Title: Goals Are Dreams with Timelines
1Goals Are Dreams with Timelines Got Plans?
- Cinda Johnson, Ed.D. Denny Hasko, M.A.
- Center for Change in Transition Services
- Valerie Arnold, M.Ed.
- Office of the Superintendent for Public
Instruction
Special Education Administrators Workshop August
3, 2009
2Agenda
- ?What do the data say?
- ? What inferences can be made?
- ? How are data analysis, IEP development, and
secondary post-school outcomes linked? - ? What new tools are available to evaluate both
district compliance and student outcomes? -
3IDEA 2004
- (20 U.S.C. 1400(d)(1)(a))
- --to ensure that all children with disabilities
have available to them a free appropriate public
education that emphasizes special education and
related services designed to meet their unique
needs and prepare them for further education,
employment, and independent living.
4Revisions to SPP/APR Indicator Measurements
- Percent of youth with IEPs graduating from high
school with a regular diploma. (20 U.S.C. 1416
(a)(3)(A)) - Revisions Burden reduced. Data Source and
Measurement aligned with ESEA. Removed
requirement to compare to all youth. Data lag one
year.
- Percent of youth with IEPs dropping out of high
school. (20 U.S.C. 1416 (a)(3)(A)) - Revisions Burden reduced. Data Source and
Measurement aligned with ESEA. Removed
requirement to compare to all youth. Data lag one
year.
- State Performance Plan/Annual Performance
Report (SPP/APR)
5Revisions (continued)
- Indicator 13 Secondary Transition
- Percent of youth with IEPs aged 16 and above with
an IEP that includes appropriate measurable
postsecondary goals that are annually updated and
based upon an age appropriate transition
assessment, transition services, including
courses of study, that will reasonably enable the
student to meet those postsecondary goals, and
annual IEP goals related to the students
transition services needs. There also must be
evidence that the student was invited to the IEP
Team meeting where transition services are to be
discussed and evidence that, if appropriate, a
representative of any participating agency was
invited to the IEP Team meeting with the prior
consent of the parent or student who has reached
the age of majority. (20 U.S.C. 1416(a)(3)(B))
- Revisions New Indicator. Aligned with IDEA
secondary transition requirements. Describe the
method used to collect these data. - Data Collection States may need to develop new
data collection procedures. - SPP Establish new baseline, review/revise
improvement activities in the FFY 2009 submission
due 2/1/11.
6Revisions (continued)
- Indicator 14 Post-school Outcomes
- Percent of youth who are no longer in secondary
school, had IEPs in effect at the time they left
school, and were - A. Enrolled in higher education within one
year of leaving high school. - B. Enrolled in higher education or
competitively employed within one year of
leaving high school. - C. Enrolled in higher education or in some
other postsecondary education or
training program or competitively employed
or in some other employment within one
year of leaving high school.
(20 U.S.C. 1416(a)(3)(B))
- Revisions New Indicator.
- Data Collection May need to revise data
collection. - SPP Establish new baseline, targets and
review/revise improvement activities in the FFY
2009 submission due 2/1/11.
