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WELCOME to our TITLE I PARENT Meeting
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Title I at Schuylkill Valley Elementary School
Success For All Readers
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Purpose Provide information about our school’s Title I program for parents of students participating in the program.
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Why Should I Know About Title I?
Because it can make a difference in many lives! Title I can help: Children achieve more in school and feel better about themselves. Parents can have more say about their children’s education. Teachers benefit from the suggestions and support that parents offer and from the satisfaction of seeing kids achieve.
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How Title I Works The federal government provides funding to states each year for Title I. To get the funds, each state must submit a plan describing: What all children are expected to know and be able to do. The high-quality standards of performance that all children are expected to meet. Ways to measure progress.
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How Title I Works, Continued
State educational agencies (SEAs) send the money to school districts based on the numbers of low-income families. The local school district (called a Local Education Agency, or LEA) identifies eligible schools and provides Title I resources.
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Your Title I program needs you to help:
Determine program goals Plan and carry out programs Evaluate programs Work with your child at home Work in school as a volunteer
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The annual Title I meeting is the place to start!
It’s the perfect time to: Learn more about Title I. Learn about your rights and responsibilities as a Title I parent. Meet other parents and teachers. Begin a process of communication and cooperation between parents and schools.
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Title I Reading Staff
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S.V.E.S. Reading Staff Title I Coordinator
Lori Messner Reading Specialist Title I Coordinator Parent Activities Deb Werstler Reading Specialist Julie Innis-James Part-time Reading Specialist Title I Aides Melanie LeRoy, Melissa Wild, Christa Gebely, Beth Carlson
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Ms. Messner
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Ms. Messner Contact Information
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Mrs. Werstler
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Mrs. Carlson
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Mrs. Gebely
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Mrs. James
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Mrs. LeRoy
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Mrs. Wild
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Teacher Qualifications
Highly qualified teachers requirements: Must hold at least a bachelor’s degree Must hold a valid PA teaching certificate Teachers demonstrate subject matter competency for the core content area they teach by passing rigorous state exams
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Paraprofessional Qualifications
To be highly qualified, instructional paraprofessionals must have: Completed two years of higher education study, or have an Associate Degree, or taken a formal assessment Take 20 hours of Professional Development annually to keep them informed and current
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Parents Rights under NCLB
The right to know the qualifications of your child’s teacher. Right to request opportunities to meet regularly with staff for parent involvement. Right to participate in decisions affecting your child. You have the right to request the qualifications of your child’s teacher and any other teacher or paraprofessionals that work with your child.
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PSSA Proficiency Levels
Your child will be taking the PA System of School Assessment (PSSA) in grades 3-8. Four Proficiency Levels for the PSSA Advanced Proficient Basic Below Basic Our goal (and the State’s goal) is for your student to reach the Proficient or Advanced level on the PSSA.
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Performance Report The federal government requires that all students in our school meet performance standards. The state has suspended the numerical score to schools based on P.S.S.A. performance and other school data for this year.
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2015 PSSA Results
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PSSA 3rd grade English Lang. Arts Adv % Prof % %Proficient 63.9% Basic % Below % % Not Proficient 36.1%
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Results Continued 4th Grade English Language Arts Adv % Prof % Percent Proficient 61.1% Basic % Below % Percent Not Proficient 38.9%
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Local Performance Report
Since the P.S.S.A. is only given in third through fifth grades, schools are required to give local assessments, as well. All of our students were tested at the end of last year in the following areas: Oral Reading Fluency, Accuracy and Retell(DIBELS Next) Developmental Reading Assessment (DRA) First-graders had an extra DIBELS Next test: Nonsense Word Fluency
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Local Performance report
K 81.2% PROF. 84.5% 10.4% BASIC 12% 8.4% BEL.OW 3.5% 1ST 76.4% PROF. 73.3% 10.1% BASIC 7.9% 13.5% BELOW 18.8% 2ND 84.5% PROF. 90.4% 7.1% BASIC 3.8% 8.4% BELOW 5.7%
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CONTINUED RD 84.3% PROF. 80.7% 7.8% BASIC 10.6% 7.8% BELOW 8.7% 4TH 81.6% PROF. 78.7% 10.2% BASIC 13.3% 8.2% BELOW 8%
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Title I Selection Process
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Students are selected through the S. V. S. D
Students are selected through the S.V.S.D. Title I Student Selection Process. This process begins in the spring of the preceding year and combines teacher recommendation and assessment results. The screenings include curriculum-based assessments, performance assessments and benchmark assessments.
