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Dropout Early Warning Prevention System for all Students Using Data Tools and Other Strategies. Gregg Curtis, PhD Education Consultant; School Counseling WI Department of Public Instruction. Topics. What data system did we have and what are we currently using?
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Dropout Early Warning Prevention System for all Students Using Data Tools and Other Strategies Gregg Curtis, PhD Education Consultant; School Counseling WI Department of Public Instruction
Topics • What data system did we have and what are we currently using? • Dropout Early Warning System (DEWS) and Students • Questions?
For the Public FROM WINNS TO WISEdash Public Portal Welcome to WINSS!
WISEdash for Districts • Goal: Increase Access to Data • Outcome: Data-Based Decision-Making
WISEdash portals WISEdash for Districts http://wise.dpi.wi.gov/wise_dashhome WISEdash Public Portal http://wisedash.dpi.wi.govDashboard/portalHome.jsp
Data in WISEdash • Enrollment and Attendance • Assessments (WSAS, ACT, AP, ACCESS) • Student Growth Percentiles • High School Completion • Postsecondary Enrollment • Student Profile • Student Search
WISEdash for Districts Introductory Video http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PCwJX6N7zCk&feature=youtube
All information on how to get access is documented here: http://wise.dpi.wi.gov/wise_securehomeinfo
What is an Early Warning System? • Early Warning Systems (EWS) use readily available school data to identify students who are at risk of dropping out , allowing educators to intervene early. • Schools can use information from an early warning system to support students who are at risk of dropping out with both school-wide strategies and targeted interventions. • DEWS • National High School Center EWS High School Tool • National High School Center EWS Middle Grades Tool
Dropout Early Warning System DEWS: • Is dependent on the data available, the factors included in the model can change, as will their weight in predicting the outcomes • Is flexible, so it can expand as more longitudinal data is available on cohorts • Currently uses these factors: • Assessments —Attendance— Mobility • Discipline (school of attendance)
DEWS Video Link and Resources • DEWS Website: http://wise.dpi.wi.gov/wise_dashdews • DEWS Fact Sheet: wise.dpi.wi.gov/files/wise/pdf/dews-fact-sheet.pdf • DEWS Checklist: http://wise.dpi.wi.gov/files/wise/pdf/dews-checklist.pdf
DEWS Video Link and Resources (cont.) • Action Guide Resource http://wise.dpi.wi.gov/files/wise/pdf/wi-dews-actionguide.pdf • Video Tutorial: http://youtube/4C2F8zhHV8w
What do the Student Profile DEWS Outcomes and Scores Look Like? KEY: Supplement this information with more recent local data
DEWS Risk Levels for Domains *Combined reading and math score thresholds for DEWS on p.13 of guide
DEWS Risk Levels for Assessments (Combined Math and Reading)
Why don’t some students have scores? • Students must have been enrolled in a Wisconsin public school in the previous school year • Students must have taken the WKCE and received a score • Students must currently be enrolled in a Wisconsin public school for the data to be displayed • ANY STUDENT WITHOUT A SCORE should be reviewed and a support system developed.
Students in Alternate Curriculum • Students are considered at-risk if unable to calculate a DEWS score • Assessment will indicate “Unknown” • All students who take the WAA-SwD will automatically have an “Unknown” DEWS score because the system currently is unable to incorporate scores from the WAA-SwD; looks like they didn’t take the WKCE.
How Could You Use DEWS With All Students? • Print out the Student Profile • Examine the DEWS Outcome Score; check to see if any of the sub scores are in the Moderate to High level • Supplement with more recent, local data • Be sure that the DEWS Outcome Date is current • With a team develop a plan of support • If a SWD, record information in the Present Levels section of the IEP.
DEWS Process LOCAL KNOWLEDGE STATE DATA Teacher / program context Parent input Special circumstances CONTEXT Assessments Demographics Intervention Strategies Attendance Disciplinary Events Mobility Location Student Risk Identification
REMEMBER • It is very important to use up-to-date data and compare the DEWS results to local data.
