Title: 20062007 RUSD
1One communitydiverse, challenged, prepared
2006-2007 RUSD STUDENT ACHIEVEMENT REPORT
2OVERVIEW OF PRESENTATION
- State and Federal Accountability
- District Program Improvement Status
- Instructional Services Strategic Actions
-
3State Federal Accountability
- Academic Performance Index (API)
- Adequate Yearly Progress (AYP)
-
4What is the difference between AYP and API?
A 1000
AYP The top two rungs of the ladder only.
API Points for traveling up the ladder All
rungs of the ladder.
P 875
B 700
BB 500
FBB 200
5API is a growth model
A 1000
1.25 API points
P 875
1.75 API points
B 700
Every one percent of students moving from BB to B
contributes 2 API points
BB 500
Every one percent of students moving from FBB to
BB contributes 3 API points
FBB 200
6Met API Targets
- 14 Elementary Schools
- - Bryant - Jefferson
- - Franklin - Lake Mathews
- - Hawthorne - Longfellow
- - Highgrove - Magnolia
- - Highland - Pachappa
- - Hyatt - Taft
- - Kennedy - Victoria
-
7Met API Targets
- 2 Middle Schools
- Central
- Earhart
- 1 Alternative School
- Raincross
8API Components-Elementary
9API Components-Middle School
10API Components-High School
11API Points Per 1 Moved Up
- API
- Weights Pts
- Advanced 1000 1.25
- Proficient 875 1.75
- Basic 700 2.00
- Below Basic 500 3.00
- Far Below Basic 200
12RUSD Average API
767
(State769)
728
707
(State729)
(State643)
13Met All AYP Criteria-Elementary (Total of 21)
- Adams - Lake Mathews - Alcott - Liberty -
Bryant - Madison - Emerson - Magnolia -
Franklin - Monroe - Grant - Pachappa -
Harrison - Rivera - Highgrove - Twain -
Hyatt - Washington - Jackson - Woodcrest -
Kennedy
14Met All AYP Criteria-Secondary (Total of 7)
- Earhart - Arlington - King -
North - Poly - Lincoln - Raincross
15Adequate Yearly Progress (AYP)
- Criteria That Must be Met for LA Math
- Participation Rate (overall and for each
numerically significant subgroup for ELA Math) - Achievement Targets (overall and for each
numerically significant subgroup for ELA Math)
16Adequate Yearly Progress (AYP)
- Additional Criteria That Must be Met
- API (over 590 or 1 point growth)
- Graduation Rate (high schools only)
17(No Transcript)
18Adequate Yearly ProgressTargets for Grades 2-8
19Adequate Yearly ProgressTargets for High Schools
20Adequate Yearly ProgressTargets for Grades 2-8
21Adequate Yearly ProgressTargets for High Schools
22Adequate Yearly Progress (AYP)
- Average Schoolwide Percent Proficient
- LA Math
- Elementary Schools 44 54
- Target (24.4) (26.5)
- Middle Schools 42 37
- Target (24.4) (26.5)
- High Schools 52 49
- Target (22.3) (20.9)
23Adequate Yearly Progress (AYP)
- Percent of Criteria Met
-
- Elementary Schools 98 (571/580)
- Middle Schools 90 (129/144)
- High Schools 99 (99/100)
24What are the RUSD AYP targets for No Child Left
Behind?
- RUSD has 46 targets including
- participation rates, district Academic
Performance Index (API), graduation rate,
proficient in ELA and math.
25What are the RUSD goals for No Child Left Behind?
- 2007 District Goals
- Participation 95
- District API 590
- Graduation 82.9
- Reading 23.0
- Mathematics 23.7
26Did we meet our No Child Left Behind Goals?
- We met 44 of the 46 goals,
- exceeding some by as much
- as 100.
- We missed one goal by 8 percentage points and one
by 0.6 percentage points.
27What goals did we miss?
28What goals did we miss?
