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Springs Academy

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Title: Springs Academy


1
Springs Academy
  • Meeting the Needs of At-Risk Students in the
    Iredell-Statesville Schools

2
The Challenge
  • H.G. Wells Our challenge is not to educate the
    children we used to have or want to have, but to
    educate the children who come to the schoolhouse
    door.

3
Characteristics of EffectiveAlternative Schools
  • The work of Guerin and Denti (1999) suggest that
    successful alternative programs need to have the
    following characteristics curricula that is
    responsive to the needs of the students,
    assessment, teaching of social skills, social
    responsibility, low student teacher ratio,
    emotional support/coping skills, focus on
    behavioral management, and restorative justice.
  • Cox and Davidson (1995) contend that programs
    that target specific populations seem to have
    more of a positive impact with students.
  • The alternative programs offered by
    Iredell-Statesville Schools seek to embody the
    above characteristics and seek to place students
    into the program most appropriate for their
    individualized needs.

4
Description of Schools/Departments Involved
  • Iredell Statesville Schools consists of 20
    Elementary Schools, 7 Middle Schools, 5 High
    Schools, and 3 Alternative Learning Schools.
    www.iss.k12.nc.us Click the Visit our Schools
    Link
  • Iredell-Statesville Schools serves over 21,000
    students from various ethnic and socio-economic
    backgrounds.
  • ISS EC Department heavily involved in ensuring
    that there isnt a disproportionate percentage of
    EC students placed in alternative settings unless
    they are the least restrictive environments for
    the individual child. They prefer to serve the
    EC students in the home school setting using
    resources/classrooms their department provides.
    This department also assists in providing
    transportation for students attending Monticello
    School and Springs Academy.
  • Administration from ISS Middle and High Schools
    representatives from these schools participate in
    the referral and transition process of their
    students to and from alternative settings.

5
How Do We Educate District Employees?
  • Training During the summer months, the
    principals of Monticello School and Springs
    Academy present to Central Office Cabinet,
    Principals, Assistant Principals, and Guidance
    Counselors regarding the various alternative
    programs the school district offers. The
    emphasis of this training is to emphasize the
    relationship between the home school and the
    alternative school to place these kids in
    appropriate programs and assist them in being
    able to find that same success in their home
    school setting.
  • The training will also focus on the 3 areas
    Attendance, Academic Performance, and Behaviors.
  • The timeline for placement after the referral
    committee meetings will also be distributed so
    home schools will know the length of time
    required for the intake process to the various
    alternative programs (See Handout Springs
    Academy Intake Processes).

6
When Does the Referral Committee Meet?
  • Post Alternative Referral Packet on the web
    pages of both Mulberry Alternative and Springs
    Academy so the principals, assistant principals,
    and guidance counselors will have access to them
    and will be able to send in referrals to the
    committee to review prior to the referral
    committee meetings.
  • Dates for the Alternative Referral Committee
    meetings will be scheduled and distributed via
    email to the above mentioned parties 3 months in
    advance so home schools may prepare referral
    packets for students in need of alternative
    services. The meetings will be held the first
    Wednesday of every month at Little Joes Chapel on
    the campus of Barium Springs Home for Children.

7
How is a Student Referred to Alternative
Education?
  • Submit Referring home schools submit the
    student packets for consideration at least one
    week prior to the referral committee meeting.
    The home school is responsible for letting the
    students parents know that their child is going
    to be referred to alternative school in order to
    get their support. If their child gets accepted
    into one of the programs, the home school makes
    the initial parent contact to inform them of the
    pending placement.
  • Meeting The referral committee consists of
    Monticello and Springs Academy principals and
    guidance counselors, ISS behavioral specialist,
    alternative school psychologist, and one rotating
    HS/MS principal. This committee meets and
    listens to formal presentations by an
    administrator/counselor from the referred childs
    home school. The committee then convenes to
    discuss the best placement for the child.
    Presenting schools are asked to turn in their
    referrals one week in advance so that appointment
    times can be scheduled for each referring school
    to improve the efficiency of the meeting.

