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MNSAA Accreditation January 2014 New School Training The Whole Learning School

MNSAA Accreditation January 2014 New School Training The Whole Learning School Sarah W. Mueller Executive Director. Candidat e Application. The Whole Learning School Provided Statement “Why Seeking Accreditation?” Statement of governing authority’s support

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MNSAA Accreditation January 2014 New School Training The Whole Learning School

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  1. MNSAA Accreditation January 2014 New School Training The Whole Learning School Sarah W. Mueller Executive Director

  2. Candidate Application • The Whole Learning School Provided • Statement “Why Seeking Accreditation?” • Statement of governing authority’s support • Projected timeframe (Spring 2015) • Programs seeking accreditation (Grades 3-12) • Signed by school & governing authority • Payment of application fee

  3. Candidate Application • Essential Standards Readiness • Mission & Philosophy statements • Curriculum Standards • Assessment of Student Learning • Health & Safety Requirements • Personnel • Governance • Financial Sustainability

  4. Achieving NEW Accreditation • A Model for The Whole Learning School • Year 1 – Develop Self Study • Profile & Narrations • Year 2 - SSP and Visit • Define visionary plan for future • Host onsite visit • Year 3-7 – Implement Plan • File Annual Progress Reports • Maintain Strategic Plan as living document

  5. Accreditation Status • Conditions on Accreditation May Apply • Public Statement • Provisional Conditions • One or more essential compliance components • Additional accountability required • Timelines and support provided • Provisional Conditions • Deficiency detracts from total • Failed to meet requirements • Violated policy

  6. Steps to Accreditation • Outline to Walk Through Process • Set up for Renewing schools • TWLS already completed Steps 1-2 • Next Up • Develop Self-Study • Communicate • Plan

  7. Standards & Indicators • HANDBOOK– Section B • 1: Mission & Philosophy • 2: Teaching & Learning • 3: Climate for Learning • 4: Communications & Relations • 5: Personnel • 6: Leadership & Governance • 7: School Strategic Plan

  8. MNSAA’s Quality Standards • Take a LOOK at the Standards • MNSAA has 7 quality standards • Each standard is comprised of several criteria • Each criteria requires a ReflectiveNarration • Narration supported byPerformanceIndicators

  9. Essential Performance Indicators • Italicized Means Required! • Written Mission & Philosophy statements; • Written Curriculum Standards; • Subject Area Philosophies • Written Process of Curriculum Evaluation; • Philosophy of Assessment • Policy Handbooks; • Faculty & Student Handbooks; • Annual State-of-the School Report; • Etc. • Legal Requirement noted LR

  10. School Self-Study Report • HANDBOOK– Section C • The School Profile • Reflective Standard Narrations • The School Strategic Plan

  11. The School Self-Study Report • Getting Organized • Understand the Self-Study Requirements • (Profile, Standards Narrations, School Strategic Plan) • Establish a Steering Team (See Handbook C-1) • Develop Sub-Committees(See Handbook C-1) • Community-wide Ownership

  12. Part 1: The School Profile

  13. Part 1: The School Profile • Tells your school’s story • (Who you are; Who you serve; What’s been happening?) • Opens self-study report • Summary statement (3-5 pages) • History highlights • Demographic Study • Overview of students, families, and community served • Stakeholder perceptions** • Surveyprovides documented evidence • Student enrollment trends

  14. Part 1: The School Profile • Stakeholder Satisfaction Survey • Consider inexpensive electronic survey • Connect stakeholders to MNSAA standards • Invite honesty, but do not open door to inappropriate responses • Summarize data gathered in The Profile

  15. Part 1: The School Profile • School Profile Template • Available under School Resources on website • Template not required, but components are • Consider it an outline for posting your findings • Take a look! • Download from MNSAA website: www.mnsaa.org

  16. Part 2: Standard Narrations

  17. Part 2: Standards Narrations • Demonstrates readiness for accreditation • The heart of your school’sself-study • Defines what is currently happening at your school • Honesty matters! May find not all criteria are in place at your school • Equally important to find areas notin compliance