In math, if SWD is only missed target, 20 points
are added
29What is the impact of missing two goals?
- In 2005-06, we missed 2 of the 46 goals.
- In 2006-07, we missed 2 goals
- Missing goals in language arts for two
consecutive years has placed us in the category
called Local Education Agency Program Improvement
(LEA PI) Year 1
30Many districts in the county and state are
currently in LEA PI.
- 25 districts are listed in Riverside County
- 16 are currently in program improvement
31How does Riverside Unified compare to other
districts?
- 1 is at risk of program improvement
- 8 are neither program improvement nor at risk
PI Risk Beaumont Not PI or at risk Corona Desert
Center (1 school) Menifee (elementary
only) Murietta
Nuview Temecula RCOE (alternative programs and 1
charter) CSDR (not Title 1)
32What actions does LEA PI require?
- Notify all parents in the district of program
improvement status by October 1, 2007 - Have outside experts assist us
- Complete state mandated Academic Program Survey
(APS) at school sites
33What actions does LEA PI require?
- Convene District Teams including parents and
community members to - Analyze school surveys
- Complete state mandated District Assistance
Survey (DAS) - Complete English Learner Self Study Assessment
(ELSSA)
34What actions does LEA PI require?
- Convene District Teams to
- Complete Least Restrictive Environment Assessment
(LRE) - Find district priorities
- Revise district plan to align with these
priorities - Secure board approval of the revised plan and
submit to state department by January 1, 2008
35How do these results influence our work?
- Each and every child deserves a guaranteed and
viable curriculum
36A guaranteed and viable curriculum
- a childs opportunity to learn cannot be
determined by the philosophy of school they
attend, - the teacher they happen to have,
- the use of non-adopted materials,
- the neighborhood they live in,
- the language they speak,
- the color of their skin, or learning
challenges they may have
37A guaranteed and viable curriculum includes
- standards-based materials, instruction, and
assessments that are district approved and
research-based - common, high expectations
- adequate time to learn
- differentiated instruction
- a qualified teacher and administrator
38- Our strategic actions to guarantee a viable
curriculum
39Strategic Actions
- Continued commitment to Professional Learning
Communities - Full implementation of Houghton Mifflin, Holt,
and Language! - Reconfigured non-severely handicapped Special Day
Classes
40Strategic Actions
- Renewed focus on English Language Development
(ELD) and Specially Designed Academic Instruction
in English (SDAIE) strategies - Content Area Coaching
41Strategic Actions
- Use of district provided pacing
- Instructional Monitoring
- Classroom Walk Throughs
- Focused, formative analyses of district benchmark
assessments
42Why the assessments?
- Formative
- Identify students who have not yet mastered the
taught curriculum - Identify areas of strength and areas of
improvement in the instructional program
43District Benchmark Assessments-Validity and
Reliability Coefficients
- High School Science
- Validity .67 - .79
- Reliability .89 - .93
- High School Language Arts
- Validity .73 - .77
- Reliability .85 - .93
44District Benchmark Assessments-Validity and
Reliability Coefficients
- Middle School Science
- Validity .67 - .79
- Reliability .88 - .89
- Middle School Language Arts
- Validity .74 - .78
- Reliability .82 - .85
45District Benchmark Assessments-Validity and
Reliability Coefficients
- Middle School Social Science
- Validity TBD
- Reliability .88-.89
- High School Social Science
- Validity TBD
- Reliability .89
46District Benchmark Assessments-Validity and
Reliability Coefficients
- Middle School Mathematics
- Validity TBD
- Reliability .72 - .83
- High School Mathematics
- Validity TBD
- Reliability .76 - .89
47District Benchmark Assessments-Validity and
Reliability Coefficients
- Elementary School Mathematics
- Validity .71 - .77
- Reliability .84 - .89
48Q A
- Will we close the knowing-doing gap by
taking purposeful action because, at long last,
we acknowledge that to know and not to do is
really not to know? - Covey