award)

  16. WBWF Next Steps Align our efforts and resources with the goals of the WBWF legislation Continue to set consistent and SMART goals and/or measurements Further develop a comprehensive WBWF Plan Inform, engage, and involve stakeholders

More Related