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Draft: September 26 , 2008 1 Differentiated Accountability Proposal

Draft: September 26, 2008 1 Differentiated Accountability Proposal

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Page 1: Draft: September 26, 2008 1 Differentiated Accountability Proposal

Draft: September 26, 2008

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Differentiated Accountability Proposal

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Why differentiation for New York State?

-Data shows that a large majority of schools in New York that are

identified on a single accountability measure for a single

subgroup are able to make AYP.

- However, the longer a school is in the process and the more

groups for which it is identified, the less likely that the school will

make AYP.

-Differentiation allows for “right sizing” of intervention strategies,

giving districts greater responsibility and latitude to work with

schools with lesser needs and creating State/local partnerships to

address schools with greater needs.

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Schools in the Improvement Phase Make the Most Improvement Early On

07-08 Status

06-07 Phase* 06-07 Category* # of Schools # Made AYP % Made AYP

Improvement Basic 146 106 73%

Improvement Focused 66 31 47%

Improvement Comprehensive** 75 32 43%

Corrective Action Focused 129 75 58%

Corrective Action Comprehensive** 91 26 29%

Restructuring Focused 96 26 27%

Restructuring Comprehensive** 77 9 12%

680 305 45%

* Based on the phase and category to which schools would have been assigned in 06-07 under this model

** SURRs are a subset of the Comprehensive category in each of the phases and make AYP at the rate of 15 %

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How it Works

Accountability designations based on both the number and type of student groups failing to make AYP and the length of time such failure has persisted.

Three distinct, two-year, phases of intervention: Improvement, Corrective Action and Restructuring.

Three distinct categories within phases: Basic, Focused and Comprehensive.

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Criteria for Placement in Categories

Basic (Improvement Phase Only): Identified for the performance of a single student group on a single accountability measure.Focused: Not identified for the performance of an “all student” group. Comprehensive: Identified for the performance of an “all student” group.

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Phase

Diagnostic

Differentiated Accountability Model

Category

CORRECTIVE ACTIONIMPROVEMENT RESTRUCTURING

CURRICULUM AUDITSCHOOL QUALITY REVIEWASSIGNMENT OF

Joint Intervention Team and Distinguished

Educator

FOCUSED COMPBASIC FOCUSED COMPREHENSIVE FOCUSED COMP

SURR

Intensity of Intervention

FAILED AYP 2 YEARS

FAILED AYP 2 YEARS

Plan/Intervention CORRECTIVE ACTION PLAN & IMPLEMENTATION

OF CURRICULUM AUDIT

IMPROVEMENT PLANCREATE AND IMPLEMENT

External personnel to revise and assist school implement the most

rigorous plan or, as necessary,PHASE-OUT /CLOSURE

Oversight& Support

SED provides TA to districts: sustaining greater latitude and more responsibility for

addressing schools

SED empowers districts: gives them the support and assistance necessary to take primary

responsibility for developing and implementing improvement strategies

SED & its agents work in direct partnership with the

district

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Improvement Phase

School Quality Review: Completion of Quality Indicators Document. District/External review by SQR team of

documentation for Basic Schools. On-site external review by SQR team for Focused

and Comprehensive Schools. School Improvement Plan:

Basic and Focused Schools: More latitude than current law.

Comprehensive: Same as Current Law. SES instead of Choice. Districts have primary oversight responsibility. Reasonable and necessary costs of SQR team are

a district expense, per Chapter 57.

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Corrective Action Phase

Curriculum Audit: external review of curriculum as written and taught, with focus on alignment with State standards.

Corrective Action Plan to Implement Curriculum Audit.

One additional, appropriate corrective action. SED supports districts, which have greater latitude

and more responsibility for addressing school needs. Reasonable and necessary costs of SQR team and

Distinguished Educator, if assigned, are a district expense, per Chapter 57.

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Restructuring Phase

Assignment of Joint Intervention Teams and Distinguished Educators.

