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Improving literacy/numeracy outcomes

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Title: Improving literacy/numeracy outcomes


1
Improving literacy/numeracy outcomes
  • Presenter Diana Jackson
  • Executive Director, Youth Workforce Solutions
  • dianajackson_at_youthworkforcesolutions.com
  • www.youthworkforcesolutions.com

2
Basic skills deficiency remains a challenge
  • In PY 2009, 55 of all WIA youth exiters were
    basic skills deficient
  • 70 of out of school exiters were basic skills
    deficient
  • 50 of out of school exiters who had diplomas or
    GEDs before participation were still basic skills
    deficient when they exited

3
  • In PY 09, the national target for meeting the
    literacy/numeracy measure was 28.7
  • One-fourth of states did not meet the measure

4
Overcoming the challenge 5 strategies
  • Understand the measure
  • Report accurately
  • Design programs to improve engagement and
    retention
  • Use youth-friendly assessment principles and
    practices
  • Use instructional strategies that are effective
    for at-risk youth

5
Understanding the Performance Measure
6
Literacy or Numeracy Gains
  • Of those out-of-school youth who are basic skills
    deficient
  • Number of participants who increase one
    or more
    educational functioning levels
  • Number of participants who have completed one,
    two, or three full years in the program plus the
    number of participants who exit before completing
    a full year in the program

7
Who is in the measure?
  • Youth who are
  • Out of school AND
  • Basic skills deficient

8
Who is in the measure Definitions
  • Out of school
  • School dropout or has received a diploma but is
    basic skills deficient, unemployed, or
    underemployed
  • Basic Skills Deficient
  • Reads, writes, or computes at or below 8th grade
    level OR cannot read, write, compute, or speak
    English at a level necessary to function on a job

9
Who is in the measure length of participation
  • Youth who do not post-test or who exit before
    completing a year of programming are INCLUDED
  • Youth who are participants for two or three full
    years, as measured from date of youth
    participation, are INCLUDED in the measure as
    long as they remain basic skills deficient
  • Youth who continue participation beyond three
    years are EXCLUDED the measure

10
Important to Note
  • Gains are needed in one area (literacy OR
    numeracy) to meet performance
  • Unlike ABE, WIA youth programs are not required
    to show gains in the participants lowest
    scoring category
  • Youth who remain participants for over a year are
    not included in the measure again for a full
    second year.
  • Out of school youth who are NOT basic skills
    deficient are excluded from this measure.

11
What is Successful Performance A Recap
  • Increase in one EFL level per year of
    participation

12
Report accurately
13
Reporting
  • Sometimes low performance can be attributed to
    inaccurate reporting

14
Accurate reporting is critical
  • If its not in WIASRD, it didnt happen
  • (with thanks to Bob Haas, ODJFS!)
  • Be sure to record the correct score (the scale
    score)
  • Train personnel who enter data in the system
  • In the system itself
  • In WIA youth programs

15
Timing is everything
  • If you miss testing a youth before their one,
    two, or three-year anniversary, it is a negative
    outcome, even if the youth shows a gain on the
    test
  • Use strategies like tickler files to make sure
    you dont lose out just because you missed that
    deadline!
  • But dont retest too often just to make sure you
    have a test score
  • Remember that literacy/numeracy is a real-time
    measure exit cohorts are not relevant to this
    measure

16
Design programs to increase engagement and
retention
17
Why worry about engagement?
  • Some research indicates that the level of youth
    (or student) engagement has more impact on
    educational outcomes than instructional methods

18
Understanding who you serve needs of out of
school youth
  • Many already have taken on adult roles, such as
    parent or primary wage-earner
  • An immediate, sustained income is often required
  • Lack of basic skills make immediate, steady
    employment, esp. at a living wage, unrealistic
  • Family/other responsibilities make attendance at
    school or employment training difficult
  • Multiple years of programming to prepare for work
    and life are required

19
Understanding who you serve Characteristics of
discouraged learners
  • Impatient with routine, sitting a long time, or
    learning environments with little variety
  • Practical learners
  • Externalizersdo not see a relationship between
    effort and achievement
  • Believe that results are beyond their control and
    so do not take personal responsibility for
    success or failure

