Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
Published byStanley Little Modified over 9 years ago
1
Managing the New Graduation Requirements: Lessons from the Field Puyallup School District Everett School District Tacoma School District
3
Focus for today To display the work of three districts which have implemented systems to assure all students have the opportunity to meet the graduation requirements for the class of 2008 and beyond.
4
Framing Question What are your district, schools, and classrooms doing different or differently to assure that all students in the class of 2008 and beyond have the opportunity to meet the new graduation requirements?
5
A Time to Write! What are the obstacles you, your district, schools, and/or classrooms face when assuring all students in the class of 2008 and beyond have the opportunity to meet the new graduation requirements? What are the strategies you, your district, schools, and/or classrooms are using to assure all students in the class of 2008 and beyond have the opportunity to meet the new graduation requirements?
6
Puyallup School District On-Time Graduation Specialist Kimberlee Armstrong, Rogers Lisa Kusche, Emerald Ridge Angie Reed, Puyallup
7
Three Comprehensive High Schools Grades 10-12 Governor John R. Rogers 1700 Puyallup 1600 Emerald Ridge 1500 Walker Alternative: Grades 9-12
8
Our Goal: Increase On Time Graduation If the current cohort graduation rate is 80.5%, for the class of 2010, approximately 300 students will not graduate with their class.
9
Our goal: Decrease Dropouts Puyallup School District’s most recent dropout rate is 6.4%.
10
Credit Deficient Students 1 st Semester Sophomores- less than 4 credits 1 st Semester Juniors- less than 10 credits 1 st Semester Seniors- less than 16 credits
11
Credit Deficient and Special Education What percentage of credit deficient students have Individualized Education Plans? 10 th Graders – 25% 11 th Graders- 38% 12 Graders- 16%
12
Our Goal: Get Students Back on Track Work with Counseling Team to enroll students in after school credit retrieval courses. Delay electives and have credit retrieval within daily schedule. Class of 2011: Required Credit Retrieval Course for those with less than 4 credits. There is hope!
13
WASL and WASL Options School Assessment Coordinator Work with Principal to identify and monitor those who have not yet met WASL standards. COE courses Student placement Staff support
14
CAA Options 50 Seniors are enrolled in a Collection of Evidence class for reading and/or writing and will retake the reading and/or writing portion of the WASL. 400 Seniors are enrolled in a math class and will retake the math portion of the WASL in the Spring. Approximately 30 seniors are doubling up on math second semester.
15
COE– Making It Work In Your Building Leigh Ann Mahaffie – Puyallup School District
16
Who should do the COE? Deeper, richer, harder, and more rigorous than WASL Not for everyone
17
Our Results Spring WASL Score 2007 Number who passed CoE Total Number of CoEs Percent Passing CoE 334-3494945% 352-370244159% 372-390457461% 391-398273479% 400-430202483%
18
PSD Final (by Teacher) Teacher Number Number who passed COE Total Number of COEs Percent Passing COE Teacher 181942.1 Teacher 2333497.1 Teacher 388100.0 Teacher 4252986.2 Teacher 5507269.4 Teacher 62316.5
19
PSD Results 193 CoEs were submitted by PSD (out of 700 statewide) Range of scores from 26-114 Approximately 65% of our students met standard (50% statewide) –School 1 49/6180% –School 2 25/29 86% –School 3 52/10351%
20
Math Approach Last Year Common Vision WASL Modules Class Item Creation OSPI approval
21
PSD This Year One core package of 7 items and a pool of extras 2 items for each content and process strand Two Classes –WASL Modules & Segmented WASL Some items to be completed second semester in Segmented WASL class On Demand/Non On-Demand Sharing statewide
22
