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SharePoint Portal Presentation

SharePoint Portal Presentation. Information Technology Services Miami-Dade County Public Schools. Welcome. Orange County Public Schools, Orlando, Florida Hillsborough County Public Schools, Tampa, Florida Miami Dade Police Department Orange County Police Department United States Army

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SharePoint Portal Presentation

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  1. SharePoint Portal Presentation Information Technology Services Miami-Dade County Public Schools

  2. Welcome • Orange County Public Schools, Orlando, Florida • Hillsborough County Public Schools, Tampa, Florida • Miami Dade Police Department • Orange County Police Department • United States Army • Laureate Education, Inc. • Township High School District, Palatine, Illinois • Chippewa Valley School District, Clinton Township, Michigan • Rochester Community School District, Rochester, Michigan • Kenosha Unified School District, Kenosha, Wisconsin • Racine Public Schools, Racine, Wisconsin

  3. MDCPS Background • Fourth largest school district • 390 public schools; 80 Charter schools • Serving 2,400 square miles • 344,000 students • 56,364 employees; 5,963 Charter employees • Services 180 different home languages

  4. The Big Picture • The Vision • Have all users connected to all information at anytime • The Challenges • Giving our users access to their systems in one area • Providing our parents an easy and consistent way to monitor their child’s progress • Tactical Objectives • Connect silo systems • Reduce paper-based systems • Increase parent involvement • Provide easy and consistent access to information

  5. MDCPS Foundation • Active Directory Account and Auto Update – MIIS and ILM • Password Synchronization – P-Synch • District Email – Outlook Exchange • District wide Gradebook – Pinnacle / Excelsior • Metro Ethernet to each remote site • Patch Management and Virus Protection – Big Fix and Sophos • Data Warehouse – Microsoft SQL • OLAP (On-line Analytical Processing tool) - Cognos • Self Service for Technology Support - HEAT • Leveraged Existing Microsoft Licensing and Experience

  6. Implementation/Timeline Portal LiteMay 1, 2006 • August 2007 - August 2008 • Attendance • Intervention • SPOT • SES • Weekly Briefing • Internship • Professional Development • RiverDeep • Unified Communications (OCS) August 2007 District and Community Deployment; Global Registration System and Enterprise Portal November 2006 to April 2007 Infrastructure and Employee Portal with Collaboration

  7. Decision Making Process • Key Criteria • Existing infrastructure and skill sets • Scalability • Technology partners and third party services • Flexibility • Rapid Development • Why SharePoint? • Experience with Microsoft Products • Mature Microsoft Exchange Environment (ADS) • Successful Portal “Lite” • Established Personnel and Student Data Warehouse • Microsoft Platform throughout District • Good Partner Relationship with Microsoft

  8. Adoption

  9. Students Parents Employees Community The Solution - www.dadeschools.net

  10. My Site

  11. Teacher Portal • Test Scores • Absences • Homeroom Section • Birthdates Teacher/Student Drill Down

  12. Student Achievement

  13. Teacher Portal

  14. My Applications

  15. Electronic Gradebook Application

  16. The Learning Village Vision To create a repository for all of the district’s digital resources, aligned to standards, and accessible from one point of entry

  17. The Learning Village How did we set out to get there • Use local content-area experts to develop lesson plans linked to district resources • Require publishers of district adopted instructional materials to provide digital versions of • Lesson plans • Textbooks • Assessment items

  18. The Learning Village Current Status • Approximately 10,000 Lesson Plans • Organized by nine-week periods, grade levels, and subject areas • About 150 Digital Textbooks (student and teacher texts) • Linked and displayed by course codes • Roughly 25,000 Assessment Items • Organized by grade and subject area, and subject area and standard

  19. The Learning Village Lesson Plans Goals • Standardize instructional focus and pacing across subject areas and schools • Provide support to new and new to subject area or grade level teachers • Link activities within plans to other district instructional resources including • RiverdeepLMS • Gizmos • Online databases

  20. The Learning Village Lesson Plans Approximately 10,000 Lesson Plans (Grades K-12) • Reading • Mathematics • Science • Social Studies • Foreign Language • Life Skills (Art, Music, Physical Education)

  21. The Learning Village Digital Textbooks

  22. The Learning Village Digital Textbooks Advantages • Accessible from anyplace with Internet access • Offer interactive activities • Include audio (in some cases) • Reduce the need for students to carry home heavy textbooks • Single sign-on through the portal (teachers and students don’t need to establish accounts with every publisher for every text)

  23. The Learning Village Digital Textbooks (both student and teacher editions) Elementary School • Mathematics • Science • Intensive Reading • Reading (2010) • Social Studies (2013)

  24. The Learning Village Digital Textbooks (both student and teacher editions) Middle School • Mathematics • Social Studies • Science • Foreign Language • Intensive Reading • Language Arts(2010)

  25. The Learning Village Digital Textbooks (both student and teacher editions) Senior High School • Science • Social Studies • Foreign Language • Language Arts (2010) • Mathematics (2011)

  26. The Learning Village Assessment Items • Both publisher produced and customized items produced by ETS • Accessible via Examview Test Generator • Automated creation of Edusoft answer sheet for scanning and scoring (Publish to Edusoft)

