Title: Rock Island School District 41
1Rock Island School District 41
- School Closing/Restructuring Report to the Board
of Education - Rock Island High School Library
- January 11, 2005
- 500 p.m.
2Facility Study
- An extensive Long-Range Facility Study Report was
presented to the Board of Education on September
28, 2004. - Of the many findings and recommendations offered
by the committee, the following relate directly
to school closing(s).
3Facility Study Recommendations Short-Term
- 1. Close two elementary schools Grant and
Lincoln. - 2. Close Marshall School - move program to
Lincoln. - 3. Sell the Marshall and Grant properties.
- 4. Review boundaries every five years to balance
student enrollment.
4Rock Island School District 41 Enrollment Trend
1971 - 2004
1971 11,502 1982 7,597 1993 7,114 2004 6,582
5Improvement Status for RI Schools
- Lincoln School Choice
- Grant Corrective Action
- Hawthorne-Irving Corrective Action
6Consequences for Not Meeting AYP
Lincoln
Grant and Hawthorne-Irving
7Timeline
- September 28, 2004
- Facility Study Report to Board of Education
- Superintendent Loy directed to determine the next
appropriate steps - October 26, 2004
- Timeline and Action Plan for providing
recommendations to the Board of Education
presented
8Timeline-Action Plan
9- October 15 November 10, 2004
- PHASE I Information Need for Action / Beliefs
- Provide information regarding
- Facility Study Recommendations
- No Child Left Behind Status and Consequences
- Superintendents Beliefs Regarding Student
Performance Gap - Gather information regarding
- Beliefs Regarding Student Performance Gap
- Input Regarding Student Performance Gap
- Begin Effective Schools Research
10 Teachers Parents Administrators
Unions Community Members
A-Call-To-Action Committee Media
Pastoral Council Grant Task Force
School Board
Many stakeholder groups were asked to provide
input toward the goal of having a recommendation
for the Board of Education ready in January.
11 PHASE I Information Need for Action / Beliefs
November 5 23, 2004 PHASE II Data Analysis
and Communications Analyze Facility Study
Recommendations Analyze input from meetings with
staff and public Begin to answer questions and
concerns Continue research on Effective Schools
Select Superintendents Advisory Task Force
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14Grant and Lincoln
15Close Grant Lincoln - Boundary Students K-6
Building Capacities Met
16On November 30th, after analyzing findings of the
Facility Study and studying GIS data, our
Leadership Team determined that to close 2
schools by next year we would have to make
massive changes in school boundaries that would
affect an estimated 1000 students. Thus came the
recommendation to close just one school next year.
17Superintendents Advisory Task Force
David Bloom, Administrator Rick Loy,
Administrator Jay Marino, Administrator Lucille
McCorkle, Administrator Bill Osborne,
Administrator George Henderson, Community Gerald
Jones, Community Rev. David McAdams,
Community Mark McVey, Community Dave Rockwell,
Community Gary Rowe, Community
Phyllis Schwindt, Community Liz Sherwin,
Community Lori Angel-Young, Parent Teresa
Campbell, Parent Stephen Moller, Parent Kim
Calhoun, Parent Liz Byczynski, Staff Christine
DePooter, Staff Keith Gotthardt, Staff Connie
Snell, Staff Linda Taylor, Staff
Purpose To provide Superintendent with
recommendations as to the closing and/or
restructuring of our 3 Watch List Schools Grant,
Hawthorne-Irving, and Lincoln
18 PHASE I Information Beliefs / Need for Action
PHASE II Data Analysis and Communications
November 18 December 17, 2004 PHASE III
Develop Possible Scenarios for School Closing(s)
and/or Restructuring Advisory Task Force to
develop 3 to 4 scenarios for school closing(s)
and/or Restructuring. Meet with the schools
directly involved to keep them updated and answer
questions and concerns. Continue Effective
Schools research, possibly secure a consultant.