8
How is a Student Placed After the Referral is
Made?
  • Determination The committee decides if the
    child is in need of alternative educational
    services or if more interventions in the home
    school are needed. If more interventions in the
    home school are needed, the committee prescribes
    which interventions need to be attempted before
    formal placement is possible. The general
    determination is communicated through an email to
    all administrators. The receiving alternative
    school will ensure that the prescribed timeline
    is adhered to.
  • Intake The school/program the referred child
    has been accepted into will contact the childs
    home school and set up an intake meeting. If the
    child is EC, then an accompanying IEP meeting
    will take place to indicate that the child is
    undergoing a change in placement into a more
    restrictive environment. Specific transition
    objectives should be established in these
    meetings for the student to have a clear sense of
    what the purpose of the alternative placement is
    to be.
  • Placement After the intake/IEP meeting is
    completed, the child will then be able to attend
    the alternative school/program. Planning for
    return transition to the home school setting
    ensures that the student is taught the necessary
    skills and is provided with the necessary
    supports.

9
What do Home Schools do While the Student is in
an Alternative Setting?
  • Support of Intervention The students home
    school will make monthly contacts with the
    alternative school principal/guidance counselor
    to check their progress in their designated
    program. They are also welcome to visit they
    child in the alternative school setting to
    strengthen the idea that the child still belongs
    to their home school. This helps destroy the
    pervasive/antiquated idea that alternative
    schools are dumping grounds where kids go but
    never come back.
  • Return Transition Once the student has met the
    attendance, academic progress, and behavioral
    goals successfully, they are eligible to return
    to their home school. The alternate school
    principal will contact the students home school
    to discuss the return transition. Before the
    student returns to the home school, the alternate
    school principal and/or guidance counselor will
    take the student to their home school for a visit
    and an informal discussion as to what skills they
    have developed while in the alternate school that
    they can transfer to the regular school setting.
    A packet showing the goals that were met, along
    with interventions used will be completed by the
    alternate school and given to the home school as
    a tool for assisting the student in their return
    transition.

10
How is a Student Transitioned Back and What
Support do Alternative Schools Provide?
  • Return Transition Meeting A formal
    intake/transition packet/IEP (if the child is EC)
    will be held at the home school prior to the
    students return. In this meeting, a behavior
    support plan will be developed based on the
    transition packet from the alternate school to
    assist the childs successful return to the
    traditional school environment.
  • Support/Tracking Once the student is back at
    their home school, the alternate school
    principal/guidance counselor will perform monthly
    checks and/or visits of the child at the home
    school. If needed, assistance and interventions
    will also be provided by the ISS behavior
    specialist to assist in the success of the
    transitioned student.

11
What are the Expectations?
  • Leadership
  • A clearly defined and user friendly approach
    connecting alternative schools to traditional
    schools.
  • An understanding of what programs are available
    to at-risk students and how to connect
    appropriate students to appropriate programs.
  • A systematic way to transfer successful
    interventions from the alternative setting to the
    home school setting.
  • A tracking system to assess flaws in the
    transition process as well as a method to assess
    characteristics of successfully transitioned
    students to assist alternate schools in further
    development of their programs.
  • Provides a timeline for principals and guidance
    counselors who have students who are awaiting
    placement in an alternative setting to allow them
    to pre-teach to the student and encourage them to
    be diligent so they may return again (See
    attached).

12
What are the Expectations?
  • Students
  • Timely placement into programs that will enhance
    their educational experience and will provide
    appropriate attendance, academic, and behavioral
    interventions.
  • Increased, ongoing support from the home school
    during a students alternative placement by
    progress tracking.
  • Reciprocity of interventions from the alternative
    school to the home school through continued
    dialogue, intervention packet, and continued
    tracking of the student in the home school
    setting to increase at-risk student success.
  • Lessened feeling of rejection on the part of the
    at-risk student as the home school and the
    alternative school join forces to ensure that the
    student gets all of the support and services
    available to be successful.
  • Formation of positive relationships with adults
    to foster a more caring environment for the
    at-risk student and give them a more pro-social,
    positive attitude.

