Title: Academic Excellence
1(No Transcript)
2OrchestratingAcademic Excellence
- Center Grove Community School Corporation
3Shared Academic Vision
- To develop the best academic programs for all
Center Grove Community School students. We want
all students to achieve to their highest
potential.
4(No Transcript)
5Curriculum Mapping
- Purpose To share and develop a challenging K-12,
teacher-designed curriculum which avoids gaps and
overlaps in instruction and which documents K-12
learning experiences.
6Curriculum Mapping Status
- Teachers are working to document what is taught
and assessed in each classroom and at each grade
level to avoid gaps or overlaps in instruction. - Teachers have selected the most important Indiana
math standards to teach and assess in each
grading period. - Teachers will repeat the process with
reading/language arts, science and social
studies.
7Curriculum Mapping Status
- Grades 6-12 teachers in each school have selected
the most important Indiana standards to emphasize
in each subject.
8Curriculum Mapping Status
- K-12 teachers are in various stages of developing
tests or other assessments given at the same time
to all students in the same course to check
learning
9Curriculum Mapping Vision
- K-12 teachers will develop a district plan for
reading/language arts (June 2008) - Eventually all K-12 teachers will have for their
grade level/course - District level plans of the most important
standards - Grade or subject plans for instruction
- Tests or assessments that measure the standards
- Shared Assessments that frequently measure
student learning - Additional data from each assessment will be used
to guide instruction.
10Curriculum Mapping Vision
- Teachers will have an updated individual plan
each year. - Students, parents and teachers will be able to
view the district and grade or subject area plans
for the school corporation. - Teacher-led curriculum reviews will occur
frequently to reflect changes in student needs.
11(No Transcript)
12New Reading Adoption(Scott Foresman Reading
Street)
- We believe this series offers the most
comprehensive approach to - increase rigor
- foster independent reading
- provide strategic intervention for struggling
students
13New Reading Adoption(Scott Foresman Reading
Street)
- My Sidewalks is the companion, supporting
intensive intervention program for students with
the greatest needs.
14New Reading Adoption(Scott Foresman Reading
Street)
- The program is based on current reading research
and focuses on the use of - whole-group instruction
- flexible, small group instruction matched to
student needs - independent reading
15New Reading Adoption(Scott Foresman Reading
Street)
- Over 540-960 leveled readers (books written for a
variety of reading levels) are available for each
teacher.
16New Reading Adoption(Scott Foresman Reading
Street)
- Allows for differentiation for high-ability,
at-level, below-level and ENL students using
leveled readers and focused vocabulary
instruction.
17New Reading Adoption(Scott Foresman Reading
Street)
- K-5 textbook adoption was selected by a group of
CG teachers. - They received additional professional development
in reading prior to last years materials
selection.
18Waterford Early-Reading Software
- This software is currently being installed in all
6 elementary buildings. - Financed with a state grant.
19Waterford Early-Reading Software
- Individualized and leveled reading instruction
occurs daily (15-20 minutes) - Supporting materials available for school and/or
home use - Provides remediation, at-level, and accelerated
literacy work from K-1
20Classroom Novels
- Issue To address teacher and parent concerns
about students reading the same book more than
once in different grades. - Results
- Grades 3-6 common novel list created last year
- Two to four common novels were selected and
purchased for each grade
21NCA/PL221 Goals
- This is the year that each school will select new
academic target goals for both NCA accreditation
and for PL221 state evaluation. - Literacy has been a common theme among district
leaders. - Stay tuned as building steering committees select
goals.
22Literacy Audit
- Purpose
- Examine current resources and practices
- Gather information to guide future decisions for
professional development and literacy practices - Recommend a literacy framework
23Literacy Audit
- Consultants have
- observed instruction in each building
- surveyed and/or interviewed parents, students,
teachers and administrators - examined resources and data
24Literacy Audit
- Results of the audit should be available to
administrators in December. - We plan to share this information with the Board
and staff in the second semester.
25Instructional Coaches
- 2.5 literacy coach positions and .5 instructional
coach position have been added at the elementary
level - A special programs coordinator oversees
- Literacy coaches
- Title I program
- High Ability services
- These positions are paid for through grant money.
26(No Transcript)
27English as New Language Learners
- Created 2 full-time teaching positions for ENL
instruction this year - Increased learning materials for ENL students and
teachers - Provided professional development to West Grove
teachers on working with ENL students in the
general classroom.
28High Ability Task Force
- Our goal is to increase services to our K-12 high
ability students. - The state has a new law requiring schools to
identify and provide services to high ability
students in K-12. - Task force groups are developing recommendations
to better serve our students.
