LaVergne Middle School 2014-15 S.I.P.



Similar documents
2014/2015 ACADEMIC IMPROVEMENT PLAN TEMPLATE. 1) List report card areas where your school received D or F grades.

3.1.a: Curricular Practices

Metropolitan Nashville Public Schools School Improvement Plan

Executive Summary. Anderson Early Childhood Center

Peck Full Service Community School Improvement Plan Principal: Justin Cotton Jr.

Colorado Developmental Education Redesign Decision Making. Dr. Kim Poast, CDHE Dr. Geri Anderson, CCCS

COMPREHENSIVE PLAN LMS REPORT Data

How To Improve Education Planning In Dekalb County Schools

Wappingers Central School District

NC TEACHER EVALUATION PROCESS SAMPLE EVIDENCES AND ARTIFACTS

Performance Goal 1: All students will reach high standards, at a minimum, attaining proficiency or better in reading and mathematics by

M-DCPS Mathematics Department K-8 i-ready Implementation Plan

EXAMPLE FIELD EXPERIENCE PLANNING TEMPLATE CCSU MAT Program

Colville Junior High. School Improvement Plan School Wide Title I Plan. Colville School District

Instructional Leadership Through Data-driven Decision-making. Action Plan. Student Achievement Need

Kentucky. Guidelines. Digital Learning. Kentucky Department of Education. Dr. Terry Holliday, Commissioner

ALL, English Learner, Foster Youth, Socio- Economically Disadvantaged

Danbury High School. Student Support Framework

Theory of Action Statements - Examples

NEA Academy InTASC Classes

IDEA Preschool $2,000. Grant Notes 2011 IDEA. IDEA School age $27,362. IDEA Preschool ARRA $2,921 IDEA Total: $32,283

LAKE SILVER ELEMENTARY

How To Improve Your School

Middle Grades Action Kit How To Use the Survey Tools!

MEIGS COUNTY S 2003 ESL / OCR COMPLIANCE REPORT. Descriptive Report on Services to English Language Learners (ELL)

I. School- Wide DL Components

MSGP Associated Course Codes with Descriptions

Mooresville Intermediate School School Improvement Plan

Jericho Elementary School Action Plan 2013 to 2015

Status Report on Suffield Public Schools Strategic Plan Implementation 2014

WORLD S BEST WORKFORCE PLAN

TENNESSEE STATE BOARD OF EDUCATION

BUILDING CURRICULUM ACCOMMODATION PLAN

EDUC 469: Middle School Teaching Skills Lab

School of Education MASTER OF SCIENCE IN SPECIAL EDUCATION. Master of Science in Special Education

JUST THE FACTS. Memphis, Tennessee

Higher Performing High Schools

Tennessee State Board of Education August 5, 2011 First Reading Item: II. C. ESL Policy Revision

Washington Junior High School School Improvement Plan Prepared in Compliance with Indiana Public Law 221

REVERE PUBLIC SCHOOLS

ACTION PLAN Student Achievement English Language Arts

Highly Qualified Requirements in a Three-Tiered RTI Model

Office of Curriculum, Instruction, and Assessment:

08X540. School For Community Research and Learning 1980 Lafayette Avenue School Address: Bronx, NY 10473

2015 TN Accountability Protocol

SCHOOLWIDE TITLE I PLAN JONESVILLE MIDDLE SCHOOL

NASSAU COUNTY SCHOOL DISTRICT DIGITAL CLASSROOM PLAN

Instructional Management Plan

TOOL KIT for RESIDENT EDUCATOR and MENT OR MOVES

Framework for Teaching Possible Evidence List

ty School District Digita al Classrooms Plan

Student Achievement - The Best Way to Succeed

Orange County Public Schools. State Accountability System September 2, 2014

NYSED/NYCDOE JOINT INTERVENTION TEAM REPORT AND RECOMMENDATIONS

MS Communication Arts Goals Building and District Update 2/26/2009

2013 Marzano School Leader Evaluation Model Rubric

SPECIAL MUSIC SCHOOL HIGH SCHOOL Website: Phone:

Steilacoom High School SIP Plan Summary

How To Write A Curriculum Framework For The Paterson Public School District

Basic Skills Teachers Intervention Specialists & Instructional Assistants Support Services Handbook Audubon Public Schools

