Title: Closing the Achievement Gap by Ensuring Equity
1Closing the Achievement Gap byEnsuring Equity
Teacher Quality
Principal Quality
School Board
District Office
Title II Leadership Ron Taylor, Administrator
2Housekeeping
- Phones are in presentation mode
- Questions are welcomed submit them
- online in the text-chat area (lower-left) or
- on the phone only, email your questions contacts
listed on Slide 38 - For technical support during the event, text-chat
klarsen - The event is being recorded and will be available
afterwards at http//www.cacompcenter.org/title2
3Equity
One of the fundamental principles of the No Child
Left Behind (NCLB) Act of 2001 is that teacher
quality is the single most important
school-related factor in student success.
Therefore, a crucial step in closing the
achievement gap for all students is to ensure
access to fully credentialed teachers.
In order to truly meet the needs of all students,
we must take the additional step of guaranteeing
that every child has the same opportunity to be
taught by fully credentialed, highly qualified,
and experienced teachers, regardless of which
school in a district a child attends.
4Equity
As required by the No Child Left Behind Act of
2001 (Title I, Part A, Subpart 1, Section
1111b8C), the Local Educational Agency
(LEA) must ensure that poor and minority children
are not taught at higher rates than other
children, by inexperienced, under-qualified, or
out-of-field teachers.
5The Quality of the Teacher Matters
Good teachers are costly, but bad teachers cost
more.Â
Bob Talbert
6The Quality of the Teacher Matters
- An important first step in closing the
achievement gap for all children is determining
teacher quality on the basis of effectiveness in
the classroom, rather than simply on the basis of
qualifications for entry into the teaching
profession.
7The Quality of the Teacher Matters
- An effective teacher is an individual who knows
both their subject matter and has the
instructional skills to deliver that content
powerfully and well. Research, as well as common
sense, suggests that an effective teacher is
critical in the academic development of students.
8Percent of Under-Prepared and Novice Teachers by
API Achievement Quartile, 2005-06
The Quality of the Teacher Matters
Low-performing schools have a disproportionate
number of under-prepared and novice teachers. In
addition, the subject areas with the most
out-of-field teaching assignments are frequently
core subject areas, such as mathematics and
science, which already have large percentages of
under-prepared teachers.
9Distribution of Interns by Poverty Decile Data
drawn from on-going 10 year study of Californias
teacher workforce for the Future of Teaching and
Learning
Percent of interns in the state
10Distribution of Interns by School-level API
Deciles Data drawn from on-going 10 year study of
Californias teacher workforce for the Future of
Teaching and Learning
Percent of interns in the state
11The Quality of the Principal Matters
"Anyone can steer the ship when the sea is calm."
-- Publilius Syrus
12The Quality of the Principal Matters
As is the case for teachers, administrators must
be able to demonstrate their effectiveness by
showing results in student achievement at their
schools. Current public policy holds schools, not
individual classroom teachers, accountable.
13The Quality of the Principal Matters
The next best thing to having a highly qualified
teacher in the classroom, is having a highly
effective principal at the helm of the school. We
know that principal quality is a major factor in
school achievement and in a schools ability to
attract and retain effective teachers. To this
end, researchers and stakeholders are now
focusing on how to measure and reward good
principals.
14The Quality of the Principal Matters
Research shows that leadership matters in
improving student achievement. In fact, among
school-related factors over which policy makers
have some control, effective leadership practices
rank second only to the quality of teaching in
influencing student learning (Leithwood, Louis,
Anderson Wahlstrom, 2004). Quality leadership
is particularly important in urban schools
serving high-poverty students (Scheerens
Bosker, 1997).
15The Quality of the Principal Matters
School improvement research shows that leadership
practices directly and indirectly influence
organizational culture and conditions.
Researchers found that having a student-centered
learning climate and ambitious instruction were
critical to improved achievement (Sebring,
Allensworth, Bryk, Easton, Luppescu, 2006).
16The Quality of the Principal Matters
Similarly, a stress on academic achievement from
both students and teachers, resource support, and
principal effectiveness, highly correlated with a
schools math and reading achievement scores
(Sweetland and Hoy, 2000). Both studies found
teachers professional capacity, their
empowerment to make curriculum and instruction
decisions, and their view of the school as a
professional community, to be both critical and
under the influence of the principal.
17The Quality of the Principal Matters
- California will not solve staffing inequities by
simply hiring more teachers or by moving current
teachers from one school to another. Teachers are
not troops recruited and deployed rather, they
are professionals who respond to opportunities
for employment within local labor markets.
18The Quality of the District Matters
You can't build a reputation on what you're going
to do.
