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Published byBrenda Johnson Modified over 8 years ago
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NISD Community-Based Accountability System vs. HB5 School District Self- Evaluation in Community and Student Engagement and Compliance
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What’s The Difference? House Bill 5 Compliance: Districts must report on PIEMS a self-evaluation of the district and each individual school in the district. Ratings: Exemplary, Recognized, Acceptable, Unacceptable Areas: 8 specific areas determined by the state One overall rating in each area published annually by TEA NISD Community-Based Accountability Voluntary: NISD Stakeholders determined criteria; District statistics, not by campus No ratings: descriptive measures to share the NISD story Areas: Align to the NISD Profile of a Graduate; 30 different areas Continually updated as new data arrives
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Why the CBAS? Demonstrates to a larger audience that the community is an important stakeholder in the schools. Demonstrates our values in regard to educating the whole child. There is more to education than state mandated tests. A wonderful opportunity to share what we are already doing.
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Why HB5? Compliance with state requirements An opportunity to self-evaluate in a variety of categories: –Fine Arts –Wellness & Physical Education –Community & Parent Involvement –21 st Century Workforce Development –Second Language Acquisition –Digital Learning Environment –Dropout Prevention Strategies –Ed Programs for GT
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What this assessment looks like Simple, objective, and easy to document Engagement Rubric Compliance Checklist Divide between elementary, middle, and high school levels to develop a rating for the district –Will be reported for the district based on individual school scores Identify what we are doing well Identify areas we need to strengthen Excellence Indicators in each content/program
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Performance Measure Data Source QuestionUnacceptableAcceptableRecognizedExemplary Campus provides multiple opportunities for parent and community volunteer service **recorded by total hours logged per student District/ Campus How many parent and community volunteer opportunities are provided? Less than 100 volunteer hours are recorded 100-1,000 volunteer hours are recorded 1,000-5,000 volunteer hours are recorded 5,000+ volunteer hours are recorded *Programs, events, organizations are scheduled to engage parents in the education of their students. District/ Campus Are parent engagement programs scheduled throughout the year? Rarely - < 3 Occasionally (4-6) Common Practice (7-9) Consistently Throughout the Year > 10 Students participate in community service projects CampusHow many hours were logged in student sponsored community service projects? Less than 5,000 hours of student led/sponsored community service activities. 5000-9,999 hours of student led/sponsored community service activities. 10,000-14,999 hours of student led/sponsored community service activities. Over 15,000 hours of student led/sponsored community service activities. Community and Parent Involvement Elementary, Middle, and High School Engagement Rubric:
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Community and Parent Involvement District Engagement Rubric: Performance Measure Data Source QuestionUnacceptableAcceptableRecognizedExemplary Campus provides multiple opportunities for parent and community volunteer service **recorded by total hours logged per student District/ Campus How many parent and community volunteer opportunities are provided? Fewer than 65% of campuses report 5,000+ volunteer hours recorded 65-74% of campuses report 5,000+ volunteer hours recorded 75-84% of campuses report 5,000+ volunteer hours recorded More than 85% of campuses report 5,000+ volunteer hours recorded Programs are scheduled to engage parents in the education of their students. District/ Campus Are parent engagement programs scheduled throughout the year? Fewer than 64% campuses report consistently scheduling more than 10 programs to engage parents in the education of their children 65-74% campuses report consistently scheduling more than 10 programs to engage parents in the education of their children 75-84% of campuses report consistently scheduling more than 10 programs to engage parents in the education of their children More than 85% of campuses report consistently scheduling more than 10 programs to engage parents in the education of their children Students participate in community service projects CampusWhat percentages of students participate in community service projects? Over 35% of students participate in community projects at fewer than 15 campuses Over 35% of students participate in community projects at 15-19 campuses Over 35% of students participate in community projects at 19-24 campuses Over 35% of students participate in community projects at 25-27 campuses
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Community and Parent Involvement District Engagement Rubric: Performance Measure Data Source QuestionUnacceptableAcceptableRecognizedExemplary Campus uses a variety of communication tools to inform parents of school news (example: website, newsletters, social media, etc.) How many parent and community volunteer opportunities are provided? Fewer than 70% of campuses use 5 or more communication methods 70-79% of campuses use 5 or more communication methods 80-89% of campuses use 5 or more communication methods More than 90% of campuses use 5 or more communication methods Parents feel adequately informed about district issues (i.e. Student growth, school finance, etc.) What percentage of students participate in community service >69% agree70-79% agree80-89% agree90% or more agree
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How will we share the information? NISD Dashboard: http://nisddashboard.businesscatalyst.com/i ndex.html
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