Lea consolidated Application District Code


Is Plan Descriptor Revised?



Download 0.96 Mb.
Page2/11
Date29.01.2017
Size0.96 Mb.
#12434
1   2   3   4   5   6   7   8   9   10   11

Is Plan Descriptor Revised?




2. Title I, Part A; Title I, Part C; Title I, Part D; Title II, Part D; Title III; IDEA; EHCY

A description of high-quality, student academic assessments to be used by the LEA and schools to:

  1. Determine the success of students in meeting the state student academic achievement standards and to provide information to teachers, parents, and students, to include homeless students and youth on the progress being made towards meeting the state student academic achievement standards.

  2. Assist in diagnosis, teaching, and learning in the classroom in ways that best enable low-achieving students served under applicable federal programs to meet state student achievement academic standards and do well in the local curriculum.

  3. Determine what revisions are needed to projects so that such students meet the state student academic achievement standards.

  4. Effectively identify students who may be at risk for reading failure or who are having difficulty reading, through the use of screening, diagnostic, and classroom-based instructional reading assessments.

LEA Narrative Description 2

Passport to Excellence

The focus of Passport to Excellence is to provide the resources necessary for the academic success of all Savannah-Chatham County public school system students to include homeless children and youth and students with disabilities on the progress being made towards meeting the state student academic achievement standards. It is an enhancement of programs already in place, and its purpose is to provide a wide range of educational options, ensuring our public school system is the first choice for all families.

To accomplish this goal the following guiding principles will be used to sustain and improve academic achievement.

· Leverage federal funding to further reduce student/teacher ratio in the most challenged schools

· Assign most effective teachers to schools with the greatest challenges

· Partner with community groups to open additional resource centers (grants / foundations)

· Ensure equity and promote success in all schools.

Working in coalition with community stakeholders, SCCPSS will offer challenging, yet enriching curriculum designed to ignite a passion for learning and teaching at high levels.

Our improvement efforts are focused on three key areas that are defined as "Units of Change" to center the efforts of schools in planning improvements. These are:



  • Climate in our schools

  • Curriculum (what is taught); Instruction (how it is taught) and Assessment (how we know that students acquired the learning that was intended),

  • Culture of Learning and Continuous Improvement - Everyone in the school community is always learning to improve their knowledge and skills.



  1. The LEA is using many strategies and approaches to ensure the use of academic assessments and data analysis to impact student achievement. The academic status of students in SCCPSS can be summarized by examining student performance on the components of the major Georgia statewide assessments and district progress monitoring tools.

The Georgia statewide assessment program for 2014 -2015 includes:

Georgia Milestones Assessment System – a single assessment system for grades 3-12. Grades 3-8 will be administered an End of Grade (EOG) in language arts, mathematics, science, and social studies



  • High School – End of Course (EOC) in 9th grade Literature and Composition, American Literature and Composition, Coordinate Algebra, Analytic Geometry, Physical Science, Biology, Us History, and Economics

Additionally, district progress monitoring tools such as the DIBELS, DIBELS mClass, Scholastic Reading Inventory (SRI) for reading and Measures of Academic Progress (MAP) for math are used as formative benchmarks in elementary and middle schools. Georgia Online Formative Assessment Resource (GOFAR) will also be used for benchmark assessments in Science grade 4 and 7 and Social Studies grades 5 and 6.


  • The district’s calendar contains information about the dates for progress reports and report cards. Progress reports go home every 41/2 weeks and report cards at the end of the nine-week period. Parents receive regular communication about their child’s progress via phone calls, emails, and text messages from teachers as well. Additionally, the district hosts a Parent Connect site where parents can log on to check on their child’s progress in real time. Sessions for parents are held both at the school and at the district level to interpret test scores and to answer any questions they may have about the various assessments.




  1. B. In order to assist in the diagnosis of ways to enable low-achieving students meet the standards and improving and teaching and learning in the classroom a well-developed progress monitoring tool needs to be used. This can assist teachers with identifying patterns of growth and gaps in learning. In addition, consolidating and centralizing data for access is valuable in identifying complex patterns throughout a grade level, content area, or across the district. Historically, district-wide formative assessments have been completed in a paper and pencil format. A change in focus toward utilization of technology to deploy these assessments will provide timely access and analysis of results.