  27. The Learning Village 2.0

  28. The Learning Village 2.0 What’s Next? Learning Village 2.0 imbedded in Microsoft SharePoint Portal will facilitate • Pushing district-developed pacing guides and lesson plans by course codes to serve as an overlay to teacher created daily lesson plans • Sharing of lesson plans/lesson plan components with students and parents • Advanced searching and sharing capabilities

  29. Drill Down To The School Level

  30. Equity and Access

  31. Student Portal Students can… • View their schedule/grades • E-Textbooks • Store documents • Teacher/Student Collaboration site • School announcements and events • Create your own “My-site” Coming soon • Many more resources E-Textbook

  32. Parent Portal Access • Login to Parent Portal Using your Existing Account • Create an Account – First Time Users

  33. It’s the ProcessNot the Technology

  34. M-DCPSAcceptable Use Policy • Read in detail • If you agree to these terms, • Select Accept One Time Only

  35. Parent Portal New Features • Student Schedule • Student Assignments & Grades • Attendance • E-Textbooks • School Bus Information • Free and Reduced Meal Application process • Ask A Question and many more resources

  36. Parent Internet Viewer

  37. Flexible and Agile

  38. Community Portal • Online Application processed and reviewed by District Community Service Office

  39. Lessons Learned • Portal Lite • Over Estimating Services, Under Estimating Staff • Mapping and Establishing Environments Beforehand • Change Control in Place • Getting all Parts to Work Together • Limited best practice for MOSS as it as a new product • Deployment issues (test -> staging -> production) • No build process

  40. Agile and Flexible • Attendance Intervention • SPOT • SES • Weekly Briefing • Internship • Professional Development • RiverDeep • Unified Communications – OCS • Success Academy

  41. Attendance Intervention • The implementation of this application is based on board rule. • Students with 5 unexcused/unresolved absences in a semester course or 10 unexcused/unresolved absences in an annual course will have their academic grade withheld. • The Intervention application allows the attendance review committee to determine the appropriate intervention for a student and then to resolve the absences so that the academic grade can be given. • Additional comments can be added at the bottom of the application to reflect any special issues that were addressed at the meeting. • Through the application the attendance review committee will print a letter for signature by the parent and student. The letter will also print in Spanish or Haitian-Creole if the home language is one of these languages. • The student and parent also are receive a message in their alert box on their individual portals. When they click on the alert they are taken to a summary page showing the attendance intervention.

  42. SPOTsuccess • This application was created in response to a need that the Superintendent saw to recognize students for doing positive things in school. The SPOTsuccess application allows staff at schools to recognize students that has taken positive action. • School personnel can recognize any student in their school by going into the portal and selecting SPOTsuccess. There are nine core values to select from. Within each core value a subgroup must be selected. The number of subgroups varies between core values. • The principal approves the recognition on the principal approval screen. • Once approved the student and parent are notified in an alert box on their individual portals. They can then click on the alert and se the congratulatory letter. • In addition the principal has the options of printing a congratulation letter, an award certificate, and emailing the parent. They can all print SPOTsuccess stickers to hand out to the students. • Letters are printed in English and a second language based on the home language.

  43. SES-Supplemental Educational Services If a child attends a school that has been identified by the state as “in need of improvement” for two consecutive years; and receives free-or-reduced price lunch, they are eligible for free tutoring. The tutoring is offered by state approved private providers in: • Reading • Language Arts • Mathematics before and after school or Saturdays

  44. Internship • Businesses apply for portal account and role, submit internship proposals, select/decline interns and submit mid-term and final evaluations of student interns. • District Community Services staff approve/disapprove business’ requests as internship providers. • Students apply for internship opportunities available to them that are automatically posted to their portal. • School site Internship Coordinators approve student requests and queue up to ten students for interview with a business and provide business information to approved students. • All functions are real-time in the portal and audiences receive email notification in addition to portal screen information for all actions and events related to an internship opportunity.

  45. Professional Development • Provides management and monitoring of District teacher training provided by specialists from Professional Development, School Operations and Curriculum and Instruction departments. • Curriculum Specialists from all departments use their portal to take a Talent Survey, the information from which is used to send the most qualified specialist to serve schools requests for professional development. • Curriculum Specialists complete a Service Log on their portal with details of the training provided including grade level, categories, specific skills, etc. • Dynamic monitoring reports are available to the District departments displaying which regions and schools needed what type of training and re-training along with numerous reports on categories and specific skills trained. Reporting also differentiates new teachers, specific grade levels, educational background, etc. regarding recipients of PD.

  46. What’s Next • Substitute System • Substitute teachers use Portal to enter their availability (using a calendar), subject areas, grade levels, school and region preferences, etc. and to apply for specific substitute vacancies. • School sites use an Intranet web application to post substitute vacancies, review available substitutes, coordinate interviews and assign substitutes to vacancies. • Email notifications and screen displays keep all parties informed on open vacancies, vacancies applied for, substitute selection, etc.

  47. Future Implementations • Continue to increase adoption if budget permits • Volunteer • Business Partners • Internship • Food Service

  48. Infrastructure Overview • Active Directory Environment • Historically decentralized AD environment • Portal project coincided with AD migration project • DMZ forest was created for student and arent accounts • Initially intended for web applications only • Now being rethought for network access

  49. Initial Infrastructure Build • Environment architecture and design • Security architecture and certificates • Hardware sizing and implementation • Active Directory Schema modifications • Database architecture and build • Data Warehouse interface and data positioning • Development and Integration environments • Active Directory provisioning and replication

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