29Curriculum, Instruction and Assessment (CIA Cadre)
- This dynamic group of teachers is focused on
professional development that will impact student
learning. - Completed action-research projects
- Attended differentiation conferences and
implemented classroom strategies - Investigating assessment practices
- Developing their leadership skills so they can
positively influence their colleagues
30Technology
- High tech multimedia classrooms to enhance
instruction being piloted by 119 corporation
teachers - Year 1 of a 3-year rollout
- Middle school technology standards
- Epsilen Project online courses and portfolios
- Grade 3 technology education
31Targeted Instructional Support
- OASIS
- Increased number of tutors from 5 in 2005 to 38
in 2007. - Tutors volunteer with K-3 students in 5 of our
elementary schools - Tutors work on literacy skills 30 minutes each
week
32Targeted Instructional Support
- RTI
- Response To Intervention (RTI) is a program to
identify students who struggle with specific
skills and/or behavior. - Provides a daily targeted intervention for 30
minutes. - Purpose is to reduce the number of special
education referrals. - Current interventions target reading.
- Math and behavior interventions will be the next
phase.
33Kindergarten
- Kindergarten Camp
- Funded through the Johnson County CAPE Grant for
early literacy - Students (120) with the greatest academic need
are identified through screening - Students attend K-Camp to learn pre-literacy
skills, phonemic awareness, classroom procedures,
and enjoy reading and writing.
34Kindergarten
- Full Day Kindergarten (FDK) expanded
- 11 sections of FDK are offered. About ½ of all
kindergarten students attend full-day. - Program provides expanded curricular opportunities
35Creating Positive Relationships (CPR)
- We have replaced the Always Changing 5th grade
adolescent education program with the CPR program
to provide more consistency. - CPR has provided a 6th grade program.
- This year the 7th grade program was added in
response to parent requests.
36Summer Remediation Programs
- Funded through state remediation funds last
summer. - A two-week academic jumpstart program provided
additional instruction to students in elementary,
middle and high school. - Instruction focused on math and reading/language
arts.
37Middle School Courses for H.S. Credit
- First year world language courses were offered at
both middle schools for high school credit. - This year Honors Algebra I is now being offered
for high school credit.
38Middle School Programming
- The Middle School Task Force is examining the
best practices of Middle Schools. - Our goal is to develop and implement the BEST
middle school programs for our district.
39High School Redesign
- Has expanded teacher participation in the process
of developing the best high school programs - Is focused on exploring programming options to
maximize student potential - Has representatives visiting Denver, New York,
Houston, and Portland, OR to view sample programs
40High School Redesign
- Parents from the Coalition of Visioneers have
joined high school staff in developing program
direction - Paul Buck has provided leadership and
cohesiveness for the High School Redesign Team.
41CARE
- The CARE alternative high school program offers
all core courses needed for graduation. - Two teachers work full-time with students.
- On-line components provide individualized
instruction to meet student needs. - 30 students participate in this program.
- According to state funding regulations, the
student-teacher ratio can be no greater than
151.
42SATs
- A higher percentage of Center Grove High School
students are taking the SAT than at any other
high school in the county.
43Advanced Placement
- CG successfully completed the national AP audit
last year. - With the addition of AP Spanish, we now have 20
AP courses offered at the high school. - In the past five years, six AP courses have been
added to the high school offerings.
44Advanced Placement
- Brad Timmons, the AP coordinator, actively
recruits students to enroll and complete the
exams. - Mr. Shockley speaks to parent groups at the
middle schools each spring to encourage
enrollment in Honors and AP courses. - Goal To increase the number of CG students
taking AP courses and taking the AP exams.
45National Merit
- Goal To have 20 National Merit finalists within
5 years. - Last year, 1 CG student was named a National
Merit finalist - This year, 5 CG students were named National
Merit finalists - High school administrators are developing a
long-term plan to achieve this goal.
46High School Dual Credit Options
- CGHS offers 11 dual credit courses through area
colleges and universities and is working to
expand offerings - High school administrators have met with 5
post-secondary institutions to explore additional
opportunities.
47(No Transcript)
48Higher Expectations
- Higher expectations (from good to great) have
been set for everyone - A New Teacher Induction program emphasizes high
expectations - Early Release Wednesday provide ongoing
opportunity for staff professional development
49Higher Expectations
- Administrative professional development has
expanded - CG is growing our own administrators through
teacher-leaders - New administrator professional development
supports transition to Center Grove - Administrators are planning their own
Professional Development based on district needs - Several PD opportunities including Cognitive
Coaching, Curriculum Mapping Institute, National
Staff Development Conferences and NCA are
planned.
50Higher Expectations
- Professional development for administrators has
emphasized - Increased rigor of teacher evaluations
- Closer monitoring of new hires
- Classroom walkthrough expectations
- Knowledge of best practices in literacy
- Collegiality and common purpose have accelerated
the growth of the team
51Higher Expectations
- The addition of two elementary assistant
principals has added teacher support and allowed
the principals to monitor instruction more
closely. - We have a focused effort to target recruitment
for ALL POSITIONS to the best and brightest, and
have increased expectations for evaluation and
retention of employees.
52(No Transcript)