  2. This will assist teachers in implementing informed instructional strategies to drive continuous improvements in student proficiency.



  3. READING AND MATH

Reading, writing, language, and speaking/viewing- these are the four essential skill areas developed in classrooms in grades K-12 in the English Language Arts Department. Embedded in the Language Arts curriculum are skills and content that will enhance opportunities for higher-level thinking skills to be developed. Students study language and how it functions in order to acquire the competence needed to adequately express what they know and think. Inquiry and research processes play a vital role in shaping instruction at all levels.

The Savannah-Chatham County Public School System is working to increase the literacy and numeracy of all students to ensure their future academic success. Students in grades 2, 4, and 7 must demonstrate their competency in Reading and Mathematics to be eligible for promotion to the next grade. The requirements will increase each year.

The district progress monitoring tools such as the Scholastic Reading Inventory (SRI) for reading and Measures of Academic Progress (MAP) for math are used as formative benchmarks in elementary and middle schools and Compass Learning is used as a computer aided instructional tool for intervention.

The district’s reading-on-grade-level objective is to increase the percentage of students who are reading on grade level by the end of grade 2, 4, and 7 as measured by the Scholastic Reading Inventory (SRI), an adaptive on-line progress monitoring tool that is administered quarterly. The objective states that by 2014, 90% of students will be reading on grade level as determined by a Lexile (A common metric to evaluate reading ability as measured by the Scholastic Reading Inventory (SRI), a research-based, computer-adaptive reading comprehension assessment) score of 330L or higher by the end of grade 2; 630 or higher by the end of grade 4; and 880 or higher by the end of grade 7.

Since SY 2011-12, teachers have used Scholastic Reading Inventory (SRI) to monitor and guide students’ progress in reading. The School Data Team will analyze the data after each administration of SRI in fall, winter, and spring and adjust instruction based on the analysis of the data.

Based on the 2015 report, 82% of second grade students, 80% of fourth grade students, and 79% of seventh grade students achieved the SRI benchmarks in reading. This shows gains in all three gateway grade levels by 9% in 2nd grade, 6% in 4th grade and 7% in 7th grade. All three grade levels met the SY 14-15 DAS performance target for Reading on Grade Level. Because reading comprehension is essential to academic learning, SCCPSS plans to continue to provide access to the SRI as a progress monitoring tool to students in grades 2-8 for the upcoming school term (SY 2015-16) and use scientifically researched and proven strategies in reading instruction for all students including homeless, neglected and delinquent, ELLs and students with disabilities.

The mathematics curriculum is designed to support teachers as they instructionally maximize each child's mathematical experiences. Teachers are urged to provide for movement through the curriculum regardless of a student's current grade level. The use of concrete objects (manipulatives) and visual models is vital for students to understand concepts and explore processes. Knowledge acquisition requires a transition from concrete through pictorial, to the more abstract for all students at all levels and ages.

Incorporating technology in instruction is imperative in order to empower students to keep pace with the information age and to be competitive in the job market; it will enhance and provide flexibility in the learning environment. Calculators and computers are essential tools for learning and doing mathematics at all grade levels. Students should be able to solve practical problems, investigate patterns, explore strategies, and focus on the process of solving problems rather than on tedious computation unrelated to applications.

2015 MAP data also reveals students in grades 2 and 4 made gains in the area Math. 76% of second grade students, 70% of 4th grade students, and 64 62% of 7th grade students met the benchmark. This reflects a gain of 1% in 2nd grade and 3%in 4th grade, but a loss of 2% in 7th grade.. Just as in reading, Math scores need to see greater gains and we plan to aggressively use scientifically researched and proven strategies in math instruction. Benchmarking for math using MAP provides the teachers with a RIT (An equal interval curriculum scale used by the District to evaluate mathematics proficiency) score which helps the teachers diagnose areas of need. Numeracy on Grade Level was implemented as a district initiative in SY2012-13 for students in grades 2 through 8. Proficiency levels at grades 2, 4, and 7 were established for the gateway promotion criteria. For the 2014-15 school year, promotion criteria was established at the remaining grade levels (3, 5, 6, and 8) in response to the state’s one-year Georgia Milestones promotion criteria waiver.

