390 likes | 503 Views
Oskaloosa Community Schools. Addressing Student Needs. The Picture of Oskaloosa CSD. Middle School and High School – SINA 4 and SINA 6 Buildings. Elementary on Watch List first year (subgroups)
E N D
Oskaloosa Community Schools Addressing Student Needs
The Picture of Oskaloosa CSD • Middle School and High School – SINA 4 and SINA 6 Buildings. Elementary on Watch List first year (subgroups) • Professional Development was 1 early release per month with full day PD opportunities during the year. Each building had their own focus. • Little collaboration taking place – some did, others did not • Iowa Core had not been implemented consistently • Inconsistency from classroom to classroom – what, how and how assessed • Gaps existed in skills for Math and Reading • District self reports improper use of test booklets– DE does not investigate
The Picture of Oskaloosa CSD 2 Main goals: (1) Build Leadership Capacity and (2) Increase capacity of teachers to have sustained and continuous improvement • Iowa Core implementation – Grade Level Benchmarks and Components created – 5 year cycle created • PLC Approach to Professional Development in place – early release days incorporated into schedule – collaboration and focused professional development • PLC Facilitators (District and Building level teams) • District Leadership Team established (DLT) as part of Iowa Core implementation requirements • Standards-Based Grading • Learning Supports identified to assist students not meeting district level expectations (1’s and 2”s) Predictive of Proficiency?
The Picture of Oskaloosa CSD In the meantime, the state initiatives are changing • Iowa Core implementation – The Iowa Core and the Common Core merge – MUCH more rigorous expectations for our students (Shifts in ELA and Math) • Additional gaps in student skills are exposed • Instruction does NOT match level of Iowa Core! • Iowa Assessments instead of ITBS/ITED - NSS instead of %tile rank (2011-2012) • RtI becomes a state focus to address gaps across the state • PLC Approach to Professional Development • State identifies collaboration expectations for districts – Oskaloosa looked to for PLC direction by other districts
The Picture of Oskaloosa CSD In the meantime, the state initiatives are changing • MS and HS continue on SINA Path • Project-Based Learning pursued • Assist with gaps in instruction and rigor • Elementary becomes SINA (IEP and F/R) • SINA Team completes a gap analysis to find reason for status • Programs versus Quality Instruction was identified by Support Team (AEA and State) as an issue in Oskaloosa • We are directed to focus on increasing the quality of instruction rather than turning to a program • Small Group Instruction chosen as consistent, quality, research-based approach (Reader’s Workshop)
The Picture of Oskaloosa CSD SINA Plan determined by teacher team (SINA 2 Requirements) • Small Group Instruction – Reader’s and Writer’s Workshop assists ALL students and helps identify struggling students more effectively. • Instructional Coach hired to assist with this process • Demonstration classrooms created • Angela Maiers expertise sought • Quality instruction and consistency between classrooms is our goal SINA 3 Requirements: In addition to Year 2 - Restructuring • Schedule at Elementary shifted to include reading and writing blocks • Block of time for interventions (Tier 2 and Tier 3) • Intervention Coach K-3 is hired to help problem-solve and be proactive • SWAT Teams formed to analyze data and identify areas of concern in core instruction
Trends in Oskaloosa F/R +116
Trend in Oskaloosa F/R +59
Trend in Oskaloosa F/R +83
Trend in Oskaloosa F/R +258
Oskaloosa Achievement - NCLB • 2013-2014 100% of students must be proficient in Math and Reading • Iowa Assessments used 2011-2012 – different metric used • NSS not percentile rank (41st %tile no longer used) • Must be careful of making comparisons between ITBS/ITED and Iowa Assessments since metric changed – and test became much more rigorous – problem solving and more complex texts and added in more informational texts and writing (revealing gaps in our levels of instruction) • Use Measures of Academic Progress (MAP) as our 2nd required assessment. Shows growth in students and is aligned to Iowa Core.
Oskaloosa Performance • What we know the data suggests: • The 1st two years of Iowa Assessments both 3rd and 4th grade did not perform at a high level • We have inconsistent performance for IEP students historically • F/R rate has increased by over 200 students • Some grades do well one year and not as well the next year. The data suggests a system consistency issue • 3rd and 4th grade – while not a trend, it is an indication of an issue • Disconnect between GLB’s and Instruction • Aimsweb, consistent assessments, Iowa Core shifts • Some years we performed higher than the state or AEA, others we did not • System inconsistency
How are we Addressing Needs? • Continue with Iowa Core alignment – identifying focus areas in Math/LA and shifts • Consistency with Instruction and focusing on Quality Instructional practices • SINA Work and PBL’s • DLT work – “Tool for Improvement” • Coach hired at MS • Common/Consistent building assessments given K-5 (EX - Text Leveling)
How are we Addressing Needs? • PLC’s look at multiple data points to identify SMART Goals and target instruction • GLB information, MAP, Iowa Assessments • Universal Screener and Progress Monitoring – Proactive approach • Interventions are focused and specific K-8 • Reading Corp volunteers K-3 • Intervention Coach K-3 • SWAT Teams at each building to analyze data • Identify core areas of concern • “Critical Friend”
How are we Addressing Needs? • Identifying Best Practice Phonics Instruction • What resources do we need to implement? • Consistent language in Math and Reading • Writing process being identified • After School Program – partnership with YMCA – 21st Century Grant • Summer Jump Start at MS for 6th Graders • Tutors and interventions at HS level
PLC’s • All teachers are part of a Professional Learning Community • SMART Goals and Action Plans developed • Data walls are created and analyzed – inform instruction • Teachers learn together and grow together • Teachers watch each other to learn • Build teacher leadership – they facilitate and help make decisions • Each building has a Building Level Facilitator group to help make PLC’s stronger and more effective. • Only as strong as the PLC Facilitator • Training and on-going support provided
RtI • Response to Intervention • Focus is on strong CORE instruction • Provide assistance to identified students who are struggling • Universal Screener and Progress Monitoring - Aimsweb • Reading CBM (K-8), Phonics skills (K-1) • Math Probes (K-12 SPED, 6-9) • Standard Treatment Protocols Identified (K-8) • Program or intervention targeted at student deficit – choose systematically based on needs. • Identifies students who are below grade level target (national norms) • Red, Yellow, Green, Blue, White – Tier 3, Tier 2, Tier 1 and above • Intensive, Supplemental, Average, Above Average, Well Above Average