The Review Process Open Student Roster Compare to Local Risk Assessment
The Fork in the Road • We now can go one of two ways in how we examine the results of the DEWS for a middle school or freshman student: • Examine the “System” data; big picture, what is happening at the school, grade level, within or across student groups • Examine the “Student” data; look at the individual student, grades, truancy, class- work, and behavior
Who Should Be Involved? • Administrators • General education teachers • Special education teachers • Related service providers • Students and other stakeholders (If confidentiality can be maintained)
System Analysis • Who is this student? • Why do we think (based on data) that he/she is at risk for not graduating on time? • Is the area indicating they are at risk a long-standing or recent issue? • Was this student on our radar? • Has anyone spoken to the student or parents to get more info about risk area?
System Analysis - continued • Commonalities: • Geographical (home and building) • Environment (general vs special education services) • Who are their teachers? • Are there any commonalities between groups in where they are at risk (EBD students x discipline) • Are we catching these students outside of DEWS?
Interventions Consider Both At Systemic and Individual Level for: • Attendance • Behavior • Academics • Mobility • Early Warning System Keys
Using Interventions • Attendance • Measure attendance in informative and actionable manners. • Take measures to increase the number of students with very good attendance and decrease the number who are chronically absent. • Recognize good attendance regularly through public acknowledgement and social rewards (i.e., earning privileges). • Separate attendance from course performance. • Be and be perceived as safe and engaging places.
Early Grade Attendance and Chronic Absence • “An Attendance Works” study found that students who have good attendance across kindergarten and first grade have the highest third grade scores statistically significantly higher than any of the other groups. • Chronic absence at kindergarten and first grade may erase many of the benefits of entering kindergarten with strong readiness skills. • Students who had no attendance risks scored an average of 50 points higher on an English/Language Arts tests than students who were chronically absent in their first two years of school. http://www.attendanceworks.org/wordpress/wp-content/uploads/2010/04/ ASR-Mini-Report-Attendance-Readiness-and-Third-Grade-Outcomes-7-8-11.pdf
Interventions • Behavior • High engagement electives that provide avenues for short-term success. • Positively recognize skill levels. • Activities that honor students’ desire for adventure and camaraderie. • Recognition at both the individual and group level for positive behavior. • Teaching organizational and self-management skills.
Interventions • Academics • Accept and acknowledge the implications of course grades being more predictive of eventual success than test scores. • Create developmentally appropriate high school/college readiness indicators that are meaningful and engaging to middle students and understood by parents. • Encourage quality coursework; may require new forms of assessment. • Offer extra help right away.
Credit Flexibility – to increase academic engagement and success • An attempt to personalize learning and extend the classroom beyond the four walls of high school. • DPI has developed and released a guidance document for districts on credit flexibility models. http://cal.dpi.wi.gov/files/cal/pdf/fostering-innovation-credit-flexibility.pdf
Examples of Flexibility • Personalized learning where instructional practices are adapted to fit each student’s needs. • Competency based education through which students earn credit by demonstrating proficiency. • Learning beyond the classroom with credits earned and/or mastery demonstrated through employment, service projects, independent and team projects, online instruction, and other activities that modify traditional instructional methods. • Dual credit courses through which students access college level coursework with the possibility of earning both high school and college credits concurrently.
Interventions • Mobility • Establish a transition protocol for families moving into your district: • Explore with families the causes and potential effects of relocation. • Brainstorm ways families can minimize negative effects of relocation; or allow students to remain in current school through the transition period. • Take steps to effectively work with families experiencing trauma. • Ensure educational records for all students leaving district are accurate and forwarded in a timely manner.
Interventions • Early Warning System Keys: • Focus on effective intervention. • Not identification. • Recognize and build on student strengths. • Match resources to student needs. • Evaluate the effectiveness of interventions. • Teachers and administrators can get started with the local data available in their schools.
Why Use an Early Warning System? 3 Reasons an Early Warning System Assists Student Achievement: • Focuses conversations and efforts on actionable problems; • Identifies students for intervention; and • Uses indicator patterns to address low performance in a strategic way.