Gateway promotion requirements for ROGL and NOGL are established for each year leading to the target year. The district’s target goals for math by 2016-2017 for the gateways grades are:

2nd grade –186 RIT

4th grade –207 RIT

7th grade – 224 RIT

SCIENCE


Excellence in science education exemplifies the ideal that all students can achieve an understanding of science if they are given challenging science learning opportunities. These opportunities are provided within a comprehensive system of science education which encompasses science literacy, content and curriculum, knowledge and understanding, and inquiry processes and application.

Below is a summary of Science initiatives in place during the 2014-2015 school year:



  • Instructional Calendars/Pacing Guides



  • Quarterly meeting with ES, MS, and HS Science Contacts, as well as ES Science Lab Teachers

Meeting follow-up agenda with summary notes were sent to all Science Contacts and Principals

  • Science Program Newsletter

Sent to Science Contacts, EDs and school administration in between quarterly face to face meetings to keep staff members up to date regarding Science

  • District Science Assessments

Benchmark assessments for 2nd and 4th Marking Periods were revised or developed for grades 3-8, Biology, & Physical Science using the GA Online Assessment System (OAS)

Student Learning Objective (SLO) assessments were developed for five additional HS science courses



  • A HS Science Professional Learning Coach was added to the Science Program staff

  • STEM Certification

The Science Program staff provided support to schools pursuing GA DOE STEM Certification through support with certification planning and lesson planning, and by

making a variety of STEM lesson plans available to teachers.



  • Science Education Research Project

Six middle schools began participating in Project ESCOLAR, a three- year collaborative project with the University of Oregon and Georgia Southern University that

aims to offer all middle-school students the opportunity to learn science within an engaging online environment. The project is committed to helping students

become digital age innovators, excel in science, and prepare for college and careers in science, technology, engineering, and mathematics.

  • Grant Partnership

SCCPSS began a 2-year MSP Grant partnership with Savannah State University’s College of Science and Technology to improve the content knowledge of MS science

teachers which includes 100 contact hours of professional learning in science content and pedagogy for participants.



  • Community Partnerships

Partnerships were continued with Armstrong State University, Savannah State University, Georgia Southern University, and Georgia Tech Savannah, Gulfstream, and Kinder Morgan – these organizations offer various teacher and student opportunities related to science education throughout the year

Students participated in a variety of local field trip opportunities including Side Walk to the Sea at the Tybee Island Marine Center, Oatland Island Wildlife Center, Fort

Pulaski, the Richmond Hill Fish Hatchery, Starbase, and many others.



  • Science Competitions

Students participated in a variety of science competitions including the Regional and State Science Olympiad, the Regional and State Science and Engineering Fair, the

SCCPSS Elementary School Science Fair, the Marine Science Bowl, the Science Quiz Bowl, SECME, First Lego League, and others.

In addition to the items listed above, the following initiatives will be added for the 2015-2016 school year:


  • SLO assessments for all HS science courses

  • Quarterly collaborative planning meetings open to all 6th – 8th grade science teachers, HS Biology and HS Physical Science teachers

  • Face-to-face and virtual professional learning for K-12 science teachers

SOCIAL STUDIES

A review of Social Studies initiatives for SY 2014-2015 and a preview of SY 2015-2016 plans:

Instructional Calendar

As part of the College and Career Readiness standards (CCR) for "Reading and Literacy standards in History/Social Studies 6-12," the Document Based Project (DBQ) will be implemented to aid teachers with writing about evidence from literary and informational texts. Teachers will utilize the CCR Standards as part of the state

standards initiative to help students become more comfortable with complex informational text.

Social Studies teachers will be continued to be trained on the Document Based Questions Literacy Program.

