Title: P-12 Education in Imperial County 2006
1P-12 Education in Imperial County2006
- Imperial County Office of Education
- Presented by
- John D. Anderson, Superintendent of Schools
2Enrollment
3Imperial County High School Graduation Rates
4API Growth Target
5I.C. Schools Meeting AYP
6California High School Exit Examination (CAHSEE)
Estimated Imperial County Cumulative Passing
Rates for the Class of 2006
English-Language Arts
Mathematics
California Cumulative Passing Rates for E/LA and
Math are 88
Includes Community (Alt. Ed) and Continuation
Schools
7Imperial County Average SAT Scores
8Facilities
- Completed two cycles of visits to Decile 1-3
schools for compliance with the Williams Lawsuit
Settlement Requirements. - County schools are in good condition.
9Schools Under Construction and Planning Stages
- Central Union High School District 1 Planning
- McCabe 2 Planning, 1 Building
- El Centro Elementary 2 Planning
- Brawley Union High School 1 Planning
- Brawley Elementary 1 Planning
- Seeley Elementary 1 Planning
- Heber 1 Building
- Calexico 1 High School Planning, 2 Elementary
Planning, 1 Middle Planning - Holtville 1 Elementary Planning
- Imperial 1 Middle School Building, 1 Elementary
Planning
10Fiscal Challenges Related to Facilities
- Funding Gap
- Typical Elementary School (600 students) the
funding gap is approximately 6000/student -
- Example Cost to build elementary school
13,800,000 (23,000/student) - State
contribution 10,200,000 - Funding gap
lt3,600,000gt - State Allocation Board Rate Increase
- Last years increase was 11
- This years increase was 4.6
- The actual average inflation cost of construction
for each of the last three years is 15-20 - 5-6 years
- 7-8 million to 13-15 million for an elementary
school - 30 million to 70 million for a high school
- Prevailing Wage
- Prevailing wage causes the cost of school
construction to be increased by 25.
11Fiscal
- Equalization
- 15 of our 16 districts eligible for equalization
- Magnolia only district not eligible
- Virtually all of Imperial County ADA in eligible
districts
12Professional Development
- AB 466 Math and Reading/Language Arts for
Teachers - AB 75 Curriculum, Technology and Leadership for
Administrators - BTSA/Induction for Teachers with Preliminary
Certification - Partnership for Student Success for School
Leadership Teams
13Support for English Language Learners (ELL) 2006
- ELL emphasis for our Partnerships
- 6 elementary schools and 7 secondary schools in
Partnerships for Student Success, a school
coaching initiative - Focused Approach and Secondary Academic
Language Training through our California Reading
and Literature Project - Certification preparation through Bilingual
Teacher Training Program -
14Migrant Education, Region VI
- 13 Imperial Valley Districts
- Brawley Elementary School District Brawley
Union School District - Calexico Unified School District Calipatria
Unified School District - Central Union High School District El Centro
Elementary School District - Heber Elementary School District Holtville
Unified School District - Imperial Unified School District Meadows Union
School District - Seeley Union School District Westmorland Union
School District - San Pasqual Valley Elementary School District
-
- Migrant Children 9,999
- Migrant Families 3,500
- Services Provided Medical, dental, optical,
educational support, drop-out prevention, and
outdoor educational experience
15Regional Occupational Program
- 45 business and industry driven courses
- WASC accredited
- 200 business partners
- 5000 youth and 1500 adults served during past 3
years - Yearly business input for curriculum
16Regional Occupational Program
- Provides career preparation in workforce
development - Responds to community needs and labor market
demands - Employees - industry trained instructors
17ROP Challenges
- ADA Cap
- NCLB Compliance for teachers
- Limitations serving youth under 16
- Difficulty in securing UC a-g course approval
- Encroachment of student time for CAHSEE
18Current Preschool Information
- Child Development Centers 80 serving 3,214
children - Family Child Care Homes 304 serving 3,078
children - Total number of Licensed Child Care slots 6,292
- ICOE Programs 16 Centers / 5 Even Start Sites
serving 500 children - Alternative Payment Program for child care for
1,772 children each month -
- 375,000 per month to child care providers
19Resource Development
- 27 competitive state, federal, and
- foundation grants supporting all aspects of
- education
- Academic
- Social/Emotional
- School Readiness
- School Safety
- College Preparedness
20Interagency Steering Committee (ISC) MEMBERSHIP
I.C. Office of Employment Training
218 Student Well-Being and Family Resource Centers
- Meeting health, mental health, social service and
academic support needs of students - Providing case management, prevention and
intervention activities, probation referrals,
home visits, family assessments and outside
referrals
22P-16 Council
- Purpose
- To formalize leadership for a
- collaborative and comprehensive
- regional approach to promote a college-
- going culture to increase eligibility,
- admittance, and attendance at post-
- secondary institutions for Imperial
- County students.
-
23P-16 Council Representatives
- Brawley Union High School District
- Brawley Elementary School District
- CA Commission for Children First
- CalSOAP
- Central Union High School District
- Heber School District
- Holtville Unified School District
- Imperial Irrigation District
- Imperial County Office of Education
- I.C. Partnership of High Education
- Imperial Valley College
- Imperial Valley Press
- IVROP
- Rabobank
- SDSU/Imperial Valley Campus
- Tyler Insurance
- The Gas Company/Sempra Utilities
- University of California
24Imperial County UC Eligibility Rate by Year
25Number of Imperial CountyStudents Enrolled in
CSU/UC by Year
26Mexican and California Education Partnership
- Purpose Grant 9-12th grade immigrant students
credit for - equivalent course content enabling them to focus
on English - language acquisition.
- Imperial County Curriculum Team aligned Mexican
- curriculum to California content standards.
- Imperial County schools will give students high
school credit - for courses completed in Mexican high
schools. - Imperial County Office of Education will pilot
this initiative in - the fall of 2006 with participating school
districts in their - region and evaluate its impact in schools.
- Partners include UCCP, local school districts,
Colegio de - Bachilleres, and Mexicos Department of
Education. -
27Online Charter School
- Partnership with the University of California
- Builds upon our joint work to provide greater
opportunity for students
28(No Transcript)
29Imperial Valley Technology Authority (IVTA)
Connected Sites (cumulative) IVTA Membership 26
agencies 98 sites
ICOE Pilot Project 2 sites
Borderlink 7 sites
Borderlink 4 sites
Borderlink 2 sites
30- State program to
- provide
- Network Connectivity
- Internet Services
- Teaching and Learning Application Coordination
- Statewide Videoconferencing Coordination and
Support
31K-12 HSN Services
- K-12 HSN provides direct service to
- 74 (7,039) of California schools
- 89 (887) of districts
- 100 (58) of county offices of education
- 4,792,263 students
- Legislative and finance support is needed to
ensure service continues
32Current and Future Challenges and Opportunities
- Funding for K-12 High Speed Network
- Preschool for All
- After School Education and Safety Program (Prop
49) - Facilities for ICOE Programs
33Excellence is a journey, not a place to
be. Author Unknown