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September 26, 2006 Schools in NCLB Restructuring: National Trends Kerstin Carlson Le Floch James Taylor Yu Zhang.

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Presentation on theme: "September 26, 2006 Schools in NCLB Restructuring: National Trends Kerstin Carlson Le Floch James Taylor Yu Zhang."— Presentation transcript:

1 September 26, 2006 Schools in NCLB Restructuring: National Trends Kerstin Carlson Le Floch James Taylor Yu Zhang

2 www.air.org National Studies of NCLB Implementation  Study of State Implementation of Accountability and Teacher Quality under NCLB (SSI-NCLB)  National Longitudinal Study of NLCB (NLS-NCLB)  Data from both studies were published in National Assessment of Title I Interim Report  Study reports forthcoming fall 2006

3 www.air.org National AYP and Identification Database  87,892 schools with valid AYP status and identification status, including schools in restructuring  Includes 50 states and the District of Columbia  Identification for improvement in 2004-05 (based on spring 2004 testing)  Currently adding data on identification for improvement in 2005-06 (based on 2005 testing)

4 www.air.org Contents of the NAYPI Database, continued  Performance on 37 targets, including:  Reading proficiency  Math proficiency  Reading test participation  Math test participation  Other academic indicator  Merged with the Common Core of Data for demographic variables, school level, urbanicity.

5 www.air.org How many schools are in restructuring?  In 2004-05, about 1,200 schools in restructuring  In 2005-06, about 1,600* schools in restructuring  In 2005-06, about 1,000* schools in corrective action, and may move into restructuring in 2006-07 * Estimates from Ed Week report, 9/13/2006

6 www.air.org Which schools enter restructuring?  Most schools identified for improvement are traditionally disadvantaged – high poverty, high minority, large, and urban.  Schools in restructuring show similar patterns.  In absolute numbers, in 2004-05, nearly half of restructuring schools were elementary schools  A greater percent of middle schools were in restructuring in 2004-05 than were elementary or high schools.

7 www.air.org Who attends schools in restructuring?  In 2004-05, a little over 1 million students attended schools in restructuring  Of these students, 60% received free or reduced-price lunch  40% were Hispanic  37% were African-American  11% were white  6% were Asian-American

8 www.air.org Why do schools enter restructuring?  Obviously, schools enter restructuring because they miss AYP targets. So what AYP targets do schools miss?

9 www.air.org Where are restructuring schools located?  The states with the highest numbers of restructuring schools in 2004-05 were: California, Georgia, New York, Michigan, Pennsylvania, Maryland, and Ohio.  21 states had no schools in restructuring in 2004-05  15 districts accounted for nearly half of schools in restructuring  But, about 400 districts had at least one school in restructuring in 2004-05

10 www.air.org What help do schools need?  NLS-NCLB surveys asked school principals what assistance they needed, and whether they received it.  Among principals in schools identified for improvement:  Highest reported needs were for improved professional development for teachers  About half said they received the needed assistance to support parent involvement  About two-thirds received the needed support to address needs of LEP students  About two-thirds received the needed support to address problems of discipline, dropout, and truancy

11 www.air.org Who exits restructuring?  There is hope for schools in restructuring: about 15% of schools in restructuring in 2004-05 actually made AYP for 2003-04.  Other strategies to exit restructuring: by becoming a charter school, grade reconfiguration, reconstitution  We don’t know enough about how schools exit

12 www.air.org Concluding remarks  A challenge particularly for elementary and middle schools  A challenge focused in relatively few large districts in about 10 states  A challenge related to school size  Strategies should be aligned with challenges

13 www.air.org For more information: Kerstin Carlson Le Floch SSI-NCLB Project Director American Institutes for Research 1000 Thomas Jefferson Street, NW Washington, DC 20007 klefloch@air.org


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