-- Henry Ford
19The Quality of the District Matters
- The goal must be to improve so-called
hard-to-staff schools by making all schools,
including high-poverty and low-performing
schools, the kinds of places where our most
effective teachers and administrators will want
to work. - Additionally, districts must develop policies,
practices and procedures to ensure that
under-qualified, inexperienced and out-of-field
teachers are not assigned to teach at these
schools.
20The Quality of the District Matters
- Nowhere is retention more important than in the
school system. For example, a school system with
roughly 10,000 teachers and an estimated turnover
rate of 20, would stand to save approximately
500,000.00 per year by reducing turnover by just
one percentage point. Not only would reduced
turnover provide monetary savings, more
importantly, it would provide savings in our
children's educational future. A motivated and
experienced team of teaching professionals
directly correlates with an improved educational
system.
21Closing the Achievement Gap Using Equity
- LEAs must identify the underlying reasons that
poor and minority children are being taught at
higher rates than other children, by
inexperienced, under-qualified, and out-of-field
teachers. In order to close the achievement gap
they must develop practices, polices and
procedures to ensure that low-performing schools
serving a disproportionate number of poor and
minority students are recruiting, developing, and
retaining highly-qualified teachers and
principals.
22Closing the Achievement GapUsing Equity
The primary component of the Compliance
Monitoring, Interventions, and Sanctions (CMIS)
program is the development of an Equitable
Distribution Plan (EDP). The focus of the EDP is
the review, development, and implementation of
strategies to recruit, retain, and improve the
effectiveness of highly-qualified teachers and
administrators.
23Closing the Achievement GapUsing Equity
Additionally, the LEA will identify local
policies, practices, and procedures that aid or
hinder compliance with the NCLB teacher quality
requirements, and align their human and fiscal
resources with the objectives of the EDP.
Enclosed with the notification letter were the
requirements detailing specific steps needed to
complete the EDP.
24Level A
Closing the Achievement GapUsing Equity
- Failed HQT Met Adequate Yearly Progress (AYP)
- LEA is responsible for completing the Teacher
Experience Worksheets (TEW) - Table A.1 for each
site that failed to achieve 100 percent highly
qualified teacher (HQT) compliance.
- Include ALL teachers of NCLB core academic
subjects at the site - The LEA must be able to demonstrate that each
non-compliant teacher will meet NCLB requirements
by the end of the current school year or are
working on VPSS
25- Equitable Distribution - Overview
Goal 100 highly-qualified teachers
Requirement 1
Benchmark Action plan for all non-compliant
teachers
Goal No under-qualified (less than
fully-credentialed) teachers at high-poverty or
low-performing schools
Benchmark Board policy
Requirement 2
EDP Requirements and Benchmarks
Goal Interns must be equitably distributed among
all sites
Benchmark Board policy
Goal Equitable distribution of experienced and
effective teachers
Requirement 3
Benchmark Teacher retention data, analysis, and
improvement plan
Goal Equitable distribution of experienced and
effective administrators
Requirement 4
Benchmark Criteria and plan for determining and
developing effective site administrators
26Closing the Achievement GapUsing Equity
- Level B
- Failed HQT and AYP for two consecutive years
Qualifications for placement into Level B are
based on HQT 2007/08 CBEDS-PAIF
submissions AYP Academic Accountability Team
aau_at_cde.ca.gov 916-319-0863
- The LEA is responsible for the development of an
EDP and will - Collect data as required
- Develop an improvement plan to be submitted by
June 15, 2009
27Closing the Achievement Gap Using Equity
- The NCLB HQT Revised State Plan requires LEAs to
ensure that poor and minority children are not
taught by inexperienced, under-qualified, or
out-of-field teachers at higher rates than are
other children in the district.
28Closing the Achievement GapUsing Equity
- Requirement 1 NCLB requires that all public
school teachers of NCLB core academic subjects be
highly qualified. To be a Highly Qualified
Teacher (HQT), and thus NCLB compliant, a teacher
must 1) have a Bachelors Degree (in any area)
2) hold a current, valid appropriate credential
as determined by the California Commission on
Teacher Credentialing and 3) demonstrate subject
matter competency.
29Closing the Achievement GapUsing Equity
- Requirement 2 To ensure that poor,
underperforming students have access to
experienced, effective teachers, LEAs may not
assign Provisional Intern Permits (PIP) or Short
Term Staff Permit (STSP) to schools with 40
percent or higher poverty enrollment, or schools
that have a statewide decile rank of one to
three.
30Closing the Achievement GapUsing Equity
- Requirement 2 continued Additionally, LEAs must
ensure that interns are not placed in high
poverty, low performing schools in greater
numbers than in schools with low poverty or
higher academic achievement.