Creative Core Curriculum for Mathematics with STEM Literacy and Arts Grades K-8

Crockett Elementary Response to Intervention Guide

Stronge Teacher Effectiveness Performance Evaluation System

Educational Technology Plan for Orion Academy

SOCIAL WORK PROGRAM ASSESSMENT REPORT

School of Education MASTER OF ARTS IN TEACHING. Master of Arts in Teaching

Churchill County School District Numa Elementary School 601 Discovery Drive Fallon, NV SAGE SCHOOL IMPROVEMENT PLAN TEMPLATE TITLE I - NRS 385

GRADING SYSTEMS

NW COLORADO BOCES ALTERNATIVE LICENSURE PROGRAM

SCHOOL IMPROVEMENT GRANT (SIG) PRACTICE:

About the Finalist. Cumberland County Schools North Carolina DISTRICT PROFILE

Holyoke Public Schools Local Stakeholder Group (LSG)

Colorado s Unified Improvement Plan for Schools for

Tackling the NEW Teacher Evaluation Guidelines

Sample Student Learning Objectives

MIAMI-DADE COUNTY PUBLIC SCHOOLS PROCESS TO MONITOR CURRICULUM IMPLEMENTATION

LEA Implementation Plan for WARE System School Year

Program Models. proficiency and content skills. After school tutoring and summer school available

Carbondale Community High School District 165 Restructuring Plan

Teacher Evaluation. Missouri s Educator Evaluation System

MTSS Implementation Components Ensuring common language and understanding

Van Meter Community Schools K-12 Lau Plan for Serving English Language Learners

QUEEN ANNE S COUNTY PUBLIC SCHOOLS SELF-STUDY REPORT

THE SCHOOL DISTRICT OF PALM BEACH COUNTY. Add on Certification Program English for Speakers of Other Languages (ESOL) Endorsement

REQUIRED TEXTBOOK LIST

19K660. Brooklyn, NY Jocelyn Badette

Mississippi Statewide Teacher Appraisal Rubric M-STAR

Office of Innovative School Models Persistently Lowest Achieving (PLA) Schools School Improvement Grant (SIG)

MO DEPT ELEMENTARY AND SECONDARY EDUCATION SCHOOL YEAR: DISTRICT: ATLANTA C-3 BUILDING: 4020 ATLANTA ELEM.

Instructionally Appropriate IEPs. A Skills Based Approach to IEP Development Division of Special Populations

Welcome to Our World CONNECTED INSTRUCTION DELIVERED DIGITALLY

Revised Appendix A: Schedules

EDUCATE ONLINE DRIVING STUDENT SUCCESS

Bilingual/ESL Instructional Plan

PROGRAM DESIGN: Primary Enrichment Program (P.E.P.)

Best Practices in Implementing ACCUPLACER//MyFoundationsLab

a. What is the period of validity for an educator s license? Less than 5 years 5 years X 3 Greater than 5 years

Online Readiness Administration Logistics TNReady Practice Tools MICA Tutorial

House Bill 7059, Acceleration Plan

College and Career Ready Performance Index, High School Model Grades 9-12

Transcription:

Rutherford County Schools LaVergne Middle School 2014-15 S.I.P. Analysis of Last Year s Final Results Areas of Greatest Progress: Proficient/Advanced IMPROVEMENTS 2013-14 LMS met 2 of the 4 AMO goals for achievement after SH was applied. 7 th Grade Math 7 th Grade ELA The 6 th grade continued to show gains in all subjects except ELA. The 8 th Grade continued to show gains in ELA for the past three years. 2013-14 LMS met 2 of the 8 gap closure goals. Racial/Ethnic vs All (Math 4.1) ED vs NonED (Math 11.5) Though the gap closures goal was not met for ED vs NonED (ELA), the gap was missed by.3 compared to a 3.2 gap the previous year. The 7 th grade showed an increase in all subjects in achievement (NCE score) except SS, which was a difference of.1. Math- 2.3 ELA-.8 Sci-.7 Areas of Greatest Challenge: Proficient/Advanced SETBACKS 2012-13 LMS did not meet the expected gap closures for the following subgroups: A. ED vs Non-ED (ELA) goal was 10.9%, result was 11.2% Gap of.3. B. Racial/Ethnic vs All (ELA) goal was 2.9%, result was 4.5% Gap of 1.6 C. ELL vs Non ELL (Math) goal was 16.3%, result was 22.4% gap of 6.1. D. ELL vs Non ELL (ELA) goal was 30.8%, result 41.6% gap of 10.8. E. SpEd vs Non SpEd (Math) goal was 20.7%, result was 24.3% gap of 3.6. F. SpEd vs Non SpEd (ELA) goal was 21.8%, result was 25% gap of 3.2. The 6 th grade showed a decrease in all subjects in achievement (NCE score). Math- 2.9 ELA- 1.6 Sci-.8 SS-.2 The 8 th grade showed a decrease in all subjects in achievement (NCE score) except Math. ELA-.5 Sci- 3.3 SS- 2.9