Development of restructuring or phase out/closure plan.

SED and its agents work in direct partnership with the district.

Reasonable and necessary costs of JIT and DE are a district expense, per Chapter 57.

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Public School Choice (PSC) and Supplemental Educational Services (SES) for Title I Schools

Phase Category Choice SES

Improvement Basic No – Year 1Yes – Year 2

Low-income, non-proficient

Improvement Focused No – Year 1Yes – Year 2

Low-income, non-proficient

Improvement Comprehensive No – Year 1Yes – Year 2

Low-income, with priority to non-proficient

Corrective Action

Focused All Students Low-income, non-proficient

Corrective Action

Comprehensive All Students Low-income, with priority to non-proficient

Restructuring Focused All Students Low-income, with priority to non-proficient

Restructuring Comprehensive All Students Low-income, with priority to non-proficient

SURR As per NCLB status

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Transition Rules for 2009-2010

1. Schools that have made AYP or are entering the second year of a phase continue to implement their previous plans, with modifications if necessary.

2. Newly identified improvement schools and schools new to corrective action and restructuring follow new process.

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Transition Rules: Examples

1. School A in 2008-2009 is a SINI 1 for Grade 3-8 ELA for SWDs. In 2008-2009, School A fails to make AYP in Grade 3-8 ELA for SWDs and LEPs. The school in 2009-2010 will be in Year 2 of the Improvement Phase. The school will modify its CEP to address both SWDs and LEPs.

2. School B in 2008-2009 is a SINI 2 for Grade 3-8 Math for low-income students. The school in 2008-2009 again fails to make AYP For Grade 3-8 Math for low-income students. The school will enter the Corrective Action Phase in 2009-2010 and conduct a curriculum audit.

3. School C in 2008-2009 is a Corrective Action school for HS math for Black students. The school in 2008-09 makes AYP on all accountability measures. The school will remain in Corrective Action and will continue to implement its approved Corrective Action plan.

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Linkage to Chapter 57

• SQR teams assigned to Improvement Schools and Corrective Action Schools.

• Curriculum Audits conducted in Corrective Action Schools.

• Joint Intervention Teams and Distinguished Educators Assigned to Restructuring Schools.

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Linkage to Growth Model

• Schools that would have been in the Focused or Comprehensive categories without the growth model may be assigned to the Basic or Focused categories instead.

• Plans will not need to address groups of students with low status but good growth.

• SED could, with Regents and USED approval, at a later date revise the definition of categories to more explicitly incorporate growth or value-added components.

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2007- 08 Accountability Status School CountsTotal: 733

Restructuring 1, 7%

Restructuring 2, 6%

Restructuring 3, 8%

Restructuring 4, 6%

SRAP 1, 4%

SRAP 2, 5%SRAP 3, 3%

SRAP 5, 5%SRAP 4, 3%

Planning for Restructuring, 8%

SINI 1, 22%

SINI 2, 11%

CA, 10%

SRAP 6, 1%

SRAP 7, 1%

Current System

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Projected Differentiated Accountability Group School Counts 2009-10Total: 733

Improvement-Basic, 194

Improvement-Focused, 55

Improvement-Comprehensive, 54

Corrective Action-Focused, 125

Corrective Action-Comprehensive, 34

Restructuring-Focused, 127

Restructuring-Comprehensive, 81

SURR, 63

Phases and Categories Allow Further Differentiation

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Timeline

• Preliminary Draft Plan submitted to USED on September 17.

• Discussions with key groups occurring during September and October.

• Peer review conference to be held in November.• Revised Plan to be submitted to Regents at October

Regents meeting.• With Regents approval, final plan submitted to USED.• If approved by USED, implementation begins in 2009-

2010 using 2008-2009 test results.

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More Information

Ira Schwartz, CoordinatorAccountability, Policy, and AdministrationNew York State Education DepartmentOffice of School Improvement and

Community [email protected]