Title: TEAM UP Oregon
1TEAM UPOregon
2TEAM UP Partners
- Chalkboard Project
- Confederation of Oregon School Administrators
(COSA) - Oregon Department of Education (ODE)
- Oregon Education Association (OEA)
- Oregon PTA
- Oregon School Boards Association (OSBA)
- Oregon School Employees Association (OSEA)
3TEAM UP Objective
- The key to improving public perception of Oregon
schools is to - Actively engage internal audiences in planning
and communication of positive messages about
public schools - (teachers, classified employees,
administrators, school board members, involved
parents)
4TEAM UP Strategies
- Help internal audiences understand
- Their influence as messengers about Oregons
public schools - The impact of negative messages, as compared to
the power of positive messages
5TEAM UP Strategies
- And
- The benefits of planned, consistent, collective
messaging - The facts about school success, and the research
about public perception and effective messages
6TEAM UP Action Plan
- As a TEAM UP district, we will TEAM UP to create
an annual communications plan
77Quick Questions
8Question 1
9Question 2
- Can you please tell me one good thing about your
school?
10Questions 3
- How do you rate student and school performance
in our district? - A1. Very good
- A2. Somewhat good
- A3. Fair
- A4. Poor
11Questions 4
- How do you rate student and school performance
in Oregon? - A1. Very good
- A2. Somewhat good
- A3. Fair
- A4. Poor
12Questions 5
- How important is parent involvement to student
and school success? - A1. Essential
- A2. Very important
- A3. Somewhat important
- A4. Not very important
13Questions 6
- How important is community involvement to
student and school success? - A1. Essential
- A2. Very important
- A3. Somewhat important
- A4. Not very important
14Questions 7
- What percentage of school budgets is spent on
central administration in Oregon? - A1. 33
- A2. 24
- A3. 16
- A4. 9
- A5. 3
-
- As defined by Chalkboard Project. School
district superintendents office, including all
support staff and associated costs. All salaries
and benefits, as well as associated costs, for
all administrators/managers located off-site from
a school building.
15Public Perceptionof K-12 Education
16What Oregonians want to know
- Oregonians want to know
- Schools and students are succeeding
- Parents are contributing to school success
17What Oregonians want to know
- Communities are involved in schools, and students
are involved in community service - Districts are spending money wisely in ways
that maximize teaching and learning
18School success lost on Oregonians
- Heres what Oregonians believe about student and
school success - Fewer than half (45) rate the states public
schools as very or somewhat good (62 when rating
local schools) - Almost half (46) of Oregonians think schools set
expectations too low for students, and more than
half say a high school diploma does not mean
students are ready for college or work
Source 2004 Chalkboard Project survey
Source 2004 Employers for Educational Excellence
survey
19but schools are succeeding
- State test scores continue to improve
- students meeting or exceeding benchmarks
- 3rd 5th 8th 10th
- Math 1998 67 61 50 32
- Math 2006 86 85 65 45
- 3rd 5th 8th 10th
- Reading 1998 78 66 55 48
- Reading 2006 87 83 66 55
Source Oregon Department of Education
20and succeeding
- Oregons national (NAEP) math test scores
continued to climb in 2005 - of students at or above standard
- Math 1996 Math 2005
- 4th Grade 65 80
- Math 1990 Math 2005
- 8th Grade 62 72
- Oregon scores at 4th 8th grades exceed NAEP
averages in math and reading
Source National Assessment of Educational
Progress, U.S. Department of Education, National
Center for Education Statistics
21and succeeding
- 2006 SAT Scores
- Verbal Math Combined
- Oregon 523 529 1052
- Nation 503 518 1021
- Oregon ranks 2nd among the 23 states that had
at least 50 of high school graduates take test
Source College Board, 2005
22- Oregonians want to believe their schools are
succeeding. - They want to invest in success, not failure.
- Question So why are Oregonians hesitant to
invest more in their schools?
23Why?