PSD Next Year Teachers’ Suggestions –Segmented WASL-Year Long COE Core set of 10 or 11 simpler items –WASL Modules - no COE –COE Semester Class Srs 1 st semester/Jrs 2 nd semester Core set of 7 complex problems
23
What Does It Look Like? (COE class) Prep Lessons Item – Most items multi-strand Revision 1-2 Week process –Stack items if you can (Ice Cream Containers leads to Sculpture Design or Painting Houses and Concert Tour Planning) Backward Design
24
What Does It Look Like? (Segmented WASL class) Prep Lessons – Seg WASL materials Item – Most items single-strand Revision 1-2 Week process –Dependent on the unit, activities chosen, Segmented WASL test Backward Design
25
Revision Day/Tracking Whole Group vs. Select Group Tracking Chart
29
Things to Take Away From Today Best teachers for resistant learners Pay them well/Extra Planning/COE Coordinator Scheduling There is help! –OSPI –ESD –me
30
Contact Information Leigh Ann Mahaffie 253-435-2830 mahaffla@puyallup.k12.wa.us
31
Managing The New Graduation Requirements Barriers to On Time Graduation Terry Edwards Everett Public Schools tedwards@everettsd.org WERA Spring Conference March 26-28, 2008
32
Goals NCLB 85% of On-time Graduates by 2014 Community/Parents 100% of their children right now Work Force Prepare students for entry into high skilled and high wage jobs College Students ready to engage in college level course work without remediation Board 100% of students graduate when they have met standard
33
High School Graduation An educational mandate An economic necessity A civil right A moral imperative
34
Graduation Definitions Graduation The completion of required course work and assessments leading to a high school diploma On Time Graduation The completion of required course work and assessments leading to a high school diploma four years after commencing grade 9.
35
The Graduation Question Graduation for the Individual Yes / No Graduation for the District OnTime Rate / Extended Grad Rate
36
On Time Graduation Rate Graduating = Initial Gr 9 + Net + Drop Cohort Enrollment Transfers Outs
37
On Time Graduation Rate # Graduates (N) # Cohort (D)
38
To Improve On Time Graduation Rate OTG = N / D 1. Decrease the number of students in the cohort (the denominator) 2. Increase the number of graduates (the numerator) *Washington Mathematics Standard 6.3
39
To Improve Your Denominator Audit your business practices around the completion of your P-210 Verify and reduce drop out numbers U – D – C codes Review building practices in track record requests for transfer students, make sure you include your special education department Verify student continued enrollment (RSVP) Personalized outreach to prevent and recover drop outs Success coordinator Counselor teacher Review district variance practices
40
Summary by School P210 C’s, D’s and U’s 2004-05 to 2006-07 School Year Source: OSPI Core Student Record System (CSRS) http://eds.ospi.k12.wa.us/CSRS Reports, Enrollment Reports, Enrollment Reports, P210http://eds.ospi.k12.wa.us/CSRS December 14, 2007
41
Everett Public School Class of 2008 Inactive Cohort (2004 – 2008) U, C or D Unknown Drop Out Complete Cascade HS 5510 Everett HS 29120 Jackson HS 2770 Sequoia HS 9371 District Total 204271 Source: Pentamation March25,2008
42
Cumulative Barriers to Graduation Graduation is the result of meeting each of the individual requirements
43
Cumulative Barriers to Graduation WASL Mastery: Reading / Writing / Math* Argumentative Paper Culminating Exhibition GRADE *Math Mastery or continued enrollment and success in challenging math course work
44
Ways to Improve Your Numerator 1. Increase your number of graduates!! Increase student achievement from the first day of school 2. Review District Policy and Procedures for Graduation 3. What are your district’s barriers / requirements to graduation? 4. Do you have the right barriers / requirements 5. What policies are in place in your district that create additional challenges to students?