13
What are the Expectations?
  • Teachers
  • Provides a structured set of strategies to
    increase success of at-risk students returning to
    the traditional classroom.
  • Provides a timeline for teachers who have
    students who are awaiting placement in an
    alternative setting to allow them to pre-teach to
    the student and encourage them to be diligent so
    they may return again.
  • Increased teacher confidence in alternative
    programs as more successfully transitioned
    students return to their classroom and progress
    towards graduation.
  • Formation of a more system-wide teacher
    communication system to improve classroom
    practices to reach students who would otherwise
    be unsuccessful.

14
How are We Evaluated?
  • Immediate satisfaction feedback to be given by
    referring principals/guidance counselors upon
    completion of the referral committee meeting
    using quality tools (Issue Bin, Plus/Delta).
  • Tracking data to confirm the of transitions
    that occur in the timeline beginning at the
    referral committee.
  • Ongoing feedback from principals/guidance
    counselors utilizing quality tools to address
    areas of improvement in the transition process to
    and from the alternative school placement.
  • Parent/student satisfaction surveys to be
    completed quarterly during the alternative school
    placement related to the quality of services
    provided, interventions used, ongoing support
    given by both the home school, and timeliness of
    the transition process.

15
How are We Evaluated?
  • Feedback data gained from satisfaction surveys to
    be completed by the home school
    principal/designee, parents of transitioned
    students, and students who have received an
    alternative school intervention.
  • Tracking data to indicate the success/failure of
    each student transition back to the home school
    setting in the 3 key areas attendance, academic
    performance, and behavioral management.
  • Tracking data to log the number of at-risk
    students who become repeat referrals to
    alternative school settings after having received
    interventions. ( 2000-2001 data collections in
    the state of Pennsylvania indicate that 44 of
    students served returned to the home school that
    year, 37 remained in alternative education for
    another year, 8 of students returned to the home
    school only to be re-referred and admitted back
    into alternative education during the same year,
    and 12 left alternative programs and didnt
    return to the home school due to graduation or
    dropping out of school).

16
Description of Schools/Departments Involved
Monticello SchoolLong-term Program
  • Designed to be an intervention for students
    displaying repeated disruptive behaviors at their
    home school (15-45-365 day placement).
  • Students entering Iredell-Statesville Schools
    from another alternative program come to
    Monticello for a 15 day assessment.
  • Students accepted into this program through the
    district referral committee come to Monticello
    for a 45 day intervention and assessment.
  • This program also serves students that have been
    administratively placed on a long-term suspension
    (45-365 day placement).
  • Curriculum Nova NET, Hands-on Learning
  • This program operates from 830-300.

17
Long-term Suspended Students
  • Students that have been long-term suspended from
    their home school
  • Can be administratively placed at Monticello
    (depending on severity).
  • Students could attend extended day to recover
    credits lost.
  • Students could recover credits at home using Nova
    NET.

18
How was Springs Academy Formed?
  • ISS Superintendent Dr. Terry Holliday and Barium
    Springs Home for Children President John
    Koppelmeyer met to discuss how the at-risk
    student population at Barium Springs as well as
    those in ISS who werent being successful in any
    setting (including the existing alternative
    school in ISS, Mulberry School).

19
How was Springs Academy Formed?
  • The 2 respective leaders commissioned an
    oversight committee, known as the MOA (Memorandum
    of Agreement) committee, to work out the
    logistics of making this partnership a reality.
  • The committee members included ISS EC department
    leadership, Monticello School Principal and
    Guidance Counselor, BSHC Vice President of
    Educational Services, and BSHC Educational
    Leadership from the on-campus school.
  • Several committee meetings took place over the
    course of the 2004-2005 school year to form the
    MOA which would serve as the constitution for
    this partnership.
  • The MOA is renewed annually by the Oversight
    Committee which includes Springs Academy
    Principal and Student Services Counselor, ISS EC
    Department Director, BSHC Vice President of
    Program Development, BSHC Vice President of
    Educational Services, and BSHC Educational
    Services Director.
  • ISS Superintendent and BSHC President sign off
    annually as the Oversight Committee forwards the
    recommendation.

