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WELCOME EDUCATION STAKEHOLDERS MEETING. Tuesday, July 29, 2014 UWRV Boardroom. The Statistics Lottery. Education, Income, and Health. Continuous assessment of the community Sustainable results in Education, Income, and Health
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WELCOMEEDUCATION STAKEHOLDERS MEETING Tuesday, July 29, 2014 UWRV Boardroom
Education, Income, and Health • Continuous assessment of the community • Sustainable results in Education, Income, and Health • Partnership opportunity with funds that will be raised through the 2014 United Way campaign, specifically with dollars directed to Impact Fund • We appreciate your support of the 2014 United Way campaign
UWRV’s Direction • UWRV makes strategic investments in our community with the ultimate goal of improving people’s lives, both by helping individuals and by creating community level change. • Our strategies include community collaborations, advocacy for public policy changes, and investing financial resources in programs provided by impact partners.
United Way Education Priorities Goal: Increase the number of children aged 0-5 in the Roanoke Valley that arrive prepared for the first day of kindergarten as determined by tangible measurement tools. Outcome #1: Parents of children 0-5 are able to access affordable quality out-of-home care and education for their children. Outcome #2: Parents of children 0-5 become more committed, confident and skilled in helping their children be prepared for school. Outcome #3: Community leaders and the public understand the cost and benefits of, and actively support, early childhood care and education both from the social service and economic development standpoints.
United Way Education Priorities Goal: Contribute to the statistically significant improvement of the graduation rates within Roanoke Valley by enabling students and their families to be better prepared to take advantage of the opportunities provided by public education. Outcome #1: Students are able to read and comprehend by the end of third grade. Outcome #2: Students are connected with help that they need to stay in school beginning at an early age.
Valley-wide Data Overview July 29th, 2014 United Way Roanoke Valley Education Open Process Stakeholders Meeting
A recent, March 2013, research project out of Montgomery County Public Schools in Maryland has identified student characteristics relating to dropping out of high school that start as early as the 3rd marking period of 1st grade. Early Warning Indicators
Eligibility Generalities TANF, SNAP,
427 373 415 387 423 8.5x
QUICK In Spring ‘13, Virginia implemented more rigorous Reading SOL assessments that were conducted, for the first time, entirely online. The tests included technology enhanced items (TEI) that required students to use more critical thinking skills and solve multi-step problems. The following are a few sample items from the Grade 3 Reading SOL test.
75.47% Virginia 73.10% 68.80% In Spring ‘12, Virginia implemented a more rigorous Mathematics SOL assessment. In Spring ’13, more rigorous Reading and Science SOL assessments were administered.
75.99% Virginia 70.69% 61.42% In Spring ‘12, Virginia implemented a more rigorous Mathematics SOL assessment. In Spring ’13, more rigorous Reading and Science SOL assessments were administered.
89.2 85.7 Virginia
ANOTHER QUICK Number of Passing SOL Tests in order to earn each respective diploma 2 1 1 1 1 2 2 2 2 1
341 54 607
Final High School Outcomes by 10th Grade Absenteeism Post Secondary source: The Importance of Being in School : A Report on Absenteeism in the Nation’s Public Schools; May ‘12
2226 1031 470 685 44.5x
53% percent of ALL the discipline related offenses for the past 5 years, Valley-wide, were related to Behavior Granular breakdown of Valley-wide Behavior-related offenses Unwillingness to submit to authority or refusal to respond to a reasonable request. Any act that intentionally disrupts the orderly conduct of a school function. Any behavior that substantially disrupts the orderly learning environment.
Middle School Risky Behaviors High School Risky Behaviors
College and Career – Virginia Western Community College • 57% of students receive financial aid / 79% receive Pell grants • CCAP • # of college-goers who go through Virginia Western • Self-sufficiency and academic success skills • 50% need developmental courses – 40% math, 20% English • Services for: 1st generation, disability, low-income, veteran, or 50+
Toddler Steps: Continuing to Work Towards Equal Footing in Early Education Presentation to the United Way of Roanoke Valley May 6, 2014
A sampling of additional • topics of analysis • Types of programs • Types of services • Family and child characteristics • Attendance records • Grade retention • Special education
Working together to: • Scrub and validate data • Join data sets • Analyze and report data • Inform conversations • Make data-based decisions
Project Milestones[Nov.2013-Apr.2014] • Fall 2013 cohort analysis • Risk factor work and summarization • Expansion to include Smart Beginnings Greater Roanoke, Botetourt & Salem school systems
2 7 9 72 12 75 7 32 11 10 2 1 1 - TAP Head Start Spring 2013 cohort. The risk factors: parent mental health, homeless, referral source/discharge reason(CHIP), food/clothing assistance (TAP Head Start), substance abuse, dual language learner, child abuse, economic status, and parent education level.
a few preliminary findings Dual Language Learners, from either CHIP or TAP Head Start, scored about 20 points LOWER when compared to non-dual language learners on the PALS K assessment. Students who enrolled in TAP Head Start at age 3 did BETTER (85.07%), than those who enrolled in TAP Head Start at age 4 (76.19%), on the K PALS assessment. Students who started at CHIP closer to their birth date did BETTER on the K PALS assessment when compared to those who started later.
additional topics of analysis Risk factors & Academic performance [ TAP Head Start ] Age at enrollment Length of enrollment Services Received [ VSQI ] [ CHIP ]
Discussion Questions As a group: • What data is relevant to your students/clients? What evidence-based strategies does your program use to help move that needle? • What opportunities are there to connect and complement each other’s work? • What would you need to do after this meeting to make this happen?
Education Open Process • Opportunity to partner with United Way • Open to nonprofit organizations meeting one of UW’s education outcomes • Process is competitive and uses zero-based funding • Partners funded should commit to engaging in data tracking • Applications are reviewed by community volunteers
Program Review Criteria Administrative Review – pass/fail
Key Dates to Remember • Education Service Providers Meeting – July 29 • Sign-ups to submit Letter of Intent - September 3 - October 1 @ noon • Logic Model/Outcome Workshop – September 16, 3:30 – 5 pm • Letter of Intent open - October 1 - 17 • Application Workshops - November 4, 3 - 5pm • Invitations to aligned programs - November 17 • Data Tracking Workshops – December 4, 3 - 5pm • Administrative and Program Applications – December 15, 2014– January 23, 2015 @ noon • Site visits and panel questions: February – March 2015 • Panel questions will be submitted to the programs via e-cImpact and programs should respond before the scheduled site visit • Site visits are targeted to occur from February 16 – March 6, 2015 • Funding Award Letters – May 6, 2015 • Signed MOUs due to United Way – May 20, 2015
Helping the students via a continuous improvement cycle of data analysis Microsoft Excel
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THANK YOU ALL FOR COMING! We’re looking forward to hearing more about these great ideas and seeing great Letters of Intent this October!