Source of Progress Source of Challenges Teachers from their respective Traditional style of teaching in grades collaborate on a weekly basis to prepare lessons, discuss interventions and enrichment Social Studies may have attributed to scores more so in some grades than others. opportunities, and create SpEd and ELL subgroup assessments. increased. Students were identified A lack of participation in according to the TVAAS Accelerated I, data folder accumulation, and county benchmark lists and were intervention classes due to ineffective identification methods per the TVAAS Accelerate I list provided interventions. We believe with the high The Reading and Math Lab was numbers of students with offered to students during elective, disabilities in inclusion classes, advisory, and CORE periods. students received less individual Teachers from all grades attention. attended the Differentiated We believe a lack of training Instruction conference at the for teachers attributed to beginning of the school year to deficiencies with SpEd and ELL develop activities and strategies. subgroups. Monthly department meetings Students who failed are held to discuss strengths and benchmark tests were not areas of growth. monitored effectively with All Reading and Language Arts intervention plans. teachers were required to embed PLC weekly meetings were not writing opportunities throughout the consistent in the focus of specific course of the school year. School students. participated in three scheduled Data review and intervention timed writings. plans may not have been effectively CORE (Creating Opportunities executed. for Remediation and Enrichment) School failed effectively monitor class: 8 th period provided opportunities for teachers to meet cross curricular activities that involved writing, vocabulary and critical thinking. with each class one additional time Five new faculty members were each week to reteach skills/concepts that demonstrated deficiencies. added to the 6 th grade team during the 2013-14 school year. Teachers in each grade level shared common planning and were able to plan lessons, create common assessments, analyze data after weekly assessment, and implement remediation and enrichment strategies. Essential Questions were written based on Tennessee state standards and used to communicate and drive instruction. A weekly schedule (M.A.S.H.) (Math, Language Arts, Science, Social Studies, Reading) was implemented in order to organize intervention, enrichment, and assessment. Data was reviewed to assess proficiency of Tennessee State Standards; instructional strategies were developed to enhance mastery of standards.

Goals for this school year: Overall Achievement Goals: (Aligned to First to the Top Goals) Math: The school will meet or exceed the 2014-15 AMO school wide goal set at 47% and the 7 th grade goal set at 49%. Reading: The school will meet or exceed the 2014-15 AMO school wide goal set at 50.6% and the 7 th grade goal set at 50.6% Subgroup Goals: (List each subgroup individually) Students in the Racial Ethic, ED, SWD, and ELL will meet or exceed the stated Gap Closure reduction for 2014-15in Math. RE-3.8%, ED-10.8%, ELL-21%, and SWD-22.8% Students in the Racial Ethic, ED, SWD, and ELL will meet or exceed the stated Gap Closure reduction for 2014-15 in Reading/Language Arts. RE-4.2%, ED-10.5%, ELL-39% and SWD-23.4% Other Required Goal Areas: To accurately and effectively identify and monitor subgroups in order to achieve AMO and Gap Closure goals. Meet with grade level and department chairs every four weeks Meet with data/intervention team every four weeks Review prescriptive achievement reports every four weeks To create focus intervention classes/groups for SpEd, ELL and under achieving students during Purpose. Fully implement RTI 2 interventions for students identified by multiple data points. To increase faculty and staff awareness of Blending State Standards (CC) and SPI s and RTI 2. Plan for this Year Key strategies to achieve goals. Teachers will continue to receive extensive data training at faculty meetings, early dismissal days, and in-services for CCS, RTI 2, and Teams. RTI 2 will be fully implemented. Progress monitoring will be implemented for Tier III. Continuation of professional learning communities will enhance the alignment of state standards with benchmark testing and instructional strategies implementations. 1. Conduct PD sessions with central office personnel 2. Conduct PD sessions within school (concurrent workshops-lead by teacher leaders) Enrichment and intervention classes will be formed using data from multiple sources to foster academic improvements for all subgroups. Administrative staff will increase monitoring of assessments and instruction by meeting with teachers and completing classroom observations. Teachers will continue to identify high achieving students for possible placement in advanced classes such as Advanced Math, Spectrum, and Algebra. Teachers will increase the usage of the student data (folders, test results, attendance and discipline) to track students so that adequate time and support can be given to improve individual student academic performance. Teachers will follow the MASH schedule to maximize professional collaboration, administer tests, and encourage morning tutoring. Teachers, who are experiencing difficulties, will be required to observe other colleagues in the building per administrator s discretion to gain insightful implementation of management techniques and instructional strategies to use in class. Administration will complete unannounced videotaped lesson for teachers to self reflect. Focus intervention classes for ELL, SpEd and Under Achieving students will be implemented during Advisory and Purpose. Math and ELA instruction will be centered around state standards and SPI s. Survey students about instructional practices and teaching styles Develop a RTI team to review, monitor, and analyze assessments administered during each nine week period Social Studies and Science departments will increase the implementation of evidence based instruction, informational text activities, and collaboration with ELA department The intervention period, previously known CORE, was moved to 1 st period and renamed Purpose.

