Title: Lynn McCoySimandle, Ph'D'
1- Lynn McCoy-Simandle, Ph.D.
- Research Associate
- Shannon Means
- Associate Director
2Purpose of Visit
- To discuss statewide data collection efforts in
KY - To present most recent findings
- To Share Lessons Learned
3House Bill 330The most comprehensive school
safety legislation in recent Kentucky history!
Designed to address
- No single state organization for school safety
- Pre-Service training for educators
- Lack of statewide data
- Shortage of funds designated for school safety
efforts
- Lack of local needs assessments
- More expelled students more local crime
- Lack of communication between courts, law
enforcement and schools - Lack of collaboration between schools and
community
4Mission
The Center for School Safetys mission shall be
to (in collaboration with several
organizations) Serve as a focal point for
a. Data analysis b. Dissemination of
information c. Research d. Technical
assistance
5Collecting Data
- A State Partnership
- Kentucky Department of Education (KDE)
- Kentucky Center for School Safety (CSS)
- Collaborative Approach
- Composition of Center for School Safety
- Relationship with all schools
6The Collection Process
- Kentucky Department of Education
- Determines definitions via collaborative process
- Establishes protocol
- Provides training for data collection and entry
- Provides on-going technical assistance
- Receives data from 1400 schools
7Rally Around the Data
- Center for School Safety
- Receives data from KDE
- Cleans data
- Verifies data with school districts
- Analyzes data
- Produce report via a collaborative process
8From where the data came
- 179 districts
- 1407 schools
- 626,179 students
9Primary Audiences Include
- School Personnel
- Superintendents and Central Staff
- School Boards
- Site Based Decision Making Councils
- Parents
- Media
10Releasing Data(Needs to be School Sensitive)
- Establish Focus Group
- Which might include- Principals, Assistant
Principals, Superintendents, DPP, Researchers,
Director of CSS, KDE (State Department) - Establish format
- Decide when and how to release report
- Extend courtesy time to school districts
- Report delivered to Superintendents two weeks
prior to media release. - Provide school districts ample time to prepare
their response.
11Releasing Data Contd.
- Media Release
- Press conference
- Release on web site
- Caution media about making
- broad and misleading inferences
- School-to-School Comparisons
- District-to-District Comparisons
- Repeat Offenders
- Zero Tolerance Policies
- Cultural Sensitivity (FERPA)
12Using the DataHow will this Process Help My
School?
- Comparative Data
- State - Regional District
- Correlation between student achievement and
discipline data - Assessing effectiveness of instructional staff
- 90 of Referrals generated by 5 of staff
- Assessing offenses
- 90 of Reported behavioral incidents are
created by 3-4 of the students
13Conceptual Framework
1-3 of Students INTENSIVE INTERVENTION Individua
lized Attention
7-9 of Students TARGETED INTERVENTION Individual
and Small Group Strategies
90 of Students UNIVERSAL INTERVENTION School-Wide
Systems of Support
14 Schools
Report Data
Impact
District Reports
Cumulative
Implementation
State Reports
Appropriate
planning based
on the data
Center for School
Safety
Needs Assessment
Consumer
by Schools
15What the2000-2001 data reveals
16Data Collection Year 3 Ensuring Accuracy
- Receipt of Data from KDE
- Database review and cleaning
- Verification sheets mailed to Superintendents
- Draft report mailed to superintendents in
embargoed format before its release to the press
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26In Summary
- The Good News
- Less than 10 of students are offenders
- Board policy violations showed overall decline
- Most serious law violations also showed decline
- Expulsions declined
- Prevention services provided by over 80 of
schools - Number of SROs increased
27In Summary
- Questions for further consideration
- Drug abuse violations - increased use or
increased supervision? - Out-of-school suspensions - zero tolerance or
better enforcement? - School, cultural and societal influences in
overrepresentation of males and African-Americans?
28Lessons Learned
- Accuracy is the key
- (have a pilot year)
- Include a verification process
- Let the data drive your planning process
- Address all issues openly and honestly
29Lessons Learned contd.?
- Never lose site of who the consumer is
- THE SCHOOL
- Make holistic comparisons of
- Academic Trends and
- School Safety Trends
- WRAP strategies around identified Risk Factors
- Trends of School Disengagement
- Which could include
- Suspensions
- Truancy
- Drop-out
- Expulsions
- Substance Abuse
30Future Directions in KY
- Statewide MAX System
- Case by Case data collection
- (unique identifier)
- Correlation with academic progress
- Continued consumer input from schools
31Center for School Safety Eastern Kentucky
University 105 Stratton Building 521 Lancaster
Ave. Richmond, KY 40475 Toll Free
1-877-805-4277 Lynn.McCoy-Simandle_at_eku.edu Shannon
.Means_at_eku.edu