19Close Grant Boundary Students K-6 Building
Capacities Met
20Close Lincoln Boundary Students K-6
21- On December 7th, both Leadership Team and the
Superintendents Advisory Task Force recommended
closing Grant School (over Lincoln). The
following reasons were emphasized - Number of students impacted (117 as to 295)
- Facility Study recommendations (the last 3
studies have recommended closing Grant School) - Grant is in the NCLB Corrective Action Stage, as
to Lincoln is at Choice - ISAT Scores Grants continue to drop, Lincolns
have improved over past 2 years - Number of teachers impacted, Lincoln has more
than twice the number of staff - Proximity to other schools, Lincoln is more
centrally located - T. Marshall Leadership team believes Grant would
be a better facility for their program
22Restructuring/Closing Schools Scenarios 1- Close
Grant and redistrict boundaries
2- Have 2 sister schools- 1 primary (Prek-2) and
1 intermediate (3-6), students from 3 watch
schools
3- Have 4 schools reconfigured (2 watch and 2
non watch)- 2 primary and 2 intermediate buildings
4- Reconfigure Hawthorne-Irving leave Lincoln
alone, move the students from Grant to H-I
5- Close Grant School, let students choose
school to attend, move TMLC to Grant
23 PHASE I Information Beliefs / Need for Action
PHASE II Data Analysis and Communications
PHASE III Develop Possible Scenarios for School
Closing(s) and/or Restructuring
December 17, 2004 January 25, 2005 PHASE IV
Analyze Options and Make Recommendation to Board
of Education Advisory Task Force to study
advantages, concerns, and implications of each
scenario, with input from Cabinet and
Leadership. Share information with Board and
schools involved for final input. Present
recommendation to Superintendent.
24Connecting Scenarios to Long Range (Facility
Study) Plan
As the two teams studied 9 different scenarios,
the need to connect these to long-range plans was
emphasized. Much time was spent discussing the
long-range recommendations of the Facility Study,
its feasibility and timeframe. It was determined
that the long-range plan to expand and build new
larger schools would likely not happen before
2008-09. The concept of creating sister schools
emerged and was given serious consideration.
25- After extensive study and analysis, scenarios
were narrowed down to 3 - Close Grant and redistrict boundaries
- Form 2 sister schools from remaining Watch
Schools, a PreK-2 and a Grade 3-6 - Form 2 sets of sister schools, matching watch
list schools with non-watch list schools
26Restructuring/Closing Schools Scenarios
1- Close Grant and redistrict boundaries
27Restructuring/Closing Schools Scenarios
2- Have 2 sister schools- 1 primary (Prek-2) and
1 intermediate (3-6), students from 3 watch
schools
28Restructuring/Closing Schools Scenarios
3- Have 4 schools reconfigured (2 watch and 2
non watch)- 2 primary and 2 intermediate buildings
4- Reconfigure Hawthorne-Irving leave Lincoln
alone, move the students from Grant to H-I
5- Close Grant and offer Grant parents choice.
29- Sister Schools Concept
- We sent a team to visit Sterling Schools, as they
restructured their 4 schools to two pairs of
sister schools in 2003. - The district had numerous positives to convey
about their change. - The superintendent stated they did it for
financial reasons, saving over a quarter of a
million dollars and were surprised by the
curricular and instructional benefits, including
. . .
30- Flexibility and equity of class size groupings
- Equitable and efficient distribution of programs
and services - Instruction and assessment consistency
- Focused administrative curriculum support
- Focused, supportive intra-staff communication and
collegiality - Focused staff development opportunities
- Equitable and efficient deployment of support
personnel - Fiscal controls/predictability
- In short, many of the concerns we have about
smaller schools are alleviated by making sister
schools.
31- On December 14th, Leadership Team reached
unanimous consensus in recommending scenario 2. - On December 21st the Superintendents Advisory
Task Force reached consensus on the same
scenario. - This is the recommendation the Superintendent
will make to the Board tonight.
32Close Grant, Reconstitute Hawthorne-Irving and
Lincoln
- Create one school boundary merging the 3 schools
- Open Rock Island Academy West at the
Hawthorne-Irving site to serve PreK-2 students - Open Rock Island Academy East at the Lincoln site
to serve Grades 3-6 students
33Twenty years from now you will be more
disappointed by the things you didnt do than by
the ones you did do.
34RI Academies East West Campus
- Our Plan to Help All Students Achieve at High
Levels Based on Research and Best Practices
35- At the Rock Island Academies our vision of
Excellence Every Day will become a reality.
Failure will not be an option.
36Core Components
- Preparing students for academic success and high
achievement will be the focus - These restructured schools will incorporate the
latest innovative educational research to ensure
that all students reach their academic potential - Concepts such as
- 90-90-90 school concept
- full service schools philosophy
- high expectations accountability
- strong parent involvement
- a safe environment emphasizing respect
- a commitment to quality and high academic
achievement for every student.
37Rock Island Academies East and West No Excuses
Schools
38What is a 90-90-90 School?
