Title: Formative Evaluation of the Community Liaison Program
1Formative Evaluation of the Community Liaison
Program
- Phase One Evaluation Report
- March 17, 2005
2Overview
- For approximately ten years, SMMUSDs Community
Liaison Program has engaged parents with the
intent of building their capacity to support
their children throughout their schooling
experience. The theory of action is that through
this engagement with parents, we are
establishing the conditions that will promote and
support student achievement. - SMMUSD -- The Community Liaison Program, 9/10/02
3Why evaluate?
- The Board of Education requested an evaluation
that focused on this program and answered four
concerns - Is the program cost-effective?
- What are the strengths and weaknesses of the
current program(s)? - Does the community liaison program positively
impact student achievement? - What concrete steps can be put into place to
strengthen the program?
4Literature Review Excerpts from National PTAs
Research Summary
- When parents are involved, students achieve more,
regardless of socio-economic status,
ethnic/racial background, or parents educational
level. The more extensive the parent
involvement, the higher the student achievement. - Children from diverse cultural backgrounds tend
to do better when parents and professionals
collaborate to bridge the gap between the culture
at home and the learning institution.
5Literature Review (Continued)
- The benefits of involving parents are not
confined to the early years there are
significant gains at all ages and grade levels. - The schools practices to inform and involve
parents are stronger determinants of whether . .
. parents will be involved with their childrens
education than are parent education, family size,
marital status, and even student grade level. - The more the relationship between parents and
educators approaches a comprehensive,
well-planned partnership, the higher the student
achievement.
6Research Design
- Two-phase research design
- Phase One The Shape of the Program (Formative
Evaluation) - Collect information about the overall program
- Collect information from the community liaisons
about the way they do their work - Phase Two Impact of the Program on Stakeholders
(Summative Evaluation) - Interviews, surveys
- Analysis of data to assess what we can say about
impact on student achievement
7Research Tasks in Phase One
- Collect demographic, fiscal and other information
about the community liaison program. - Work with the community liaisons to shape the
design and creation of individual portfolios of
their site-based work.
8Overview of the Program
- 13 community liaisons serve 12 school sites and
Child Development Services. - 11 are Bilingual community liaisons.
- 2 are African American community/pathway
liaisons. - Their hours per week at different sites range
from 5 to 40. - Funding comes from several sources.
9Allocation of Community Liaison Staff to Sites in
Adams Pathway
10Allocation of Community Liaison Staff to Sites in
Lincoln Pathway and CDS
11Allocation of Community Liaison Staff to Sites in
Malibu Pathway
12Bilingual Community Liaisons
- Community liaison program began with the creation
of positions to meet state and federal
requirements to have someone on site to assist
non-English speaking parents. - Began at Title I sites.
- Focused on language issues, but also other
barriers and issues that impede full
participation of English Learner students and
their parents.
13Number and percent of Spanish-speaking students
at each site served by a bi-lingual community
liaison -- Elementary
14Number and percent of Spanish-speaking students
at each site served by a bi-lingual community
liaison Secondary
15African American Community Liaisons
- The Bilingual Community Liaisons served one
important need in our school communities. - The Minority Student Study and Intercultural
Advisory Council advocated to expand the
Bilingual Community Liaison Program and develop a
program to provide liaison support to African
American families with children attending SMMUSD
schools. - Funding from the City of Santa Monica enabled the
expansion of the Bilingual, and the creation of
the African American, community liaison positions.
16Portfolio Development and Review Process
- Standards-Based Portfolio
- Review of the Portfolio
- Thematic analysis
- Common and unique tasks
- Relationship of the portfolios as a group to the
standards
17Frameworks for Organizing the Community Liaison
Portfolio
- SMMUSD Job Description
- Parent Outreach and Engagement
- Parent Leadership Development
- Cultural Interpretation
- Increasing Student Achievement
- National Standards for Parent/Family Involvement
Programs - Communicating
- Parenting
- Student Learning
- Volunteering
- School Decision Making and Advocacy
- Collaborating with the Community
18Standard 1 Communicating
- Communication between home and school is
regular, two-way, and meaningful. - Working with parents to set up meetings, I.E.P.s,
conferences, relay community information. - Simultaneous translation of meetings
- Translation of school newsletters, forms, etc.
- Parent to parent networking.
19Standard 2 Parenting
- Parenting skills are promoted and supported.
- BAC/ELAC meetings (translation by liaison)
- Hispanic/African American Support Groups
- Parent Advocates/Mentors
- Parent Expectations Support Achievement (PESA)
and parenting lectures - Parents are aware of AP, AVID and other advanced
and learning support activities - Help parents understand parent and teacher
collaboration for student success
20Standard 3 Student Learning
- Parents play an integral role in assisting
student learning. - Helping parents understand how some learning
experiences in the U.S. might differ from
learning experiences in home country - Pinnacle training for parents
- Overviews of the SBRC
- Homework assistance training
- Tips for parents to help students with math,
reading, verbal comprehension, and oral expression
21Standard 4 Volunteering
- Parents are welcome in the school, and their
support and assistance are sought. - African American Museum during Black History
Month - Weekly parent meeting to help prepare materials
for classes - Parental assistance for field trips and school
yard supervision
22Standard 5 School Decision Making and Advocacy
- Parents are full partners in the decisions that
affect children and families. - Governance Council Meetings
- ELAC/BAC
- PTA
23Standard 6 Collaborating with the Community
- Community resources are used to strengthen
schools, families, and student learning. - Project LEAD
- Liaisons organize tutoring by members of the
community - Community referrals for health, housing,
parenting, counseling, etc. - Translation simultaneous translation and
written translation of key documents - Works with Tech4All to provide students and
families with computers
24Finding 1
- Overall, the work of the community liaisons is
addressing the six national standards for
effective parent and family involvement in
education and the five research findings cited
earlier in the literature review.
