Title: Closing the Achievement Gap
1San José Unified School District
- Closing the Achievement Gap
- Linda Murray, Superintendent in Residence
- Education Trust-West
2Successes Challenges
3(No Transcript)
4(No Transcript)
5SJUSD Academic Performance Index 1999-2003
Gap Reduced by 23
6 of SJUSD Graduates who Satisfy UC/CSU
Requirements
Increased requirements
7Mean GPA for All SJUSD Graduating Seniors
1998-2004
8Graduation Rate Based on NCES Definition
1999-2004
Increased requirements
9 Graduates Satisfying UCCSU Requirements in
2002-2003 Comparable Urban Districts in Northern
California Highest Performing Urban District
from Southern California
64
10 Hispanic Graduates Satisfying UCCSU
Requirements in 2002-2003 Comparable Urban
Districts in Northern California Highest
Performing Urban District from Southern California
45
11SJUSD SAT9 CAT6 Matched Mathematics Scores at
Grades 3-9 for Students who Have Been Tested
with STAR Every Year Since 1998
Gap reduced by 43
CAT6 scores adjusted to SAT9 scale
12SJUSD SAT9 CAT6 Matched Reading Scores at
Grades 3-9 for Students who Have Been Tested
with STAR Every Year Since 1998
Gap reduced by 55
CAT6 scores adjusted to SAT9 scale
13SJUSD SAT9 CAT6 Matched Mathematics Scores at
Grades 4-9 for Students who Have Been Tested
with STAR Every Year Since 1998
Gap reduced by 24
Median National Percentile
14SJUSD SAT9 CAT6 Matched Reading Scores at
Grades 4-9 for Students who Have Been Tested
with STAR Every Year Since 1998
Gap reduced by 48
Median National Percentile
15SJUSD Median National Percentile Score for All
Students
16Seniors Who Have Taken at Least One Semester of
an Advanced Placement Course
17Average Number of Semesters in Advanced Placement
that have been taken by Seniors who have taken at
Least One Advanced Placement Course
18Hispanic Enrollment in Chemistry or Physics
19Hispanic Enrollment in all A to G Courses
20Pass Rate in A to G Courses for Hispanic Students
21Early Work in SJUSD
- Equity 2000
- Consent Decree
- Stanford Accelerated Schools
- Committee of 100
- Development of Life Long Learning Standards
- Development of Strategic Plan
221996-The Beginning of the Journey
- 1996 Danforth Foundation grant to support a
public engagement model - Public Agenda, KSA Communications, and the
Institute for Educational Leadership - Model included Focus Groups, Communications
Audit, and Community Conversations
23Setting the Stage for Focus Group Work in SJUSD
- Public Agenda facilitated focus groups
- 7 targeted school/community focus groups
- Interview guided discussions on student
achievement, diversity, and community involvement
24SJUSDs Community Conversations
- A structured 2 hour school community dialogue
involving 15 -20 key stakeholders - yearly
involvement of 600 people - An opening plenary sets the stage for the
conversation (why we are here) - Facilitated breakouts in school groups guide the
Conversation around the main topic (Standards,
Bullying, Caring School Climate, Community
Involvement, College Going Culture) - Feedback process that synthesizes data for action
planning
25Structural/Programmatic Changes
- Master Schedule
- Block scheduling
- Shadow Classes
- Seventh Period/Zero Period
- T-Periods
26Structural/Programmatic Changes
- Coring
- Open Enrollment in A.P.
- Extended Day/Week/Year
- AVID
- Detracking/Mixed Ability Grouping in Grades 4-9
- Desegregated Classes in Grades 10 -12
27District Support
- PSAT/A.P. Potential
- Springboard
- Parent Outreach
- Credit by Exam for Middle School
- Standards Based Teacher Evaluation System
- Aligned Administrator Evaluation System
28District Support
- Data Reports
- One-on-Ones
- D F Reports
- Star and CAHSEE Data
- A.P./PSAT/SAT/ACT
- EAS-e/ Data Warehousing
- Edusoft
29Safety Net Programs
- Tutoring
- Mentoring
- After School Programs
- Cognitive Tutor/Nova Net
- Summer Bridges
- Alternative Education Programs
- Saturday Academies
- Summer Institutes
- Summer School
- Community Colleges
- Community Partnerships
- Business Investments
30Professional Development
- Differentiating Instruction
- Research-based Methods
- Subject Matter Training
- Coaching
- Clinical Model
- Teacher Expectations
- Cultural Competence
31SJUSD Success Voices of Students
- Having to do A-G requirements to graduate, it
makes you think I have gone this far, why not
just go to college. - In the case of other high schools that dont
have that, kids might not take the classes they
are supposed to. When they find out all about
college and want to go, they have to take all
these other courses that they didnt take in the
past years because they didnt know about the A-G
requirements. - -- Lorena Loera, Senior San Jose High School
32SJUSD Success Voices of Students
- Teachers sort of expect all incoming
freshman will be ready to go to college. If
A-G requirements werent applied, some people
would take an easier route. It was that
persistence that I had to keep doing well and
the bar being raised so high that made me realize
that I was college material. - -- Cesar Lopez, Senior Lincoln High School
33SJUSD Success Voices of Students
- Hearing someone tell you that you can do it, it
makes you think She thinks I can do it, I must
be able to do it. Most adults at San Jose High
School stress higher education they push you to
be better and to aim higher because they know you
can do it. - -- Jose Santa Cruz, Senior San Jose High
School