20
Springs Academy Placements How are they
different?
  • Springs Academy serves both residents of Barium
    Springs Home for Children (on whose campus our
    school is located) Typically about 10 of our
    students are group home residents
  • Both of our programs Community School and Day
    Treatment require an Assessment with a Certified
    Mental Health Employee (Community School- 1
    assessment, Day Treatment- 2 assessments). These
    assessments serve to validate the need for the
    services provided by these programs and to also
    see if the student qualifies for additional
    services or supports.

21
Springs Academy Day Treatment Program
  • Day Treatment programs are designed to meet the
    needs of students with moderate behavior
    challenges.
  • Featuring a 1 to 4 staff to student ratio, these
    classrooms offer daily experiential learning,
    therapeutic activities, and group time in
    addition to their academic studies.
  • Each classroom holds up to twelve students that
    are served by staff with educational and
    therapeutic expertise.
  • Students participating in this program must meet
    mental health eligibility criteria to receive
    services.
  • Day treatment is the most intensive intervention
    available to students in a public school setting.

22
Highlights of Springs Academy Day Treatment
  • Customized learning approaches
  • Self-management/Interpersonal Skills Training
  • Functional Application of Academic Skill
  • Positive Based Motivation (Teaching Family Model)
  • Individualized and Group-Based Interventions
  • Availability of Individual and Family Counseling
  • Students are referred to this program through the
    districts behavior specialist

23
Springs Academy Day Treatment
  • This program is a partnership between Barium
    Springs Home for Children and ISS. Both agencies
    have input into admission and continued placement
    decisions.
  • Parents/Guardians must be willing for the student
    to attend and participate in treatment.
  • The student must meet state day treatment
    eligibility.
  • This program operates from 815 215 on the
    same ISS school calendar.

24
Springs Academy Community Classroom
  • The Community Classroom provides an
    individualized academic program for up to 24
    middle and high school at risk youth.
  • The staff to student ratio for this program is 1
    to 6 and offers students the opportunity to
    experience a non-traditional learning
    environment.
  • This program originated from the Barium Springs
    on campus school for residents.
  • Students are referred to this program through the
    district referral committee.
  • This program operates from 815 215 on the
    same ISS school calendar.

25
What kind of student comes to theCommunity
Classroom?
  • The student has been unsuccessful in a
    traditional classroom setting.
  • The student has shown academic success in a small
    structured learning environment (Monticello,
    resource or self-contained room), and
    demonstrates the need to continue in this type of
    environment to maximize student potential.
  • Episodes of non-compliance are infrequent and do
    not include physical aggression.
  • Is able to succeed in a small classroom setting
    with minimal classroom disruption.
  • Student can be effectively served when placed
    within the existing group of students.

26
What Do We Do With Our Students To Assist in
Their Success?
  • Positive point totals lead to extrinsic
    incentives from the School Store (drinks, candy,
    video games, clothes, games, balls) and Fun
    Friday Activities.
  • Fun Friday Activities funding comes from BSHC as
    well as from donations from community churches
    and agencies.
  • Students are eligible to be named Student of the
    Day (each classroom has a designated day of the
    week). Students recognized in this manner are
    eligible to attend Student of the Day parties
    once each quarter filled with food, games, and
    music.
  • Students are also eligible for Quarterly A/B
    Honor Roll recognitions and Monthly Perfect
    Attendance recognitions

27
What Do We Do With Our Students To Assist in
Their Success?
  • Monthly Perfect Attendance Recognitions

28
What Do We Do With Our Students To Assist in
Their Success?
  • Quarterly A/B Honor Roll Recognitions

29
What Do We Do With Our Students To Assist in
Their Success?
  • Springs Academy staff receive continuous
    consultation on behaviors and at least monthly
    observations with written feedback regarding the
    teams effectiveness in using the Teaching Family
    Model to address behaviors and achieve academic
    success.