Instructional frameworks were developed for some of the courses that previously did not have a curriculum framework such as American History and Sociology.


  • Specific Learning Objectives were developed for some of the courses that did not have the End of the Course Test attached to them to include Local Area Studies/History, World History and Sociology.

Specific Document Based Questions (DBQ) were assigned to courses and grade levels

  • District Assessments

Specific Learning Objectives were developed for World History, American Government, Sociology and AP Macro-Economics.

  • Student Learning Objectives (SLOs) were updated for the following courses: Sociology, AP Psychology, AP Macroeconomics, Local Area Studies and US History in Film.

New SLOs are : Current Issues, AP Microeconomics, AP US Government/Politics

Revised SLOs are: World History and American Government/Civics



  • Specific Learning Objectives for Local Area Studies/History and AP Psychology were updated.

  • A High School Professional Learning Coach was hired for SY 2014-2015 school. This position will continue for 2015-2016.



  • Curriculum

Social Studies frameworks and pacing guides are for grades K-8 are complete. Unit resources are also provided for teacher use on the district’s intranet site ACORN. Pacing guides for grades 9-12 have also been created in most areas. The Social Studies Department will continue to develop pacing guides for Current Issues, Humanities, Local Area Studies History, US in Film and World Geography. Unit Resources are also being developed for Current Issues, Humanities, US in Film and World Geography.

Community Partnerships

The Georgia Port Authority and the SCCPSS Social Studies department formed a partnership in order to develop an e-book for their Websites. The e-book project will continue in 2015-2016.

The Massie Heritage Center is undergoing renovations in order to display the “Ship to Shore” exhibit. The exhibit will serve as a teaching and learning resource for several Social Studies courses to include Economics and Logistics.

A new partnership was formed with the Georgia Historical Society and the SCCPSS Social Studies department. Society staff members are assisting teachers and students with Social Studies Fair projects.

Many of our Economics teachers have received training at workshops facilitated by instructors from the Georgia Council on Economics Education.



  • Field Trips

Field trips are planned according to areas of study and the relationship and value of coordination with curriculum. The city of Savannah is laden with historical structures and proper planning allows teachers to schedule field trips so that students can explore historical and cultural monuments in the city.

  1. Schools and teachers are responsible for implementing the districts Instructional “Non-Negotiables,” which are district-wide expectations that support standards-based classrooms. Many of these non-negotiables relate to academic assessment of students to include homeless children and youth, students with disabilities, and students who may be at risk of failing. These strategies include using rubrics for development of work and assessment by the teacher and student, designing performance tasks that reflect rigor and are directly correlated to the curriculum, using timely and specific feedback by teachers to students regarding their work products, and developing common formative assessments by teachers in grade level teams in the elementary grades, and by content area teams in secondary schools. Teachers in Professional Learning Communities do this work collaboratively during assigned planning times and other times as determined by the building administrators. Teachers also use online assessment systems throughout the year. These assessments are used to help measure growth, to determine placement for new students, and to forecast results on major high-stakes tests. These include CompassLearning, STAR Math, Accelerated Math, and the Georgia Online Formative Assessment Resource (GOFAR). Teachers also use Exemplars Math tasks and grade level assessments from state adopted textbooks throughout the year for diagnostic purposes and progress checks.

The district currently has a number of reading inventories that are used by teachers to identify areas of support needed by students. These include the DIBELS, STAR (reading and math), and the Scholastic Reading Inventory (SRI). Currently, benchmark assessments are used as screening tools. Based on the screening data various tools are used for further diagnosis of specific reading weaknesses. In addition, the basal programs used by the district provide teachers with grade level assessments of reading skills to be used throughout the year for surveying, diagnosing, and checking progress. The Home Language Survey is used for the initial screening for English Language Learners. It is included as part of the initial registration and for students as they enter school during the school year. During the 2014-2015 school year, the district will continue to implement High School benchmark assessments in the core content subjects in order to monitor student growth leading up to the actual EOC. Specifically, students at risk of academic failure will be identified and provided support through after-school tutorials, Saturday school, credit recovery and/or Twilight High School program.