- Answer Oregonians arent hearing our
remarkable success story - Oregon schools and students are performing at
unprecedented, high levels despite more that 15
years of difficult budget circumstances. -
- Just imagine what we could do with adequate
funding!
24Parent involvement
- Oregonians believe parent involvement is critical
to success of students and to generate support
for schools - 83 say lack of parental involvement is the
biggest obstacle to student success even bigger
than money/spending concerns and 80 say parent
support for teaching and learning is essential
Source 2004 Chalkboard Project survey
25Community involvement matters
- OSBA Tangible Triumphs project finds that
Oregonians opinions about schools improve when
we use these messages - Studies prove that schools do better when
parents and other adults are involved. - Well-educated students are essential to our
economic and civic health teachers and schools
cant do this job on their own.
Source 2004 Employers for Educational Excellence
survey
26Community involvement matters
- Students learn best when they have the chance
to apply their lessons to real-life problems
through internships and other experiences in the
community. - Kids who are active in school are less likely
to engage in crime or get in trouble.
Source 2004 Employers for Educational Excellence
survey
27Perceptions of school spending
- Oregonians two biggest school funding concerns
- 1) Reducing administrative costs
- 2) Schools not spending wisely
- 70 believe central administration waste and
inefficiency is big obstacle to school success
Source 2005 Stand for Children survey
Source 2004 Chalkboard Project survey
28Perceptions of school spending
- Oregonians think 34 of district budgets are
spent on central administration
(educators/parents think its 16)
Sources 2005 Citizens for Oregons Future survey
2005 COSA data, Bringing Oregons Education
Community Together
29http//www.chalkboardproject.org/openbook1.php
30Small Group Exercise
31Small group exercise
- Develop a list of local school examples that
illustrate one of the following messages - Schools and students are succeeding, academic
standards are high, and schools are preparing
students for college and the workforce - Parents are contributing to school success
- Communities are involved in schools, and students
are involved in community service
32Our Perceptionsof Schools
33What do our folks want?
- We want all of us to work together more
effectively - We want positive public relations and marketing
for schools, and to be armed with positive
messages and success stories to tell - We want better knowledge about school budgets
- Teachers, classified employees, administrators,
school board members, involved parents
Source 2005 COSA data, Bringing Oregons
Education Community Together
34Working together
- 90 of educators and parents say its very
important that a broad-based coalition of school
groups team up both in Salem and in local
communities to work together on funding and
other education issues - More than 90 believe it is vital to have a
united voice, with both the legislature and the
public, to overcome negative perceptions about
schools
Source 2005 COSA data, Bringing Oregons
Education Community Together
35Better knowledge of budgets
- 35 of non-administrators would rate their
districts spending choices as so-so or poor - Almost half couldnt think of instances in which
they were happy with how their district spent
money - Biggest gripes were high administrator
salaries, too many administrators and not
spending enough money to explain how money is
spent and allocated
Source 2005 COSA data, Bringing Oregons
Education Community Together
36TEAM UP Focusis on us
37Why TEAM UP focus is on us
- 46 of Oregonians are unable to identify anything
positive about their local school - 36 percent say it has been more than a year or
that they have never heard from their local
school district
Source 2004 Employers for Educational Excellence
survey
38Why TEAM UP focus is on us
- Nearly half of all messages coming from staff
about schools are - NEGATIVE
Source Banach, Banach and Cassidy national data,
2000-2004
39Report Back7 Quick Questions
407 Quick Questions Answered
- How was school today?
- Can you please tell me one good thing about your
school? - Rate student performance in your district.
- Rate student performance in Oregon.
- How important to student success is parental
involvement? - How important to school/student success is
community involvement? - What percentage of school budgets is spent on
central administration?
41Where do we gofrom here?
42If your district decides to TEAM UP
- Get the TEAM UP Playbook (www.cosa.k12.or.us)
- Please let us know. TEAM UP Oregon partners
are happy to help.
43Team UpOregon