30
What Do We Do With Our Students To Assist in
Their Success?
  • The Teaching Family Model of care is employed by
    the Springs Academy Staff to provide
    individualized behavior management and
    therapeutic intervention to modify behavior and
    teach coping and social skills needed to be
    successful at home, school, and in the community.
  • The TFM is also utilized by the group home staff
    at Barium Springs Home for Children.
  • The TFM originated at Boys Town and has shown
    overwhelmingly positive results in decreasing
    aggression and increasing positive decision
    making.

31
What Do We Do With Our Students To Assist in
Their Success?
  • A motivational system is utilized in which
    students receive positive points for positive
    behavioral exhibitions (1 point increments), and
    negative point consequences for negative
    behavioral exhibitions (2 point increments). The
    initial goal for staff is to identify 4 positive
    behaviors to every 1 negative behavior on their
    point card. A (-10) is the maximum point
    consequence assigned at any given time. At that
    point a youth is considered out of compliance.
  • Each earned negative consequence is followed by
    an opportunity for the youth to participate in
    positive corrections (role plays and processing
    appropriate skills) to earn back half of the
    point consequence.

32
What Do We Do With Our Students To Assist in
Their Success?
  • A key component in addressing any student
    behavior, positive or negative, is providing
    rationales as to why youth should use appropriate
    skills and how it will benefit their own lives
    and achieving personal goals.

33
What is the Point of the Incentives?
  • The goal of the incentives is to get the students
    focused on something they are interested in
    (rewards) while they are learning the target
    skills (which is a totally new way of operating
    for them).
  • Students move up levels Student, Scholar,
    Masters, Doctorate. Moving up the levels
    increases expectations of behaviors and receive
    less reinforcement for basic skills that are now
    expected to be mastered and are only reinforced
    for more advanced skills tailored to their
    individual behavioral needs. With each level also
    comes increased access to privileges for using
    the advanced skills. This move from extrinsic to
    intrinsic motivation is what drives our students
    towards successful transitions back to their
    regular school placement.

34
What Data Supports the Usage of the Teaching
Family Model?
  • Items such as successful discharge, decrease in
    CAFAS scores, physical interventions, and
    restraints are evaluated each quarter to provide
    trend data for school staff to use to improve
    service delivery.

35
What Does the Model Look Like in Action? The
Target Skills
  • All students are taught 4 basic skills upon
    admission that are the basis for advanced skills
    and critical to school success
  • Following Instructions
  • Accepting Feedback/No for Answers
  • Staff/Peer Relations
  • Participation
  • Each student provides input into their
    individual goals at their intake meeting and
    through functional analysis of behavior the staff
    develops a behavior support plan to teach target
    skills. This is reviewed and revised each month
    based on observation, feedback from staff,
    client, guardians, and the treatment team during
    monthly person-centered planning meetings.

36
What Does the Model Look Like in Action? The
Target Skills
  • Following Instructions
  • Look at the person
  • Say OK
  • Complete the Task
  • Check Back

37
What Does the Model Look Like in Action? The
Target Skills
  • Accepting Feedback/No Answers
  • Look at the person
  • Say OK
  • Dont Argue
  • Wait until a neutral time to discuss any
    disagreement you may have
  • This target skill can be used when receiving
    instructions, consequences, or work assignment
    critiques.

38
What Does the Model Look Like in Action? The
Target Skills
  • Staff/Peer Relations
  • Be pleasant when talking with staff/peers.
  • Refrain from behaviors and words that hurt
    others.
  • Encourage peers to follow rules.
  • Report peers negative behaviors to staff.

39
What Does the Model Look Like in Action? The
Target Skills
  • Participating in Activities
  • Appropriately request to be a part of the
    activity
  • Cooperate with others in the group (ex. Allowing
    others to take their turns)
  • Use a pleasant voice when talking to others
  • Remember to accept losing or winning
    appropriately

40
What Does the Model Look Like in Action? The
Target Skills
  • Showing Respect
  • Obey a request to stop a negative behavior.
  • Avoid acting obnoxiously in public.
  • Refrain from teasing, threatening, or making fun
    of others.
  • Allow others to have their privacy

41
What Does the Model Look Like in Action? The
Target Skills
  • Asking Permission
  • Look at the person.
  • Ask for what you want using a question.
  • Accept the answer given.

