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Campus Improvement Plan

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Title: Campus Improvement Plan


1
STATE COMPENSATORY EDUCATION (SCE) State funding
for Students At-Risk of Dropping out of School
2
SCE Funds What are they?
  • State funding provided for the purpose of
    supplementing the regular education program for
    students identified as at-risk of dropping out of
    school.
  • SCE funds may be used to upgrade the entire
    educational program on a Title I campus.
  • These SCE funds are subject to the same audit
    requirements and rules as Title I funds.

3
SCE Funds on School-Wide Campus
  • SCE funds may be used to upgrade the entire
    educational program on a campus identified in the
    Application for Federal Funding as a Title I,
    Part A schoolwide campus whose actual poverty
    percentage is 40 or greater.
  • This provides greater flexibility (NOT free use)
    of SCE funds.

4
How do you get them?
  • Identify your at-risk students
  • Meet with SBDM
  • Include plans in your CIP

5
Identification of At-Risk Students
  • The campus at-risk coordinator shall establish
    procedures to conduct periodic reviews to
    identify additional eligible students as well as
    review the status of previously identified
    students, ensuring that all students receive
    services as needed.

6
Identification of At-Risk Students
  • Since some criteria may only temporarily qualify
    students for SCE services, the campus coordinator
    will determine through periodic reviews of the
    student data the students continued eligibility
    and need for continued services.

7
AT-RISK CRITERIA
  • Considerations for Identification and for
  • Exit

8
Criteria 1
  • The student is in pre-kindergarten, kindergarten
    or grade 1, 2, or 3 and did not perform
    satisfactorily on a readiness test or assessment
    instrument administered during the current school
    year.

9
Criteria 2
  • The student is in grade 7 12 and did not
    maintain an average equivalent to 70 (on a scale
    of 100) in two or more subjects in the foundation
    curriculum during a semester in the preceding or
    current school year or is not maintaining such an
    average in two or more subjects in the foundation
    curriculum in the current semester

10
Criteria 3
  • The student was not advanced from one grade level
    to the next for one or more school years.

11
Criteria 4
  • The student did not perform satisfactorily on
    TAKS and has not in the previous or current
    school year subsequently performed at a level
    equal to at least 110 of the level of
    satisfactory performance.

12
Calculating the 110
  • STEP 1
  • Divide the total TAKS raw score cut (the number
    of correct responses needed to pass the test) by
    the total TAKS test items (total number of
    questions in the particular test).
  • Example There are 42 questions on a test and
    the student is required to answer 24 items in
    order to pass the exam. Therefore, 57.14 of the
    items must be answered correctly to pass the exam.

13
Calculating the 110
  • STEP 2
  • Multiply the percentage of the total TAKS items
    needed to be answered correctly by 110.
  • Example 57.14 X 110 62.86.
  • Therefore, 62.86 of the items need to be
    answered correctly in order to meet the 110
    requirement.

14
WEBSITES
  • Raw Score Conversion Tables
  • http//www.tea.state.tx.us/student.assessment/scor
    ing/convtables/index.html
  • Join the Division of Student Assessment Mailing
    List
  • http//www.tea.state.tx.us/student.assessment/inde
    x.html

15
Criteria 5
  • The student is pregnant or is a parent.

16
Criteria 6
  • The student has been placed in an alternative
    education program during the preceding or current
    school year.

17
Criteria 7
  • The student has been expelled during the
    preceding or current school year.

18
Criteria 8
  • The student is currently on parole, probation,
    deferred prosecution, or other conditional
    release.

19
Criteria 9
  • The student was previously reported as a dropout
    in PEIMS

20
Criteria 10
  • The student is currently LEP

21
Criteria 11
  • The student is in CPS custody or has, during the
    current school year, been referred to CPS by the
    school, courts or police.

22
Criteria 12
  • The student is currently homeless.

23
Definition of Homeless
  • McKinney-Vento imposes a broad new definition of
    homeless that triggers a districts duties
    under the Act. The term homeless children and
    youth means individuals who lack a fixed,
    regular, and adequate nighttime residence.

24
Definition of Homeless
  • This category includes children or youth who
  • Are sharing the housing of other persons due to
    loss of housing, economic hardship, or a similar
    reason
  • Are living in motels, hotels, trailer parks, or
    camping grounds due to the lack of alternative
    adequate accommodations
  • Are living in emergency or transitional shelters
  • Are abandoned in hospitals
  • Are awaiting foster care placement
  • Have a primary nighttime residence that is a
    public or private place not designed for or
    ordinarily used as a regular sleeping
    accommodation for human beings
  • Are living in cars, parks, public spaces,
    abandoned buildings, substandard housing, bus or
    train stations, or similar settings or
  • Are migratory children living in circumstances
    described above

25
Criteria 13
  • The student resided in the preceding school year
    or resides in the current school year in a
    residential placement facility in the district,
    including a detention facility, substance abuse
    treatment facility, emergency shelter,
    psychiatric hospital, halfway house, or foster
    group home.

26
SCE ALLOCATION
  • The initial allocation must be brought before
    your SBDM Committee.
  • The decision on how it will be spent must be
    approved by your SBDM Committee.
  • This information must be included in your CIP.

27
How can I use the money?
  • Upon identification of students, the campus
    coordinator, in collaboration with appropriate
    campus staff, shall ensure that identified
    students are provided appropriate services that
    address the students qualifying criteria.

28
Suggested Programs
  • Intensive remediation services for State
    assessments
  • Extended learning opportunities (e.g. before-,
    during-, and/or after-school tutoring sessions)
  • Basic course extensions (e.g. algebra labs,
    extended writing labs, content mastery-like
    services)
  • Counseling sessions

29
Suggested Programs
  • Peer, teacher, community-member mentoring
    sessions
  • ACT/SAT preparation sessions for identified
    students
  • Teen parenting sessions
  • Training sessions for parents of identified
    students

30
Suggested Programs
  • Intensive, supplemental reading programs
  • Study skills sessions
  • Self-esteem enhancement programs
  • Individualized instruction

31
Suggested Programs
  • Summer enhancement programs
  • Extended early childhood programs
  • Goal-setting sessions
  • Class-size reduction measures

32
Some ways you cant use the money!
  • Gasoline
  • Food
  • Basic supplies for identified students
  • A new marquee
  • Furniture for the teachers lounge
  • New student desks
  • Pay a teacher to referee a volleyball game

33
JUST REMEMBER
  • SCE funds are provided to supplement, not
    supplant, district funding of the regular
    education program.
  • SCE funds are intended to address the needs of
    student who are at-risk of dropping out for the
    purpose of preventing them from dropping out of
    school

34
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