Key strategies to achieve progress for students with the greatest need: Offer intervention classes (Math Lab, Reading Lab, Writing Lab, SRA, ESL discovery) Offer enrichment classes (Advance Math, Spectrum) Provide additional time and support for academic improvements (Purpose, Advisory, and Special Ed and ELL pull out classes) Common mini benchmark assessments will be given every two to three weeks. Teachers will be sent to professional trainings dealing with SpEd and ELL. Data team will provide monitoring sheet of stated sub groups. Increase usage of prescriptive technology (Reading and Fast Math, Compass Learning, ThinkGate, Brain Pop) Develop and implement additional SpEd small group SRA classes for RLA and Math for all grades Early morning tutoring will be offered for all grades based on MASH schedule. Teachers will present best practices classroom strategies at faculty meetings. Developing mini benchmark tests using ThinkGate software, TCAP Test Sampler, and Textbook Tier II and III will occur during Advisory and Purpose by highly trained teachers. An academic vocabulary wall will be place in hall to display words of the week. Words are announced weekly via the televised morning announcements. Teachers are expected to embed the mathematical/instructional practices, accountable talk, and vocabulary within daily classroom instruction. School will purchase IReady license. Central office ELL and SpEd department will purchase Imagine Learning. Projected costs and funding sources for key strategies: Benchmark test copies - $100 Teacher Training - $600 Teacher instruction supplies - $1,500 Technology programs/upgrades IReady - $3300 Brain-Pop - $1000 Equipment- $2500 Celebrations and Successes Recognitions- $700 Benchmarks for Progress Benchmarks: Timeline: Nine-week Team Meetings {Leadership, RTI 2, Data} (Review subgroup, November, January, April department, and grade level performances) (Monitor/Review assessment Every nine weeks results) Teachers will submit unit plans detailing usage of high quality activities and technology with evidence meetings occurring at the end of the nine weeks to assess quality of learning and instruction. Department heads will compile a department notebook containing Benchmark tests, data analysis, and TVAAS information. Department meetings are held monthly. Also teachers meet weekly with grade level department colleague to discuss strengths and areas of growth. Researched Best Practices, curriculum pacing, scope and sequence are topics discussed in order to best drive instructional practices. Student Data Folders (containing past, present and future achievement information) are used to drive parent-teacher conferences throughout the year. Students meet with teachers during Advisory to discuss academic patterns and projections. Pre/Post Assessments in all general education classes will be highly Academic school year encouraged. These assessments gage the academic growth of identified students throughout the course of the year. Construct Focus List of students per grade to monitor subgroup progression End of 1 st nine weeks, Oct. 2014 Present Best Practices (Instruction, Management, Subgroup) at Faculty Oct. 2014, Dec. 2014, Feb. 2015, Training Meetings and Early Dismissal days. Every nine weeks, Team discussions during Grade Level Monday Meetings Reviewed monthly at Department Meetings and also during weekly grade level department meetings. Updated at the end of each 9-week grading period. Oct. 2014, Jan. 2015, Mar. 2015