  18. Part 2: Standards Narrations • Quality of the Reflective Narrations • Do NOT merely restate the standard • Sets the stage for the onsite team • Professional document crafted by well-trained and highly skilled educators • Published! • Quality evaluated by team

  19. Part 2: Standards Narrations • Identifying Strengths & Challenges • Use findings to build summary for each standard • Process = • Subcommittee writes draft • Whole group reviews and adds ideas • Identify key strengths & challenges • CHALLENGES – Become the focus of the school improvement plan

  20. Part 2: Standards Narrations • Self-Study Narrations Template • MNSAA requires use of template • Personalize the template for your school • Available under School Resources on website

  21. Part 2: Standards Narrations • Don’t Forget Standard 7! • Not completed until after strategic plan written • Can be forgotten • Set a reminder to return to this before publishing • Essential component of the Self-Study

  22. Indicators of Compliance • Onsite team looks for supporting evidence for each narration. • Ask the questions: • “How do we comply?” • “How can we provide evidence?” • MNSAA requirements & ideas • Team observations & interviews

  23. Part 3: School Strategic Plan

  24. Part 3: School Strategic Plan • Summarizes challenges identified • A roadmap for school improvement • Provide strategic direction + a plan of action • Needs to be a collaborative process • Key component of Annual Progress Report • Maintained as a “Living Document”

  25. Part 3: School Strategic Plan • MNSAA SSP Quality Expectations • Valid – Reflective of current needs of school • Connected – To self-study report • Supported – By wide body of stakeholders • Visionary – Not a checklist • Reasonable – Timeline manageable • Focused – On your students!

  26. Part 3: School Strategic Plan • Specific Framework Required! • Objectives – Where the school wants to be • Strategies – How the school plans to get there • Action Steps – What specifically the school is going to do

  27. SAMPLE • Objective: The school will provide a safe learning facility. • Strategy 1:A crisis management plan will be developed. • Action Steps: • A taskforce will be established. • The task force will review state guidelines and resources. • The task force will interface with local authorities. • Draft a crisis management plan for consideration. • Seek approval from board. • Implement crisis management plan. • Evaluate and adjust as needed. • Strategy 2:Explore extended day program. • Action Steps: • Survey families for need. • Determine space for program. • Research state laws. • Etc. – Continue to add action steps to reach goal.

  28. Part 3: School Strategic Plan • MNSAA Template Required! • Complete on electronic template • Download from MNSAA website • Word table - Able to revise • Ability to report progress to MNSAA • Take a look!

  29. Part 3: School Strategic Plan Samples Available Take a look at the Sample on the MNSAA Template! Be sure to checkout our website for more resources: www.mnsaa.org

  30. Part 3: School Strategic Plan • INVOLVE STAKEHOLDERS! • Communicate Self-Study Findings • Solicit Input • Build Buy-In • Finalize with full school community

  31. The Onsite Visit • HANDBOOK – Section D • Guidelines & Responsibilities • The Onsite Visiting Team • The Team Report Template

  32. The Onsite Visit • Purpose of the Onsite Team Visit • To Validate • To Evaluate • Quality Expectations of MNSAA • Provide Objective Outside Feedback • Bottom Line

  33. The Onsite Visit • Thinking Ahead of the Visit • Budget considerations • Facility considerations • Technology considerations • Interview considerations • Team meet and greet • Organize your indicators • Clear your calendar • Advise stakeholders

  34. The Onsite Visit • The Team Report • The Team will determine: • Sufficient Indication of Compliance • Compliance with Concerns • Insufficient Indication of Compliance • Recommendations for Improvement • Commendations for Excellence • Take a look!

  35. The Onsite Visit • The School Responds • Visit closure • Communicate findings with stakeholders • Written response to recommendations • Template provided • Submit revised SSP

  36. The Appendix • HANDBOOK – Section E • Sample Timeline for Process • Curriculum Standards Requirement • SSP Sample • Fee Structure

  37. MNSAA Accreditation January 2014 New School Training The Whole Learning School Sarah W. Mueller Executive Director

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