Title: The NEASC Accreditation Process
1The NEASC AccreditationProcess
2What Does Accreditation Mean?
- Adherence to Standards established by member
schools regarding the systems, processes, and
practices of school personnel - Demonstration of school improvement based on
steps taken to address evaluation report findings - Adherence to Commission procedures and policies
3Major Phases of the Accreditation Cycle
- Self-Study Phase (1 year) 2007 - 2008
- An in-depth, reflective examination of the
schools educational programs and services based
on the Standards - Hosting a Visit (4 days) Projected Fall - 2008
- A visiting committee of peers will meet with
representatives from all school constituencies
and write an evaluation report - Follow-Up Phase (5 years)
- The action phase of the process during which time
the school is responsible for implementing the
evaluation report
4The Accreditation Ten Year Cycle
5How Will the NEASC Process Improve Student
Learning?
- Assists administrators and teachers in working
toward school improvement - Assures students that their needs are being met
through a quality educational program - Affirms that school board educational policies
are sound - Assures the local citizen that tax dollars are
supporting quality school programs and quality
facility
6How Will the NEASC Process Improve Student
Learning?
- Improved instruction
- Improved organizational effectiveness and
long-term planning - Enables schools to identify strengths and
weaknesses - Fosters teamwork and collegiality
- Improves professional development
- Improves school resources
- Provides effective system for ensuring school
accountability - Offers teachers buy in to use the report findings
as a tool for continued school improvement
7How Will the NEASC Process Improve Student
Learning?
- Provides exposure to new learning trends and
innovations - Increased parental and community support for
school initiatives and involvement - Increased continuity and consistency in best
practices - Leads to better staffing decisions
- Provides exposure to peer evaluators
8Emphasis on Standards
- Accountability for essential learning for all
students - A reflective school culture
- Professional development tied to teaching and
learning needs based on best practice - Strong instructional leadership and resources
- Personalization
- Formative Assessment
- Equity Failure is not an Option
9Overreaching Concepts of NEASC
10Long Term Accreditation Goals
- Engage the professional staff in using the
Standards to impact teaching and learning - Use the accreditation process as a foundation to
effect changes/initiatives to benefit students,
professional staff, parents and community - Infuse the Mission and Expectations into the
daily life of the school - Use the Mission and Expectations to guide
decision making processes
11The Essential Question
- To what extent does our school adhere to each of
the indicators in each Standard?
12Required Tasks to Complete Self-Study
- All faculty are organized into 7 committee
teams, representing a team for each standard - Each committee is responsible for gathering
evidence, conducting surveys and questionnaires,
analyzing current practices and writing
reflective essays in response to specific
questions. - Each team must collect and organize artifacts for
the site visit.
1306-07 Timeline to Address EWHSFocus on Teaching
and Learning
- Goal
- To evaluate the structure of how we organize and
deliver instruction to produce the graduate we
envision.
- Activities
- Fall 06 - High School Reform Framework shared
with ATM, HS Leadership, HS Staff - Fall/Winter 06-07 - Development of HS Scheduling
Committee - Ongoing Meetings
- Staff Survey
- Research Best Practices
- Visitation to South Windsor
- Collaboration with Union
14Next Steps
- July 07
- Run Mock Schedules on Rediker
- Analyze Strengths and Challenges of Each Mock
Schedule - Fall 07
- Discuss with Union, Faculty and all
Administration - Present Findings and Recommendations to BOE
- Pilot/Implement Recommendations in 08-09
15Proposed One Year Alternative Schedule
- Monthly Two Hour Delayed Opening
- Second Thursday of Each Month
- September 6
- October 11
- November 8
- December 13
- January 10
- February 14
- March 13
- April 10
- May 8
- June 5 (1st Thursday)
- Two Hour Delayed Rotation Schedule
- A 930 1007
- B C Periods Eliminated
- D 1011 1057
- E 1101 1225
- F 1229 115
- G - 1 19 205
16Scheduling Advantages
- Instructional time remains within DRG and state
average - Product of the time spent by teachers will result
in an increase of rigor in instruction for our
students - Research supports a later opening for teens
- Union Support
- Change does not impact contract
- Older siblings will be home with younger siblings
to help with AM bussing - Adequate time to accomplish NEASC requirements
17Scheduling Disadvantages
- Decrease of a maximum of 20 hours of
instructional time - Possible parental inconvenience
- Scheduling of Busses