20
Characteristics of Discouraged Learners
  • Basic skills deficient
  • Parents and family members often have same
    characteristics, which makes involving them
    difficult
  • Often prefer peer relationships to adults
    attempts to engage them in positive (from the
    adults perspective) social activities
  • Source At-Risk Students Reaching and Teaching
    Them by Richard Sagor and Jonas Cox
  • Low self-confidence, have deep feelings of
    helplessness
  • Avoiders
  • Distrustful of adults and adult institutions
  • Dont see a future, so planning may be irrelevant
    to them

21
  • Disconnected youth are often
  • Without hope
  • Without dreams
  • Without trust
  • Reconnection can happen through
  • youth-focused
  • recruitment, engagement, retention

22

What does it mean to be youth-focused?
  • Youth Involvement engaging youth in shaping and
    designing program offerings
  • Positive Peer Influence harnessing the influence
    of youths peers through group activities and
    lessons to encourage youth to take part in
    program offerings
  • Youth Popular Culture utilizing young peoples
    music, fashion, creativity, language and
    entrepreneurial spirit to engage them
  • Source Youth Development Research Fund, Youth
    Cultural Competence Program Manual

23
Ten Tips for Youth Friendly Programming
  • Even those these tips are not necessarily about
    teaching literacy or numeracy, they are about
    keeping at-risk youth engaged
  • If youth arent engaged, if they drop out of your
    program, it doesnt matter how great your reading
    instruction is
  • Again, how engaged youth are may have more of an
    impact on outcomes than instructional methods
    (though some instructional methods lend
    themselves to greater engagement than others)

24
Tips for Youth-Friendly Programming 1
  • Design intake procedures to be youth-friendly.
  • Provide a checklist of documentation that youth
    need to provide
  • Use intake forms that focus on strengths, not
    just deficits
  • Intersperse interesting activities with data
    gathering
  • Consider using tape recorders to record some
    information
  • Be prepared to explain the purpose of questions
    that youth might consider intrusive and explain
    who will have access to the information.
  • Honor them for being courageous enough to ask for
    help.

25
Tips for Youth-Friendly Programming 2
  • Design interpersonal support into your programs.
  • Caring adults such as case workers, counselors
    and mentors are essential for positive youth
    development.
  • Train your staff to be welcoming and
    knowledgeable including, if possible, the
    secretaries and janitors.
  • Recruit or place youth in groups or teams for
    mutual encouragement.
  • Youth mentors can provide support and model
    desirable behavior. Involve parents and families.

26
Tips for Youth-Friendly Programming 3
  • Make honesty, authenticity and respect central to
    your programs.
  • Provide what you promise and don't promise what
    you cannot provide.
  • Give youth genuine opportunities to contribute
    and lead in your organization and community.
  • Develop as a culturally competent organization
    that acknowledges and respects the values,
    beliefs, customs and traditions of the youth
    being served.

27
Tips for Youth-Friendly Programming 4
  • Meet immediate needs first
  • If a youth needs help NOW, meet that need as soon
    as possible
  • Do not wait until youve done an objective
    assessment as soon as you determine eligibility,
    you can start providing services
  • Even if it isnt an urgent need, use the initial
    assessment to identify something that would help
    the youth right away and provide it as soon as
    you can
  • Meeting an immediate need builds trust the youth
    is more likely to give you a chance because you
    said you would help them and you did

28
Tips for Youth-Friendly Programming 5
  • Help them envision a future
  • Many older, out-of-school youth dont see a
    future for themselves
  • Help them see where they can go, beginning with
    where they are
  • Break up the big picture into small, manageable
    steps
  • Point out positive role modelsadults who have
    overcome similar difficulties

29
Tips for Youth-Friendly Programming 6
  • Make planning a partnership
  • Never develop a plan FOR a youth, only WITH a
    youth
  • Dont force goals onto a youth
  • Encourage basic skills deficient youth to set a
    reachable skill achievement goal
  • Talk about options and let the youth make the
    choice about what program or service is right for
    them

30
Tips for Youth-Friendly Programming 7
  • Focus on assets
  • Every youth has gifts, talents, and assets
  • When planning (e.g. developing an ISS), start
    with the youths strengths and build on those
    instead of starting with problems and barriers