42
What Does the Model Look Like in Action? The
Target Skills
  • Self-Control
  • Learn what situations make you angry.
  • Monitor the feelings you have.
  • Instruct yourself to relax.
  • Express feelings in an inoffensive way.
  • Praise yourself for controlling emotions

43
What Does the Model Look Like in Action? The
Target Skills
  • Completing Tasks
  • Listen carefully to instructions or directions
    for tasks
  • Assemble the necessary tools/materials needed for
    the task
  • Begin working carefully and neatly
  • Remain focused on the task until it is completed
  • Examine the product of your work to make sure it
    is complete
  • Check back with the person who assigned the task
    if you have questions or once you have completed
    the task

44
Additional Skills
  • 1. Accepts Compliments
    26. Independent Living
  • 2. Accepts Criticism
    27. Leadership Skills
  • 3. Accepts Responsibility
    28. Listening Skills
  • 4. Accepts No for an Answer
    29. Money Management
  • 5. Age-Appropriate Activities
    30. Offers Help
  • 6. Apologizes/Expresses Regret
    31. Participation
  • 7. Asks Permission
    32. Peer Reports
  • 8. Assertiveness
    33. Personal
    Hygiene/Appearance
  • 9. Attends School
    34. Problem Solving
  • 10. Conversation Skills
    35. Public Conduct
  • 11. Cooperates with Others
    36. Purchasing Skills
  • 12. Emotional/Impulse Control
    37. Reports Whereabouts
  • 13. Employment Skills
    38. Says No/Resists Peer
    Pressure
  • 14. Encopresis / Enuresis
    39. Sex Education
  • 15. Establishes / Maintains Friendships
    40. Shows Appreciation
  • 16. Expresses Accomplishments
    41. Shows Respect for Others
  • 17. First Aid / Self-Medication
    42. Show Respect for Property
  • 18. Follows Instructions
    43. Sportsmanship

45
PDSA Plan, Do, Study, Act
  • Springs Academy uses the PDSA approach to improve
    processes, academic and operational
  • The Cycle involves the identification of the
    problem, validation of the need for improvement,
    and a plan of action to improve results.

46
PDSA Plan, Do, Study, Act
  • Plan What is it that we want to accomplish?
  • Do What steps are we going to take to accomplish
    our plan?
  • Study What do the results tell us about the
    success/failures of our action steps?
  • Act Did we accomplish our plan, are we going to
    try it again, or do we need to change our
    deployment steps?

47
Examples of PDSAs at Springs Academy
  • Bus Transportation Knowing the long bus rides
    that students had to endure each day, we used the
    PDSA approach to show how we could increase
    efficiency to make the addition of another bus
    more cost effective. (Shuttle Routes)
  • The Result The alternative schools received a
    4th bus to transport our students, thus
    decreasing the average length of bus ride.

48
Examples of PDSAs at Springs Academy
  • Teacher Rotation Instead of having each of my
    teachers prepare anywhere from 6 to 19 lessons
    per day, we devised a teacher rotation to allow
    each teacher to focus on one of the tested areas
    to improve our academic results.
  • The Results Staff satisfaction improved by 15
    in one year!! Student performance composite
    increased by 10!! Our students achieved AYP-
    High Growth!! Our school met its ABC goals for
    the 2nd straight year!!

49
Examples of PDSAs at Springs Academy
  • Attendance By utilizing lunch and after school
    detention in lieu of always using bus and school
    suspensions, making daily phone contacts with the
    parents/guardians of absent students, and by
    making perfect attendance a requirement for a
    student to achieve Fun Friday, we were able to
    improve our attendance.
  • The Result Attendance improved to nearly 90
    (89.92) and Springs Academy showed the highest
    rate of attendance improvement in all of ISS!!!

50
Iredell-Statesville Schools Triangle Model to
Raise Achievement and Close Gaps
51
The Springs Academy Way Handout
  • See the thumbnail interventions utilized at
    Springs. These were presented to other district
    schools for their own implementation as it fits
    their needs.

52
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