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2009 CSAP and Growth Model Achievement Results News Conference Friday, Aug. 7, 2009
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Introduction Jo O’Brien, Assistant Commissioner, Standards and Assessment
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Welcome & Overview Dwight D. Jones, Commissioner of Education
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Barbara O’Brien, Lt. Governor of Colorado
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Bill Ritter Jr., Governor of Colorado
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Bruce Benson, President, University of Colorado
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Peggy Littleton, Colorado State Board of Education
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2008-2009 School Year Results Jo O’Brien, Assistant Commissioner, Standards and Assessment
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Reading Performance
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Writing Performance
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Math Performance
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Science Performance
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Overall Performance Observations Third and Fourth graders made good gains in both reading and writing Gaps still remain for Free and Reduced Lunch eligible students Gaps persist for minority students CSAPA students made gains in fifth, seventh and tenth grades English Language Learners are progressing and exceed the general population in many grades
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Overall Performance Observations Science shows improvement in all grades Seventh grade had very strong improvement in reading and writing and math Hispanic students were up in writing in all grades ACT scores for eleventh grade are up in Science Reasoning, Math and Reading
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2008-2009 School Year Results Richard Wenning, Associate Commissioner
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Changing Conversations About Learning SchoolView and The Colorado Growth Model
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Growing Enough to Keep Up at Proficient
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Fewer Low-income Students Keeping up
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Growing Enough to Move Up to Advanced
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Our Challenge: Students making enough growth to catch up to Proficient Number of students below Proficient in 2008 - 143,813 in Reading - 210,473 in Writing - 212,994 in Math
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Growing Enough to Catch up to Proficient
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Our Biggest Challenge: Students catching up from Unsatisfactory to Proficient Number of students Unsatisfactory in 2008 - 47,909 in Reading - 28,128 in Writing - 82,167 in Math
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Growing Enough to Catch up from Unsatisfactory to Proficient
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Average Student Growth Rate (Median Student Growth Percentile) 50th percentile growth: state average = year’s growth in year’s time Not necessarily enough growth
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Changing Conversations: Schools with High Sustained Growth Conversation we need as a state: How do schools sustain high growth rates year after year? –Shine light on these schools –Inquire, document and disseminate their practices
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Schools with High Sustained Growth 161 schools with 60th percentile growth or better over three years serving 69,000 students in 49 districts 28% of schools with 40% or more low income students 24% in rural areas 51% had 200 or more students with growth results
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Delta Middle School (Delta)
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School Recognitions Jo O’Brien, Assistant Commissioner, Standards and Assessment
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Bradford Intermediate (Jeffco)
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Crowley County Elementary
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Delta Middle School (Delta)
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Denver School of Science and Technology (DPS)
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Harris Bilingual Elementary (Poudre)
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McMeen Elementary (DPS)
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Mead Middle School (St. Vrain)
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West Denver Prep Charter School (DPS)
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South Park High (Park)
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Tollgate Elementary (Adams-Arapahoe)
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School Recognitions Derek Carlson, Principal, Delta Middle School
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School Recognitions Bill Kurtz, Head of School, Denver School of Science and Technology
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Closing Dwight D. Jones, Commissioner of Education
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