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The screening includes:
oral reading fluency and accuracy (DIBELS Next DORF) DIBELS Next NWF, PSF, FSF reading comprehension assessment STAR Developmental Reading Assessment (D.R.A.)*** Teacher Recommendation *** Fountas and Pinell starting in Fall 2015
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A student may also be selected through parent requests and through Child Study Team recommendations when a need is identified. During the school year students may be targeted for interventions based on data-analysis-team decisions.
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Parent Advisory Council
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Purposes of the P.A.C. To allow parents the opportunity to make program improvement suggestions To provide parents with information regarding program requirements, regulations, provisions To conduct an annual evaluation of the content To develop and update the Parent Involvement Policy and the School-Home Compact
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Parent Involvement Policies
Parents will be involved in the planning, design, and implementation of the Title I program through the work of the Parent Advisory Council. Parental suggestions and recommendations regarding the development, operation, and evaluation of the program will be given serious consideration for Title I changes and and improvements.
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Parent Involvement Policy
Here is a copy of our current Title I Parent Involvement Policy. Please take a few moments to look over it. Feel free to comment or ask questions. Shall we approve it as is? Or do you have any suggestions for change? At S.V.E.S. the policy is reviewed at our annual meeting. Revisions take place at your suggestion. The policy is updated and approved each fall.
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Title I teachers are available to attend parent/teacher conferences.
Parents will always be welcome to make arrangements to visit Title I classes. A notification/permission letter is sent to the parents of each child selected to receive Title I support.
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Title I at S.V.E.S.
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S.V.’s 2014/2015 Title I Program This year’s Title I program will focus on grades K, 1, 2. 1st grade: 16 students 2nd grade: 30 students Kindergarten to be identified mid-year Current Total: 46 students
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TITLE I LEARNING COMPACT
We believe that the parent, the child, and the school should form a partnership in the very important business of improving the learning success of the student. We have developed a Learning Compact which the parent, the child, and the reading specialist are asked to sign. This is a voluntary agreement that defines the goals and responsibilities of teachers, parents, and students as equal partners in learning . The compact is one way to help carry out the school’s policy process.
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In-Class Title I Support
In accordance with ESEA recommendations, the Title I program at Schuylkill Valley Elementary School will primarily provide in-class supplemental reading support, while using a pull-out model when appropriate. Title I students work in the regular classroom in small, flexible groups during core reading instruction. During the WIN time students work in various small groups in their classroom on targeted skills.
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What support is given? The Title I teacher collaborates with the classroom teacher to decide how to best support the Title I student. Your child’s classroom teacher is the person responsible for planning classroom instruction for your student. This might include: assessment and evaluation reinforcement of vocabulary or grammar skills practice with the focus-comprehension strategy assistance with writing assignments word rings a research-validated intervention program ( Read Naturally, Reading Mastery, Soar to Success, Orton Gillingham, Corrective Reading) fluency practice guided reading groups
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Kindergarten Kindergarten students are screened during the first full week of school using the DIBELS NEXT assessment. Students work in small groups during the WIN time block each day. The goal is to catch reading difficulties early and see if we can intervene successfully. Interventions at this level include , Language for Learning, Fundations, Soar to Success, Lexia.
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First Grade Students work in small groups during the WIN time block each day. Additionally, during the 120 minutes of core reading instruction a reading staff member works in each of the classes regularly. If needed, intervention programs your student may encounter include Fundations, Reading Mastery, Read Naturally, Language for Learning, Early Success, Soar to Success, Lexia, Orton Gillingham, Wonder Works.
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Second Grade A reading staff member works with second grade students during the core reading instruction and WIN time. Some children also have word rings and work for 5-10 minutes each day with a reading staff member. Interventions on this level include Reading Mastery, Read Naturally, Early Success, and Soar to Succes, Wilson Language Learning., Wonder Works.
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Wonders Our school is in the secondyear of the implementation of Wonders, our new reading program. There is a component designed for use in intervention groups. Your child may also be working on that intervention., called Wonder Works.
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Information Information about which program your child is using should come home with him/her in the form of a letter from me. If you do not receive it or would like further information, copies of the letters are on my spot on the website under Programs.
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Your Title I Program needs you!
Learn about your local Title I program. Take advantage of what Title I has to offer. Get involved in your child’s education. You, your children, and S.V.E.S. can be a winning team. Thank you for coming.
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Wrap-up Questions Comments Concerns
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