- 90 or More Free and Reduced Lunch
- 90 or More Minority Enrollment
- 90 or More of the Students Meet or
- Exceed Proficiency on Independent
- State Tests
39Common Elements of 90/90/90 Schools
- Focus on Achievement
- Multiple Opportunities for Student
- Success
- Weekly Assessment
- Writing as a Lever
- External and Collaborative
Scoring
401.) Focus on Achievement
- Charts, graphs and pictures of success are posted
and displayed in offices, hallways, classrooms,
local stores - High academic performance is rewarded with high
praise - Students not meeting standards receive
interventions until standards are met
412.) A Focused Curriculum
- Curriculum focuses on a few areas math,
language arts and reading and these areas are
covered in all content areas (ready to enter
junior high at or above grade level) - Test scores increase in all areas, not just the
areas focused on - Identifying and aligning focused common academic
standards at each grade level results in high
achievement
423.) Frequent Assessments
- When a student does poorly on an assessment, they
are given multiple opportunities to succeed - Student learning is the goal, not student grading
- Weekly student assessment of progress is made by
the teacher and the student is encouraged to show
improvement the following week
434.) Strong Emphasis on Writing
- Most common characteristic of high performing
schools is an ongoing writing performance
assessment program - There is a single rubric for all writing
assignments in all content areas
445.) External Scoring of Student Work
- External scoring allows schools to develop a
common assessment practice. - By exchanging student work for assessment
purposes, teachers identify common expectations
which leads to consistency among teachers
45Its The Practice!
- There is no 90/90/90 program
- These practices are neither
- secret nor proprietary
- Clear focus, collaboration and regular feedback
are the keys!
46Closing the Achievement Gap
- Have uniform standards
- Make the curriculum challenging
- Maintenance of a school climate conducive to
academic productivity - Provision of increased instructional time in
reading, mathematics, and other basic skills - Application of in-depth, appropriate, and ongoing
assessments of the performance and progress of
each student - Provide effective teachers
47Data Driven Focus on Continuous Improvement
- Student assessment data will be used to drive
instruction and school improvement. - Adjustments in classroom instruction will occur
based on current and frequent student achievement
data. - Students will have ownership and accountability
for their own learning through the use of - Personal Mission Statements, Data folders,
Student Led Conferences and other concepts of a
student centered classroom. - All teachers will be trained in the Koalaty Kid
approach to continuous improvement and students
and teachers will use quality tools and the Plan,
Do, Study, Act process to improve learning and
instruction.
48Case Studies- Schools Using Quality Processes and
Tools
- Other schools have done it, so can we!
- Baldrige Award Winners in Education
- Community Consolidated School District 15
(Palatine, IL) - Pearl River School District (Pearl River, NY)
- Chugach School District (Anchorage, AK)
- Lincoln Award Winners in Education
- Brazosport School District- example of closing
the achievement gap and all students achieving at
high levels (see next few slides)
49Brazosport ISD Starting Points (Math)
White
79
All Students
65
50Math Test Scores- Brazosport ISD
100
90
White 79
40
9293
9192
9394
9495
9596
9697
9798
9899
9900
51The Common Thread
- All these schools are committed to quality
initiatives (Baldrige, Koalaty Kid, Total Quality
Management, etc.) and utilize Plan, Do, Study,
Act as the only model for data driven decision
making
52Incorporate the RISD41 Academic Excellence
Framework.
- The AEF is a comprehensive plan based on
research, best practices and benchmarking of
highly effective schools and provides a 6 pronged
approach that will increase academic achievement.
- 1.) Implementation of Effective Instructional
Strategies based on research and best practices.
- 2.) Power Standards the standards that each
teacher will make sure that every student learns
prior to leaving the current grade.
53- 3.) Curriculum Mapping- The alignment of
curriculum between grade levels. - 4.) Performance Descriptors/Exit Outcomes- The
academic goals, performance standards and
achievement targets that contribute to high
expectations. - 5.) In-Process Measures- The deployment of
in-process measures and assessments that will
allow for early detection of students who are
below standards. - 6.) System of Student Support- The procedure of
providing behavioral/academic support as needed
through prevention, intervention and remediation
services for students who are not meeting the
established academic targets.
54The Full Service Community School
- Before and after school programs for students,
partnerships with community agencies and other
services for families. - The objectives of the Full Service School are
- (1) To improve the access of children and
families to recreation, education, social
service, and health programs by developing an
integrated and coordinated service delivery
mechanism at each school - (2) To involve school faculty and staff,
students, parents, community and nonprofit
representatives in deciding which programs and
services will take place in the school building
or close by, and in monitoring their success so
that each takes ownership of the process
55The Full Service Community School
- (3) To improve the relationship between parents,
teachers, and school personnel so that teachers
feel supported by parents and parents strengthen
leadership skills, feel welcome in the school,
consider the school a ready source of help with
problems, and believe that their contribution to
their child's education is valued and nurtured
and, -
- (4) To create a mutually supportive environment
where classroom and social support services work
together to enhance student achievement.