7Graduation- Indicator 1
School Year Cohort Extended Graduation Rate Special Education On-time Cohort Graduation Rate Special Education
2005-06 68 54
2006-07 69 55
2007-08 69 55
8Drop Out Indicator 2
School Year Annual Dropout Rate Special Education
2005-06 6.7
2006-07 7.0
2007-08 6.8
9Secondary Transition Indicator 13
10Postsecondary Outcomes Indicator 14
11Critical Links
Indicator 2
Indicator 13
Indicator 1
Indicator 14
12Analysis of Critical Links
- Opportunities for LEAs to examine data at the
student, building and district level - Domains of both strengths and areas of need can
be identified - Root cause analysis is possible with a team
approach to data examination
13Transition Systemic Framework
14Post-school Outcome Data and Report
- Access post-school data via Online Post-school
Survey System (www.seattleu.edu/ccts) - Examine outcomes (percentile and numbers)
- Contacted
- Engaged
- Working
- Attending postsecondary education
15Indicator 13 ChecklistTransition Components in
the IEP
- Age-appropriate transition assessment(s)
- Measurable postsecondary goals updated annually
in education/ training AND employment AND
independent living as appropriate - Transition Services
- Course of Study
- Annual IEP Goals
- Student invited to IEP Team meeting
- Agency linkages
16Quality Indicators for Secondary Transition
(QuIST)
- Program Self-Review
- 100 quality indicators for program evaluation
- Five domains of the Quality Indicators
- School-based Activities
- Work-based Activities
- System Support
- Family Involvement
- Connecting Activities
- Excel format for automatic scoring
17EXAMPLE DOMAIN INDICATORS
- School-based Activities
- Transition planning and career development (12)
- Curriculum and instruction (9)
- Graduation (3)
- Student involvement (4)
- Dropout prevention/intervention (5)
- Work-based Activities
- Internship opportunities (3)
- Job shadowing (3)
- Job readiness skill development (5)
- Integrated employment (5)
- Employment with supports (5)
18Aligning and Questioning Data
- Post-school outcomes
- Are the percentage of youth contacted
representative of the district? - Which youth are not faring as well after leaving
high school? - Indicator 13, the IEP
- Which areas are strongest?
- Where is there need for improvement?
- QuIST
- Using the evidence based practices for transition
services, where are the gaps?
19Data Analysis An Example
- Youth with emotional and behavioral disorders are
dropping out at nearly 60. - Course of study is limited for these youth and do
not contain strong services for employment goals. - The high school does not have a community based
work experience program or a working relationship
with adult agencies particularly in the area of
mental health.
20Transition Systemic Framework Pilot Project
- Selection of high performing districts in the
area of transition - One-year project September 2009 - June 2010
- Training presented through web-conferencing
- Using Post-school data
- IEP Self-review with Indicator 13 Checklist-WA
- QuIST
- Project Teams develop action plans for program
improvement in each area - Composite results developed by districts for
statewide dissemination
21SPP/APR 20 Indicators
Data Collection
Follow-Up Visits
District Profile
Washington Special Education Program Review
Process
On-site cooperative venture
LEA App Self-evaluation
System Analysis
TA/ feedback
Review, Analysis, Selection
Review, Analysis, Selection
Self-study
TA
Training TA
22Desired Result Program Improvement
- Using the previous examples improvement
activities include - Building level analysis of post-school outcome
data. - Development of a strong course of study based on
transition assessment. - Course of study included in all IEPs with
student, parent and general education involvement.
23Desired Result Program Improvement
- Increased positive post-school outcomes in rates
of graduation, employment and postsecondary
education. - Transition services designed and implemented for
all students based on evidence based practices. - IEPs developed and implemented that are
compliant, include students and families and
provide services that lead to positive
post-school outcomes.
24REFERENCES
- Brown, P., Edgar, G., Johnson, C., (1997).
Transition Guide for Washington State,
School-to-Work Quality Indicators. Revised
September 2006 December 2007, 24-30. - Grigal, M., Hart, D. TransCen, Inc., (2008).
Quality Indicators of Postsecondary Education
Services for Students with Intellectual
Disabilities. - Kohler, P. (1996). Taxonomy for Transition
Programming Linking research and practice.
Champaign Transition Research Institute,
University of Illinois. - National Alliance for Secondary Education and
Transition (NASET), (2005). National Standards
Quality Indicators Transition Toolkit for
Systems Improvement, 49-68. - National Secondary Transition Technical
Assistance Center (NSTTAC), (2008).
Cross-referencing the Taxonomy for Transition
Programming with NASET National Standards
Quality Indicators. -
25CONTACT INFORMATION
- Cinda Johnson, Ed.D. Denny Hasko, M.A.
- Seattle University
- (206) 296-6494
- cinda_at_seattleu.edu haskod_at_seattleu.edu
- Valerie Arnold, M.Ed.
- Office of the Superintendent of Public
Instruction - (360) 725-6075
- valerie.arnold_at_k12.wa.us
-