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Overview. 21st Century Skills/CTE additional considerationsP-20 CouncilsHigh School Tiered Interventions InitiativeHigh School Renewal Creating a portfolio of secondary schools: The San Diego StoryPromising models for district capacity-building . National High School Center Maximizing Attai
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1. Powered-up: Alignment and Renewal of High SchoolsSouthwest Comprehensive Center Regional High School Summit April 1-3, 2009Dr. Helen DuffyNational High School Center American Institutes for Research
2. Overview 21st Century Skills/CTE – additional considerations
P-20 Councils
High School Tiered Interventions Initiative
High School Renewal – Creating a portfolio of secondary schools: The San Diego Story
Promising models for district capacity-building
3. National High School CenterMaximizing Attainment for All High School Students
The National High School Center serves as the central source of research, information and expertise on high school improvement for the Regional Comprehensive Centers (RCCs) and the states they serve.
4. High schools should be places where: Students feel adults know and care about them
Classes are supportive, engaging and demanding for students who begin at all levels of academic achievement
Students receive the guidance, content knowledge and skills they need to plan for their future – whether their plans include college, technical schools or work
5. Common Goals: American Diploma Project and Partnership for 21st Century Skills Align high school standards with post-secondary and workplace expectations
Upgrade high school course requirements so students can take a college- and work-ready curriculum
Streamline the assessment system so that the tests students take in high school can serve as readiness tests for college and 21st century jobs
Hold high schools and post-secondary institutions accountable for student success
6. 21st Century skills / CTE Brief activity
Mike Rose: The Mind at Work
Jeannie Oakes, Marisa Saunders: Beyond tracking: Multiple pathways to college, career and civic participation
Hugh Mehan: Multiple
perspectives on multiple pathways
7. P-20 Councils Overview:
38 States currently have P-16/P-20 councils
ECS has identifies characteristics of P-16/P-20 councils (most are advisory)
NV, AZ, GA
For more information on P-16/20 Councils, see: http://www.ecs.org/html/educationissues/HighSchool/highschooldb1_intro.asp?topic=p-20
8. P-20 Considerations Stakeholders:
Early childhood learning advocates
Governor
State legislators
Challenges:
Attend meetings (not their designees)
Embrace participation, but limit numbers
Balance K-12 vs. post-secondary members
Vision/mission statement / scope
Meeting frequency (e.g. quarterly)
9. P-16/20 Considerations (ECS) Priorities:
Reflect a defined scope of work
Represent areas that will gain traction for student success
Represent work that individual agencies cannot accomplish alone
Address areas of need through examination of data
Include benchmarks
Reflect accountability for council members
10. P-16/20 Considerations (ECS) Identification of resources:
.5 FTE staff
Legislative appropriation or funds built into budget
External sources
11. High School Tiered Intervention Initiative(HSTII) Background:
Addresses increased requests for guidance and tools to support secondary implementation
Incorporates National RTI Center’s middle school initiative
Expands upon Center on Instruction’s examination of state initiatives (Elementary and SPED-focused)
Goals
Process/activities
Current status of the initiative
12. High School Tiered Intervention Initiative (HSTII) Differences of opinion exist as to whether it is relevant for high schools or what it might look like
Tiered intervention is a framework that is variously portrayed as a way to:
identify students with learning disabilities through an alternate approach
reduce inappropriate placement in special education
organize differentiated instruction
organize school-wide prevention strategies
The perspective as to the purpose of tiered interventions seems linked to its perceived relevance for high schools
Goals of tiered interventions at the secondary level may differ (percent proficient, EOCs, exit exams, graduation rates)
13. High School Renewal –The San Diego Story AIR role: to bridge and strengthen connections between research and practice
Two BMGF grants funded $18 million
Implemented July 2004 – Conversion of 3 large underperforming high schools to 14 independent small schools
Four new start-up small schools in Fall 2007: Kearny High Educational Complex
14. Key features of small schools (SRN) Personalization and continuous relationships
High standards and performance-based assessment
Authentic curriculum
Adaptive pedagogy
Knowledgeable and skilled teachers
Collaborative planning and professional development
Family and community connections
Democratic decision-making
15. Goal:
Increase the number of college-ready high school graduates and improve post-secondary options (college, technical training or work
Strategies:
Build capacity to support and sustain initiative
Develop transparency and accountability systems
Inform and engage parents and community
High School Renewal –The San Diego Story
16. Status - Year 5 14 have averaged 61.5 API points growth vs. 25 points for comprehensive HS. Overall multiple year gains accomplished by 12 out of 14.
Western Association of Schools & College (WASC) accredited maximum 6 years for 9; 3 years for 4 and 2 years for 1
Great variance in student performance
Leadership instability: 5 superintendents (two interims)
New board members
Other challenges: budget impact; staffing flexibility
17. Construction Tech Academy andThe School of International Business Common attributes:
Focus on every student’s success
Are data driven
Lead with a sense of urgency
Take initiative and don’t wait for support
Core design elements with multiple pathways for college/career prep
Well developed and supported teaching staff
Unity of purpose with strong culture for performance accountability at adult and student level
18. Emerging work District Partnerships: Building Capacity at the District Level
CA context:
Supporting districts in Program Improvement
Partnership story
Promising model for capacity-building
More systematic findings will follow
19. Upcoming products from the NHSC Updated U.S. and High School Fact Sheet
Selected States Responses to Supporting High School English Language Learners (WestEd)
High School Course-taking Patterns for English Language Learners:A Case Study from California (WestEd)
Educating English Language Learners at the High School Level: A Coherent Approach to District and School-Level Support (AIR and WestEd)
20. Key points Importance of:
Multiple pathways
Instructional change
Portfolios of schools
Alignment across the system
Capacity to support districts
21. Questions/Discussion
Contact information:
Helen Duffy
National High School Center
hduffy@air.org