56A Climate of High Expectations
- The focus of these schools will be high academic
achievement for each and every student - All staff will share a fundamental belief that
all students can, will, and must learnand will
clearly communicate this belief to all - Students, parents and staff will understand what
the high academic expectations are and what must
be done if students are to meet those goals - Research has consistently shown the link between
expectations and high achievement
57Strong Parental and Community Involvement
- The restructured schools will ensure strong
parental involvement through the implementation
of a Parent Involvement Agreement. - Parents will have multiple opportunities to
become involved in their childs education. - A Parent University will be created to give
parents the skills necessary to assist their
children with academics. - Community partnerships will be formed with
colleges and local businesses to ensure strong
collaboration with the schools and mentoring of
students.
58Other Components of the Restructured Schools.
- Students will have opportunities to participate
in after school and intersession classes that are
based on themes such as technology, math and
science, fine arts and more - Teachers and students will have access to the
latest technology and software to increase
academic achievement and prepare students for
gainful employment in the 21st century -
- Strategies such as looping (the teacher staying
with the same class for 2 or more years) and
multi-age (combining students of various grade
levels together) will be utilized as appropriate
59Our Goal
- To create first-class restructured schools
incorporating a climate and culture of high
expectations and high academic achievement
through the implementation of best practices and
the latest educational research. - Students making adequate yearly progress (AYP)
- Entering junior high school at or on grade level
- High academic achievement as measured by multiple
assessments - Motivated, life-long learners
60Savings from Closing Grant
- 1 FTE Principal 88,679
- 1 FTE Secretary 28,199
- 1 FTE Building Supv. 21,673
- 1.5 FTE Custodians 63,986
- Building repairs 22,900
- Utilities 35,490
- Supplies 3,500
- Total Savings 264,427
Closing Grant and not re-using for other
programming
61Savings from Closing Grant
- 1 FTE Principal 88,679
- 1 FTE Secretary 28,199
- 1 FTE Building Supv. 21,673
- 1.5 FTE Custodians 63,986
- Building repairs 17,904
- Utilities 25,500
- Supplies 3,150
- Total Savings 249,091
Close Grant-reuse as Alternative Education
Center. Assumes only 1 FTE custodian.
62Savings from Closing Grant
- 1 FTE Principal 88,679
- 1 FTE Secretary 28,199
- 1 FTE Building Supv. 21,673
- 1 FTE Custodian 43,832
- Building repairs 17,904
- Utilities 25,500
- Supplies 3,150
- Total Savings 228,937
Close Grant-reuse as Alternative Education
Center. Assumes 1.5 FTE custodians.
63Other Potential Benefits
- More efficient staffing resulting in better
services to children and/or cost savings - Classroom teachers
- PE/Music teachers
- Itinerant staff
- Nurse
- Speech
- Social worker/psychologist
- Counselor
- Food Service
64Title I Funds
- Current Allocations
- Grant 106,176
- H Irving 145,824
- Lincoln 190,848
- Total 442,848
- Estimated Allocations
- PK-2 190,848
- 3-6 246,624
- Total 437,472
65Title I Funds
- For the 2004-2005 school year the district was
required to set aside 427,496 for School Choice
Transportation and Supplemental Educational
Services. - In 2005-06 this would not be the case with
restructured schools as the 3 will not be on the
NCLB Watch List.
66Lights on for Learning (LOFL)
- Current Allocations
- Grant 100,000
- H Irving 100,000
- Lincoln 100,000
- Total 300,000
- Estimated Allocations
- PK-2 135,000
- 3-6 135,000
- Total 270,000
67Transportation Savings
- NCLB Bussing 65,000
- Paid from Title I funding
- 113 students
- Shuttle Bussing 9,000
- Paid for from Transportation funding
- 6 students
68Shuttle Bussing
- Shuttle Grant boundary students to
Hawthorne-Irving and Lincoln. - Each shuttle bus costs 21,243
- 89.95 per day per bus
- 30.75 per day per monitor
- 176 days
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71Close Grant, Reconstitute Hawthorne-Irving and
Lincoln
- Create one school boundary merging the 3 schools
- Open Rock Island Academy West at the
Hawthorne-Irving site to serve PreK-2 students - Open Rock Island Academy East at the Lincoln site
to serve Grades 3-6 students
72- Our dilemma is that we hate change and love it
at the same time. What we really want is for
things to remain the same but we get better. - - Sydney Harris, journalist
73- Many things can wait. Children cannot. Today
their bones are being formed, their blood is
being made, their senses are being developed. To
them we cannot say tomorrow. Their name is
today. - Gabriela Mistral