Title: SCHOOL IMPROVEMENT PLAN
1SCHOOL IMPROVEMENT PLAN
PRESENTATION
2SCHOOL LEADERSHIP TEAM
Dale Minge Principal
Mary Stephens Jason Saari Mary Clark Dennis
Baker Barbara Lehman Tonia Bianco Kortney Palmer
Diane Tilgner Kathy Easterling Linda Cheek Sarah
Cooper Suzanne Yanders Harriet Bright Monica Leach
Dianne Gordon Chairperson
3MISSION STATEMENT
- Pittsboro Elementary School will prepare
self-sufficient, - life-long learners by providing
- a developmentally appropriate integrated
curriculum taught by a caring and enthusiastic
staff in an environment conducive to learning for
all students.
4BASIC FACTS ABOUT PES
- School enrollment 515 (not including pre-k)
- One teacher is serving our school as a Visiting
Instructional Faculty (VIF) member - 100 of our Teacher Assistants are Highly
Qualified - We have 24 regular homerooms
- Two Exceptional Education self-contained
homerooms - One Pre-School program
- 23 staff members are certified bus drivers
5TEACHER EXPERIENCE
-
- 36.4 (up from 35) of our teachers have earned a
Masters Degree - We have 5 (up from 4) teachers with National
Board Certification - We have 2 teachers in process of earning their
NBTS - We also have 3 teachers in process of earning
their - Master Degrees
- 18 teachers have their Mentor Certification
6OUR changing school population
7Our overall school population has dipped slightly
from 527 to 515, thats still a total of 60
students (3 more classrooms) in 5 years.
8OUR STUDENT POPULATION
10.7 are Hispanic
21.6.3 (down from 23.3) are African American
59 are White
4.8 are Multi-racial (down from 6.1)
9Our AIG population has grown as well.
10Our Hispanic population surprisingly only grew
two tenths of one percent in 07-08 to 10. .
11SCHOOL IMPROVEMENT PLAN
GOALS
12GOAL AREAS
- High Student Performance
- Healthy Students In Safe, Orderly, and Caring
Schools - Quality Teachers, Administrators,
- and Staff
- Strong Family, Community, and Business Support
- Effective and Efficient Operations
13EXECUTIVE SUMMARY
- We did not meet our expected academic growth in
the NCDPI - Accountability Model
- School with no recognition
- 68.5 of students passed the
- EOGs
- 8/9 NCLB reading subgroups
- met the standards
14EXECUTIVE SUMMARY cont.
- 79.8 of our third graders were proficient in
reading on the EOG test - 82.2 of our fourth graders were proficient in
reading on the EOG test - 74.1 of our third graders were proficient in
math - 66.4 of our fourth graders were proficient in
math - Our subgroups that did not make adequate yearly
progress were economically disadvantaged in
reading and math and our African American
students in math. - Substantial increase in our first and second
grade population that qualify for our ITS Reading
Program
15Digging deeper Within the data
- Our African American students had a dramatic rise
of proficiency of 16.8 to 80.8 in reading - Our white students also went from 87.2 to 94.75
proficient in reading - 74.1 of our third graders were proficient in
math - 66.4 of our fourth graders were proficient in
math - However 84 our white students demonstrated
proficiency in math as compared with 49 of our
African American students.
16Additional Facts
- Our subgroups that did not make adequate yearly
progress were our economically disadvantaged
students in reading and math and our African
American students in math. - We have had a substantial increase in our first
and second grade population that qualify for our
ITS Reading Program