31Closing the Achievement GapUsing Equity
- Requirement 3 The Revised State Plan for NCLB
HQT requires LEAs to ensure that poor and
minority children are not taught by
inexperienced, under-qualified, or out-of-field
teachers at higher rates than other children in
the district.
32Closing the Achievement GapUsing Equity
- Requirement 3 continued To ensure poor
underperforming students have access to
experienced effective teachers, LEAs must
demonstrate an ability to retain experienced and
effective teachers in all schools. -
33Closing the Achievement GapUsing Equity
- Requirement 4 The NCLB HQT Revised State Plan
requires LEAs to ensure that poor and minority
children are not assigned to school sites with
inexperienced or under-qualified site
administrators in higher rates than low poverty,
high performing sites.
34Closing the Achievement GapUsing Equity
- Level C
- Failed AYP and HQT for three consecutive years
- Section 2141 (c) State educational agency shall
enter into an agreement with such local
educational agency on the use of that agency's
funds under this part
- The LEA is responsible for full implementation
of approved EDP plan, and the development of
Title II, Part A expenditure budget - Budget must be developed in an agreement with the
CDE
35Closing the Achievement GapUsing Equity
- Approved EDP Plan
- Most districts developed the EDP during the
2007-08 school year - Districts without an approved EDP must also
develop the plan using requirements outlined in
Level B - Budget Agreement
- Target use of Title II, Part A funds on why LEA
failed to meet AYP and HQT
36(No Transcript)
37Title II, Part A, Improving Teacher and Principal
Quality, 2141 Budget Instruction Page
- Professional Development
- Professional Development for teachers Including
but not limited to activities that develop and or
enhance content knowledge subject specific
instructional strategies class management
examination of student achievement data - Administrators Including but not limited to
development, articulation, implementation of
school community, school culture, instructional
programs, proper management of the organization,
- its operations, and its resources for a safe,
efficient, and effective learning environment
effective hiring practices effectiveness of
contract language
- Subject Matter Project activities and similar
content development activities. Does not include
activities such as SB 472, CLAD/EL training and
other pedagogical trainings
38- Exams and Test Prep
- Exam fees/ reimbursement
- Test preparation training and/or materials
Including but not limited development and or
purchase of training materials directly related
to preparing for taking any exam directly related
to acquiring Highly Qualified status purchasing
of reading material directly related to the
preparation for taking any exam directly related
to acquiring Highly Qualified status.
39- Recruitment, Training and Retaining
- Recruitment Activities Including but not limited
to payment for travel directly related to
recruitment advertizing material/ radio air
time directly related to recruitment - Hiring Incentive, relocation allotment Including
but not limited to directly paying a monetary
amount for accepting certain position paying
directly/reimbursement of relocation expenses
directly related to accepting a position
board-authorized incentive for hard-to-staff
school sites
- National Board Certification and/or stipend
Including but not limited to direct payment or
reimbursement of training and material related to
obtaining National Board Certification in
assigned area payment of stipend related to
holding National Board Certification in assigned
area - VPSS Including but not limited to direct payment
or reimbursement of VPSS training directly
related to obtaining HQT status - Course Work Including and not limited to
directly paying or reimbursement of
university/college course work directly related
to obtaining subject matter competency, clearing
a credential, if said credential is directly
related to acquiring Highly Qualified status
40- Class Size Reduction Typically Title II, Part A
funds may be used for Class Size Reduction (CSR)
however, districts placed in CMIS Level C have
failed to meet AYP and HQT, therefore will need
to provide evidence that CSR will positively
impacted student achievement and improve
retention of highly qualified teachers. - Expansion of current (2008-09) CSR program is not
allowed under this agreement
41Closing the Achievement GapUsing Equity
- Budget development will be done
- using Budget Template
- Due June 15, 2009
- Beginning in January 2010 budget will be
submitted using the Consolidated Application
(ConApp) Part II, page 34 - Due January 30th
- Expenditure reports will be done
- using Budget Template
- Due June 30th
42Closing the Achievement GapUsing Equity
- Level B EDP Plans and Level C Budget (and EDP if
required) Due June 15, 2009 - Send To California Department of Education
- Attention Kelly Heffington
- 1430 N Street, Suite 4309
- Sacramento, CA 95814
- CDE will sign agreement and notify districts of
approval - Submission questions should be addressed to
Kelly Heffington at Kheffington_at_cde.ca.gov
916-324-5689
43Closing the Achievement GapContacts
- Lynda Nichols, Consultant
- 916-323-5822 lnichols_at_cde.ca.gov
- ConApp Questions
- Jackie Rose, Analyst
- 916-322-9503 jrose_at_cde.ca.gov
44Closing the Achievement GapContacts
- Thank you!
- Please visit the CA CC Title II Web page for
resources and future Webinar announcements at - http//www.cacompcenter.org/title2