  1. Response to Intervention (RTI) is an intervention process designed to help students who are struggling academically, behaviorally and/or communicatively. RTI consists of curriculum based instruction, early identification of educational deficits, frequent progress monitoring, and intensive evidence-based instructional interventions. The district RTI documentation is located in TIENET which is an electronic web-based response to intervention program that makes documenting intervention more efficient. Schools maintain spreadsheets and generate reports for central office review. The provision of research-based interventions varies throughout the district. The district employs universal screeners at the elementary and middle school levels in the content area of reading via DIBELS for grades K-1, Scholastic Reading Inventory (SRI) for grades 2-8, and in the content area of math via Measures of Academic Progress (MAP) for grades 2-8.

The Department for Exceptional Students strives to provide comprehensive support with the purpose of providing educational services to students with disabilities to meet their individual needs. The Department works interdependently and responsibly by providing assistance related to programming, conducting staff development workshops, assisting in the identification of personnel, providing feedback to teachers and assuring compliance with legal due process issues. The Department is committed to providing the assistance needed to ensure that students with disabilities are receiving the most appropriate services possible.

Procedures for identification and assessment of potential Limited English Proficiency (LEP) students are in place to ensure proper classification, programmatic assessment and reclassification of all LEP students based on State and Federal requirements. The Home Language Survey (HLS) is administered to all students in the school district during start of school enrollment and to newly enrolled students. The WIDA ACCESS Placement Test (W-APT) is administered to all K-12 students identified as potential English language learners on the Home Language Survey. The W-APT is used as a measure of ESOL program eligibility. ACCESS is used to assess and measure English proficiency. This assessment is administered annually to ALL English language learners in grades K through 12 - this includes any student who qualifies for ESOL services even if they (or their parents) have denied ESOL services. Monitored students (EL-M) have exited the program, and are therefore not eligible to be assessed with the ACCESS for ELs assessment. A student plan is maintained in the permanent student record file for each student identified as EL. All eligible LEP students are re-tested annually with ACCESS. Progress is assessed and tier placement is evaluated by the ESOL teacher and classroom teachers. Data from the ACCESS is analyzed and used to improve the ESOL instructional program by :



  • Identifying, acquiring, and upgrading curricula, instruction materials, educational software, and assessment procedures.

  • Developing and implementing new language instruction educational programs and academic content instructional programs for EL in early childhood, elementary and secondary programs.

  • Expanding or enhancing existing language instruction educational programs and academic content instruction programs at district Cluster Centers.

  • The ACCESS data is also used to determine LEP student’s readiness to exit the ESOL program. Several factors of student performance will be considered in determining English proficiency level and readiness to exit. English Learners (ELs) must be assessed for proficiency on an annual basis, using the state approved assessment, ACCESS for ELs. The requirement to pass state reading assessments in order to exit ESOL has been removed and exit will now be based on ELs reaching a minimum literacy score on the state approved language proficiency assessment. Students reaching a Composite Proficiency Level of at least a 5 on tier B or C (as well as a 4.8 Literacy sub-score) of the ACCESS are considered to have attained a level of English proficiency and are exited from the program. The ESOL teacher and classroom teachers, using a Language Assessment Conference, further assess students who reach a composite proficiency level at least a 4 or higher on tier B or C (as well as a 4.8 Literacy sub-score) of the ACCESS. Based on the determination of the Language Assessment Committee, students scoring in this range may be recommended for exiting the program. Students who are determined ready to exit the program are then placed in the regular program and are monitored for two years by the site-designated ELL contact and the classroom teachers to ensure their success in general education courses.

To determine a student's readiness to exit, the following is used: ACCESS score of level 5 (tier B or C) with a 4.8 literacy sub-score. If a student is required to have an LAC, it will be held to review the following to determine if the student is ready to exit:

a) Language proficiency

b) Achievement

c) Classroom performance

d) test scores

e) Teacher recommendations







Download 0.96 Mb.

Share with your friends:
1   2   3   4   5   6   7   8   9   10   11




The database is protected by copyright ©ininet.org 2024
send message

    Main page