25Finding 2
- However, the community liaisons work looks quite
different at different sites and emphasizes
different components of the national standards at
the different sites.
26Finding 3
- The work that most of the liaisons emphasized the
most was serving as cultural translators. It
is the role of the liaisons to clarify the
expectations of the school system for the
families. It is also their job to clarify for
different parts of the school system the needs of
the families in part by respecting the values and
the differences that families bring to the table.
The liaisons are both community insiders and
school insiders.
27Finding 4
- Many of the community liaisons are doing
significant amounts of work that relate to
student achievement. This includes both working
with parents to help them support their
childrens academic learning, but also working
with individuals or small groups of students on
such tasks as organization, clarity of
expectations, and asking for assistance.
28Finding 5
- One area where community liaisons work seems to
differ significantly is in the ways that they are
balancing the work they do to support individual
students and families with the work they do to
help those students and families become
participating members of the school community.
Most emphasize the individual work and outreach
work that they do more than the participation in
groups that are the decision-making entities at
the school sites.
29Finding 6
- The amount of translation both simultaneous
oral translation and written translation -- that
most of the bilingual community liaisons are
doing is staggering. Many expressed concern that
this aspect of their work was overwhelming them
and interferes with their ability to complete
other, needed work with students and families. - Translation appears as a task for many of the
standards.
30Finding 7
- There appear to be inequities in the allocation
of community liaison support to individual school
sites.
31Recommendation 1
- Establish a floor for district fiscal support
for the community liaison program at an
individual site. - CDE has a guideline that when 15 of a school (or
districts population) speaks another language,
all materials should be translated into that
other language. - If 15 were the floor for district support for
the bilingual community liaison program, some
changes to the program might occur.
32Changes to Allocations of Community Liaisons
Using the 15 Floor for District Support
- Olympic (33) would have a community liaison at
least partially supported by the district. - District resources might be reallocated from four
sites (Cabrillo, Webster, Lincoln, and Malibu)
that are below the floor OR district resources
might be allocated in parallel fashion to Grant
which is below the floor as well but which
currently self-funds its program.
33Recommendation 2
- Consider allocating bi-lingual community liaisons
to sites based on the number of Spanish-speaking
students at the site. For example, there might
be a ratio of up to 175 Spanish-speaking
students to 1 community liaison. (Edison would be
an exception since the entire staff is also
bi-lingual.) - This would reconfigure the existing secondary
school bilingual community liaison staff.
34Secondary Bi-Lingual Community Liaisons Current
Allocations and with Proposed 175 Student
Allocation
35Recommendation 3
- Seek alternative ways to support translation
needs both for simultaneous translation and
translation of written documents.
36Recommendation 4
- At all sites, continue to work on both elements
of the necessary, but difficult, balance to be
struck between - Working with parents, family, and students to
build their capacity to advocate for their
children/themselves throughout their schooling. - Working to insure that school-wide venues --
committees and activities -- include the
participation of the individuals and smaller
groups with whom they work.
37Recommendation 5
- Expand the number of community liaisons and base
them in the six houses at Samohi. The focus of
student support and intervention at Samohi is
shifting to the houses and both the recent WASC
visit and the USDE independent evaluation
applauded that effort. This fundamental aspect of
student and family support should also be part of
the house structure.
38Recommendation 6
- Portfolio development should become a regular
part of the evaluation cycle of the community
liaisons. - The evaluation process should include
- Selecting 3 to 4 of the national standards as
part of individual goal-setting, - Peer review of proposed entries,
- Structured opportunities throughout the year to
reflect on their work, and - An evaluation conference with the principal and a
relevant district office administrator.
39Goals of the Portfolio Evaluation Process
- The goals of this evaluation process should be
to - target areas for growth,
- identify professional development needs, and
- recognize the extraordinary contributions of the
individual community liaisons.
40Recommendation 7
- Staff in Educational Services (including Student
and Family Support Services), administrators in
Title I schools, and community liaisons need to
attend training about the changes in expectations
for parent and community outreach included in the
No Child Left Behind Act and begin addressing new
requirements in their work.
41Recommendation 8
- The National Standards for Parent/Family
Involvement Programs from the National PTA should
be the starting point for a school wide review of
current practices at each site in SMMUSD. The
community liaisons are one piece (albeit an
important one) of our family and community
outreach and involvement. We should take stock of
how each schools entire set of programs and
practices meet these standards and use the
community liaisons portfolios and this needs
assessment to begin setting priorities as
individual sites and for the district as a whole. - Staff in Educational Services (including Student
and Family Support Services), administrators in
Title I schools, and community liaisons need to
attend training about the changes in expectations
for parent and community outreach included in the
No Child Left Behind Act and begin addressing new
requirements in their work.
42Recommendation 9
- Undertake phase two of the community liaison
evaluation. Phase two is intended to focus on
data about the program from key stakeholders
parents, students, administrators and some
exploration of data to determine what, if any,
connections to student achievement can be made.
This portion of the evaluation should be linked
to recommendation 6 (the site based needs
assessments/program reviews) based on the
National PTA standards. - Timeline 2005-2006 academic year