Title: Becoming a Premier Urban School District
1Becoming a Premier Urban School District
- Understanding Evaluation, Accountability
Assessment Systems
September 22, 2006 Infomart, 7th Floor
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4Becoming a Premier School District
- Know your children
- Know your teachers
- Know how your school compares
- Control for quality
- Know the rules - accountability assessment
systems
5 Know the rules
6Three Accountability Systems
- Campus performance in Dallas ISD is currently
rated under three distinct systems - Local - SEI
- State - AEIS
- Federal - AYP
7 Local Accountability System
- Dallas Accountability System, also known as SEI
is a method of evaluating campuses with regard to
absolute performance and value-added growth. - Of the 213 schools rated in 2006, there were 11
Value-Added Exemplary (5) and 53 Value-Added
Recognized (25) schools. - Almost 1M is set aside annually to provide
Outstanding School Performance Award to teachers
and staff at the winning schools.
8 State Accountability System
- State Accountability System, commonly known as
AEIS, is a method of evaluating campuses based
on set standards of performance on five subjects
in five student groups, and other indicators. -
- Of the 212 Dallas ISD schools rated in 2006,
- 13 Exemplary (6),
- 67 Recognized (32),
- 106 Academically Acceptable (50),
- 23 Academically Unacceptable (11), and
- 3 AEA Academically Acceptable (1).
- Over 7M has been granted to 78 Dallas ISD
schools to be distributed in fall of 2007.
9 Federal Accountability System
- Adequate Yearly Progress (AYP) is the
accountability component of the No Child Left
Behind Act of 2001. The US Department of
Education requires that all states rate their
public schools based on whether or not they met
adequate yearly progress in reading and math on
the state's assessment and on one additional
indicator (grad or attendance). - As of 2006, Dallas ISD has nine Stage 3, seven
Stage 2, 13 Stage 1, and three Year1 schools.
10Test Your Understanding
- The following questions are designed to increase
an awareness of the rules and procedures of the
State and Federal accountability systems.
- There are no sanctions for not getting the
correct answers.
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12Assessing Special Ed Students
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15Stage 1 Title I SIP Requirements
- Parent notification
- School choice and transportation
- Campus Improvement Plan
- Technical Assistance Provider (TAP)
- SIP funding application
16Stage 2 Title I SIP Requirements
- All requirements as in Stage 1, plus
- Supplemental Educational Services
17Stage 3 Title I SIP Requirements
- All requirements as in Stage 2, plus at least one
of the following corrective actions - Replace school staff who are relevant to the
failure to make AYP - Institute and fully implement a new curriculum
- Significantly decrease management authority at
the campus level - Appoint outside expert to advise the campus on
its progress toward making AYP based on its CIP - Extend the school year or school day for the
campus - Restructure the internal organizational structure
for the campus.
18Stage 4 Title I SIP Requirements
- All requirements as in Stage 3, plus the district
must prepare a plan and make necessary
arrangements to carry out one of the following
restructuring options - Reopen school as charter school.
- Replace principal and staff.
- Contract for private management company of
demonstrated effectiveness. - State takeover.
- Any other major restructuring of school
governance.
19- Know the rules
- Control for quality
20Common Issues Impacting Rating
- At least 17 schools missed getting higher
accountability ratings due to errors made by
adults and not student performance.
211. Partial erasures
- Common Issues
- Student responses on TAKS and SDAA answer
documents occasionally have asterisks (). This
often occurs when a child bubbles more than one
response, indicating incomplete erasures. - Twelve schools could have jumped an AEIS
rating and three schools could have made AYP had
all those erasures been correct .
- Possible Solutions
- Cleaning erasures is serious business. Campuses
need to have a plan to address incomplete
erasures in a controlled environment - Practice bubbling in formative assessments
- Important It must be noted that the student is
the only person that can clean up erasures
222. Demographic misinformation.
- Common Issues
- When answer documents are pre-slugged, errors in
demographics are minimal. It is the
hand-slugging that is causing problems. This
occurs for new students or destroyed answer
documents. - Most common
- Flipped DOB DD/MM/YYYY
- Nicknames/ Hyphenated Names
- Reversed digits in ID
- Possible Solutions
- Schools need to double check all documents before
submission. A list of student demographic
information on MyData can be used for this
purpose. - For a student to be continuously enrolled, the
school code, first name, last name and date of
birth must match on PEIMS snapshot and the date
of testing.
233. Missing expectations
- Common Issue
- On the SDAA-II, 179 tests had missing ARD
expectations. If the expectation is missing, TEA
assigns an achievement expectation of III (3).
- Possible Solution
- There is a triple check for this. The campus,
Area and Systemwide Testing check answer
documents during quality control - More hands-on training will be provided to
relevant staff prior to quality control
244. Dropouts
- Common Issue
- Every year, middle schools seem blind-sided by
the fact that they miss AEIS based on the dropout
rate. -
- Middle Schools track students into private
schools, find coding errors or even find the
students incarcerated. Unfortunately, finding
these students after PEIMS resubmission cannot be
reason for appeal.
- Possible Solution
- Start early! Verify proper coding and actively
seek to resolve the leaver issue as soon as the
school receives a list of school leavers - Seek help from other schools, Area or district
offices in tracking the leavers - Understand the new Leaver Codes
255. Improper Status Codes
- Common Issue
- When TEA looks at multiple answer documents for
AYP calculations, TAKS has the highest priority.
-
- A special education student who takes SDAA
only, but has a blank pre-coded TAKS answer
document submitted with an S scorecode, will be
considered Not Proficient.
- Possible Solution
- Know specific rules on how to void and code
answer documents. -
- Given that there is also extensive training,
this should not be happening. - Hand-coded documents should be double checked
before submission.
266. Grade Change
- Common Issue
- There are students with earned credits not
matching their grade level. - There are 10th graders who fail but earn enough
credit to become 11th graders in the middle of
10th grade. - District policy forbids changing grade level in
mid-year. Consequently, some students take 10th
grade TAKS twice, while others may never take
10th grade TAKS.
277. Lack of Participation
- Common Issue
- AYP requires 95 participation. This does not
mean just TAKS participation but all tests (TAKS
SDAA, LDAA, RPTE in reading TAKS, SDAA, LDAA,
LAT in math). - Many schools think it is 95 tested for all
students. If only 47 out of 50 in a student
group tests, they miss AYP on participation.
- Possible Solution
- Schools need an AYP checklist to make sure all
students are tested - Know the impact a few students can make in a
participation rate of a small student group
28- Know the rules
- Control for quality
- Understand your competition
29How do we compare to other urban school
districts?
- All public schools in Texas are rated on the same
set of performance standards, making it easier to
compare across districts - For a fair comparison, only the districts with
similar characteristics are considered Austin,
Dallas, Houston, EL Paso, Fort Worth, and San
Antonio
30Reading - All
31Reading Economically Disadv.
32Mathematics - All
33Math Econ. Disadvantaged
34Writing - All
35Writing Econ. Disadvantaged
36Science - All
37Science - Econ. Disadvantaged
38Social Studies - All
39Social Studies Econ. Disadv.
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46For More Information
- All documents included in this presentation are
available on EA website - http//www.dallasisd.org/eval/index.htm