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Published byGinger Sanders Modified over 9 years ago
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Supporting HQT Plans: Shawn Hawkins Teacher Quality Coordinator Richard Lawrence Director, Office of Title II, III & System Support Robert Mellace Troops to Teachers, Title II, and RLIS Coordinator
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“Plans are nothing, planning is everything”- Dwight D. Eisenhower
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Develop a HQT Plan Review, verify and analyze data Plan for classes to have HQT – Recruiting – Retaining – retraining Implement the plan – Communicate
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Develop a HQT Plan Review, verify and analyze data
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HQT Monitoring Reports Chart identifying issues relating to: – Certification – Highly Qualified Teacher Data – Certified List – Other required records
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Human Resources for Understanding the Data County/School Experts (not just Title I/II) – Personnel Director/Certification Officer – Principals – WVEIS County Contacts – Special Education Director – Curriculum Specialists
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Planning For HQT Clean-up the data – Verify: – course assignments – teacher certification for courses – SSN issues – no teacher or courses identified – course coding Analyze the data – Charts, comparison of similar schools/counties/state, programs and impact (use actual numbers)
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The Existing Plan What is working? – Improvement and impact What problems still exist? – Ideas, rationale to continue What new problems/issues do we have? – Ideas /programs supported by research Communicate! – Counties and the WVDE, any new ideas?
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Planning Organizer
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County Highly Qualified Teacher Data Resources HQT 2008 HQT 2009 HQT 2010 2007-2010 Reports by Teacher, Subject or Exceptionality 2007-2010 Reports by Teacher, Subject or Exceptionality
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Sample Comparison of HQT Data
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HQT by Elementary Programmatic Level
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HQT by Middle Programmatic Level
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HQT by High Programmatic Level
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HQT Content Areas over 4 years
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Sample HQT Monitoring Report Sample Monitoring Chart Sample Monitoring Chart (Narrative included) Sample Monitoring Chart (Narrative included)
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Personnel Data Report 2009 Report (pages 79-80) (Substitutes not included)
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Sample Documentation (Substitutes, First-Class/Full-Time Permit & Out-of-Field Authorization) School Name Teacher Name AND/OR Course Code/Course Name Actions (OOF, Permit, Alt. Cert) Additional FundingTimeline of Expected Completion School ATeacher C Course Code/Course Name OOF Reading Spec.(cert. Elem). Already enrolled at MU (optional) Reimbursement (State out-of-funds letter 12/29/2010) Stipend ($___) Expected completion May 2013 School BTeacher D Course Code/Course Name First-Class/Full-Time Permit Multi-Cat & English (restricted) Enrolling at WVU (optional) Recruited from sub list (optional) Waiver Renewal 2010 (optional) $0Expected completion May 2011
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Develop a HQT Plan Plan for classes to have HQT by: Recruiting Retaining Retraining
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Tuition Reimbursement Enhances the Knowledge of: Pedagogy Content Student Behavior and Development Best Instructional Practices Best Assessment Practices Classroom Management
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Tuition Reimbursement as Part of an HQT Plan will: Increase the % of classes taught by HQTs Improve school culture Improve teacher effectiveness Increase student learning Increase student achievement
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Elements of Strong Tuition Reimbursement Policies 1.Needs driven eligibility guidelines 2.Application procedures 3.Budgets for the HQT plan 4.Accountability and follow-up 5.Communication strategy
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1. Needs Driven Reimbursement Targets Determine targets through data Critical-need core subject areas Schools with low % classes taught by HQTs Schools with high poverty
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1. Needs Driven Reimbursement Targets (cont.) Schools with high turnover Certification renewal Authorizations in high-need subject areas Endorsement in high need subject areas
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1. Needs Driven Reimbursement Targets (cont.) Certification if on permit or alternative Do not reimburse if no commitment to HQT
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2. Well-Designed Applications Establish who is eligible Establish the priority of those eligible Summarize the policy List required documentation Establish timelines
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2. Well-Designed Applications (cont.) Establish repayment conditions Include assurance courses lead to HQT Establish limits for out-of-state tuition Require signature of the applicant
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3. Purposeful and Adequate Budgets Identify multiple sources of funding Consider requirements of the funds Consider third party agreements with IHE
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3. Purposeful and Adequate Budgets (cont.) Consider Scholarships Consider Grants Consider Transition to Teaching Utilize Troops to Teachers
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Develop a HQT Plan Implement the plan
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4. Accountability, Verification and Follow-Up Strategies Verify grades and hours Verify that classes lead to HQT status Follow-up on repayment conditions Verify progress toward graduation date
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Retention Strategies Leadership training Distributed Leadership – collaborative teams Rigorous, job embedded, professional development
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Retention Strategies Tuition support for certificate renewal Administrative support – For those with expiring certificates Ensure advanced notification for renewal
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5. Communicating the Policy List critical core subject areas annually Publish high-need school list annually – Website- E-mail – Newsletter- Meetings – Posters- Webinar – New teacher orientations
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5. Communicating the Policy Differentiate marketing of tuition reimbursement by: – School – Teacher – Subject – Source
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The Difference…
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Suggestions for HQT Plan Improvement? Individually assess district policies/data Identify strengths Identify weaknesses Identify how the plan might be improved
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Questions? Richard Lawrence – rlawrenc@access.k12.wv.us rlawrenc@access.k12.wv.us Shawn Hawkins – shawkins@access.k12.wv.us shawkins@access.k12.wv.us Robert Mellace – rmellace@access.k12.wv.us rmellace@access.k12.wv.us
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