45
Overt: Barriers / Requirements Credits WASL Argumentative Paper Culminating Exhibition
46
Covert: Barriers / Requirements Attendance policy Grading practices Registration process Master schedule
47
Missing: Barriers / Requirements Do you have the appropriate requirements in place that will allow students to meet the ultimate goal of high school graduation Increase course rigor Add additional math requirement Define high school math sequence Increase middle school relevance by focusing on high school readiness Algebra Geometry Washington State History
48
Help Overcome Barriers / Requirements WASL credit recovery Directed athletics ROTC Marching band Private music lessons
49
Overt Barriers / Requirements Culminating exhibition: Argumentative Paper History: 12 years ago 8 years ago Today Impact: Lessons Learned:
50
Overt Barriers / Requirements Credits: Red – Yellow – Green Establish a consistent data tracking process/report What we did Determine biggest obstacles High failure rate classes High failure rate staff Focused attention through district wide On Time Graduation Committee Developed the 1-F strategy Enhanced parent communication about academic success and progress to graduation
51
Overt Barriers / Requirements What we did Pyramid of intervention Additional support classes Extended day programs Success Coordinators Drug Alcohol Interventionists In School academic support What we are finding: Preliminary progress
52
Everett Public Schools Comparison of Red-Yellow-Green by Grade Level Semester 1 in 2006 and 2007
53
Overt Barrier / Requirements WASL Class of 2008 Performance 1130 active students 1012 met standard in Reading (90%) 995 met standard in Writing (88%) January 2008
54
Overt Barrier / Requirements WASL Does this mean 10% or student will not graduate due to WASL performance? What will be the impact of credit and WASL performance on graduation?
55
Cascade High School Class of 2008 386 Students Reading (January 2008)
56
Cascade High School Class of 2008 386 Students Writing (January 2008)
57
Cascade High School Class of 2008 27 Students Not Met WASL - Reading District Data March 2008
58
Cascade High School Class of 2008 26 Students Not Met WASL - Writing District Data March 2008
59
Everett Public Schools 2008 Special Education Graduates
60
Extended On-time Graduation Rate 2002-03 through 2006-07 District and School Totals
61
What does this mean for future work? Credit is the highest barrier to OTG Less then 10% of students have not met standard on Reading or Writing WASL Nearly 20% of student have not met standard in credit requirements If a student has been successful in rigorous course work they will be successful on WASL Ensure that students are enrolled in rigorous course work Ensure that students are successful in those rigorous courses
62
What does this mean for future work? We need to help students and teachers be successful the first time a class is attempted Shift grading culture to all can meet standard Be aware of the cost of credit remediation We need to create opportunities within the 4 year OTG window to recover “lost” credits
63
What does this mean for future work? We have State support and District emphasis on ensuring WASL performance but little to no support for helping students recover “lost” credits Focus on WASL improves WASL Focus on earning credit improves both credit trajectory and WASL performance
64
What does this mean for future work? Reevaluate the core question: Focus on graduation not its individual requirements
65
Organizing & Implementing for Student Success By Kimberly Müeller and Michael Power Tacoma Public Schools
66
What did we do to address the new graduation requirements? Creating: The structures and systemsCreating: The structures and systems Supporting: The students and adultsSupporting: The students and adults Re-examining: Is it working?Re-examining: Is it working?
67
GALT Guidance & Counseling Curriculum & Instruction Research & Evaluation Public Relations High School Ed. Coordinator Graduation Req. Assis. Superintendents Creating: GALT (Graduation Advisory Leadership Team)
68
and... supporting students on-site… Student GSS (Graduation Support Specialist) CounselorsAdministratorsTeachers CPL (Culminating Project Lead) Career Counselor
69
and supporting the adults working in the system… GSS & CPL GALT Coordinator of Grad Requirements
70
Re-examining: Is it working? Reflecting on individual performanceReflecting on individual performance Examining system and the supportsExamining system and the supports Re-evaluating the resourcesRe-evaluating the resources
71
Framing Question What are your district, schools, and classrooms doing different or differently to assure that all students in the class of 2008 and beyond have the opportunity to meet the new graduation requirements?
Similar presentations
© 2025 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.