31
Tips for Youth-Friendly Programming 8
  • Dont set youth up for failure
  • Dont enroll drop-outs in any program that looks
    like a traditional school (e.g. large group
    instruction without personalization, inflexible
    scheduling, etc.)
  • Dont insist that a youth get a diploma or G.E.D.
    before providing them with work experience
  • Dont enroll basic skills deficient youth in
    G.E.D. preparation without remediation
  • Dont use a one-size-fits-all approach by placing
    youth in your out of school program whether or
    not it meets their needs

32
Tips for Youth-Friendly Programming 9
  • Programming must be interesting and relevant
  • Out of school youth are not typically engaged by
  • Abstract, theoretical instruction
  • Passive learning activities like lecture
  • Activities that are disconnected from their
    experiences or needs
  • Out of school youth are typically more engaged by
  • Active, hands-on learning activities
  • Academic instruction that is presented in an
    authentic, relevant context

33
Tips for Youth-Friendly Programming 10
  • Value and respect all youth
  • Teach tolerance, value diversity
  • Race, ethnicity, culture, religion (or lack of
    it), sexual orientation, gender identity
  • Have policies and procedures in place that assure
    all youth are protected from all forms of
    violence, including bullying and harassment

34
Use youth-friendly assessment principles and
practices
35
Assessments for Literacy/Numeracy
  • Must be crosswalked to National Reporting System
    educational functioning levels
  • Either ABE or ESL
  • Each ABE or ESL level describes skills in areas
    of reading, writing, numeracy, speaking,
    listening, functional, and workplace skills.
  • See TEGL 17-05 Change 1, Attachment A for EFL
    descriptors

36
Assessments for Literacy/Numeracy
  • Assessments must be standardized (has standard
    administration and scoring procedures)
  • Must use the same instrument for pre- and
    post-test
  • Youth with disabilities should be tested with
    appropriate accommodations.
  • Participants should continue to receive
    remediation until they are no longer basic skills
    deficient. They will not count in the measure
    again until they have received a second full year
    of programming.

37
Assessments Crosswalked to EFLs
  • Currently acceptable list for literacy/numeracy
    testing
  • TABE
  • CASAS
  • GAIN
  • MAPT
  • Work Keys (High Intermediate Basic Education and
    above)

38
Principles of Effective Assessment
  • When done well, assessment is an important tool
    in
  • Uncovering a young persons strengths and
    interests
  • Identifying possible problems and challenges
  • Placing youth at appropriate instruction levels
  • Evaluating program effectiveness.
  • When done poorly, assessment can have a negative
    impact on individual youth and program success.

39
Principles of Effective Assessment
  • Make sure assessment processes are
    youth-friendly.
  • A 3-hour assessment should not be the first thing
    that happens when a young person walks in the
    door looking for help.
  • Meeting an immediate need first helps create
    trust and buy-in from the youth.
  • Consider using reading or math subtests only if
    valid.
  • Make testing surroundings as pleasant as
    possible. Provide water or soft drinks. Allow
    youth to use iPODs (as long as other test-takers
    arent disturbed).

40
Principles of Effective Assessment
  • Tell youth why they are being assessed and how
    the results will be used.
  • Dont use the word test.
  • Be sure they know they cannot fail.

41
Use instructional strategies that are effective
for at-risk youth
42
Youths Academic Needs
  • To understand the teachers goals
  • To be actively involved in the learning process
  • To relate subject matter to their own lives
  • To follow their own interests
  • To receive realistic and immediate feedback
  • To experience success
  • To experience an appropriate amount of structure
  • To have time to integrate learning
  • To have positive contact with peers
  • To have instruction matched to their level of
    cognitive development and learning style
  • Jones and Jones, Comprehensive Classroom
    Management

43
Meeting youths academic needs
  • If these needs are not met, or if the youth
    perceives they are not being met, youth may act
    out or simply stop coming

44
Contextual Learning
  • Uses R.E.A.C.T. principle
  • Relating linking the concept to be learned with
    something the youth already knows
  • Experiencing hands-on learning and teacher
    explanation allow discovery of knowledge
  • Applying Applying knowledge in the real world
  • Collaborating Team approach to solving problems
  • Transferring students take what theyve learned
    and apply it in new situations

45
In summary
  • Improving literacy and numeracy scores can happen
    when
  • Staff, youth, and other stakeholders understand
    the measure and what is expected of them
  • Staff are fully trained so that reporting is
    accurate and timely
  • Programs are designed to engage and retain
    hard-to-serve youth
  • Instructional methods meet youths academic needs
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