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He Moku, He Wa‘a, He Wa‘a, He Moku : Collaborating For The Future of Our Community

R e d a c t e d. He Moku, He Wa‘a, He Wa‘a, He Moku : Collaborating For The Future of Our Community. State of Hawai‘i Race to the Top Tier Two Interview August 10, 2010. Who We Are. Kathryn Matayoshi, Interim Superintendent of Education, Hawai‘i Department of Education

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He Moku, He Wa‘a, He Wa‘a, He Moku : Collaborating For The Future of Our Community

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  1. R e d a c t e d He Moku, He Wa‘a, He Wa‘a, He Moku:Collaborating For The Future of Our Community State of Hawai‘i Race to the Top Tier Two Interview August 10, 2010

  2. Who We Are • Kathryn Matayoshi, Interim Superintendent of Education, Hawai‘i Department of Education • Tammi Oyadomari-Chun, Executive Director Hawai‘i P-20 Partnerships for Education • Alvin Nagasako, Executive Director Hawai‘i State Teachers Association • Ronn Nozoe, Acting Deputy Superintendent of Education, Hawai‘i State Department of Education • Chris Pating, Vice President of Strategic Planning and Implementation, Kamehameha Schools R e d a c t e d

  3. Many Islands—One State, One District Kauai Niihau Molokai Oahu Maui Lanai Kahoolawe Hawai‘i

  4. Why We Are Here • “He Moku, He Wa‘a, He Wa‘a, He Moku” • “an island, a canoe, a canoe, an island” • Ambitious Goals • Alignment & Coordination • Common Destination • Momentum R e d a c t e d

  5. Why We Must Transform, Now In under a generation, the Hawai‘i economy has left behind its agricultural base and become a knowledge economy. By 2018, Hawai‘i will rank 10th* in the nation in jobs requiring postsecondary degrees. Remains of Waialua Sugar Mill Waialua, Hawai‘i, 2009 * Source: Georgetown University Center on Education and the Workforce, June 2010

  6. Hawai‘i’s Common Destination: A Clear Theory of Change College & Career Readiness for Every Student Effective Teacher in Every Classroom and Effective Principal in Every School, Statewide Realigning People, Information, Resources & Authority: We’re Reorganizing Everything We Do to the Four Assurances Expecting More & Supporting More: We’ve Had the High Expectations and Rigorous Assessments; Now We’ll Have the Data and Aligned “Systems of Support”

  7. The Case for Hawai‘i: Hawai‘i can reach the common destination betterand faster.

  8. Hawai‘i’s Ambitious Goals for 2018  R e d a c t e d 100% proficient in reading and math by 2018 90% career- and college-ready high school graduation rate by 2018 62% college-going rate, with 25% more two- and four-year college degrees earned by 2014 Eliminate gaps in proficiency, graduation rate and college-going by 2018, especially for Native Hawaiians and Pacific Islanders 8

  9. New Statutes, New Policies: Hawai‘i’s Momentum R e d a c t e d Adopted the Common Core State Standards • Lifted the charter cap for new school start-ups • Cemented interagency data sharing in statute • Signed Agreement of Concepts with teachers’ union • Legislated alternative routes and performance contracts for principals 9

  10. Hawai‘i’s Statewide Education Attainment Depends on Our Coordinated Effort 55 percent of working age adults will receive a two- or four-year degree by 2025 R e d a c t e d

  11. Hawai‘i’s Aligned P-20 Leadership R e d a c t e d Common Education Agenda: MOA among Governor, Superintendent, University of Hawai‘i • Adopt Common Core State Standards • Adopt Career- and College-Ready Diploma • Conduct Achievement Gap Analysis • Solidify P-20 and Workforce Data Sharing 11

  12. Our Promise: Every student, Every teacher and principal, Every communityfor long term sustainability R e d a c t e d

  13. Our Promise: R e d a c t e d Every student

  14. Expecting More, Supporting More: Every Student R e d a c t e d Expecting More • 100% proficient, reading and math; 90% career- and college-ready graduation rate • Common Core State Standards and Common Statewide Curriculum • Career- and College-Ready Diploma Common Statewide Curriculum: No Achievement Gaps Supporting More • Weighted student funding formula allocates resources by student need • Electronic “Gradebook” and College Access Portal • Early learning stipends and extended learning time • Relevance through STEM: New Tech, Robotics, FIRST, Creativity Academies, STEM Counseling Centers, Searider Productions • Response to Intervention tiered supports Personalized, Relevant Learning

  15. Expecting More: Career- and College-Ready Diploma Common Core-based High School Graduation Requirements Aligned Career & College Entry Requirements Aligned Graduation and Entry Requirements • All students will complete: • 4 credits English including Expository Writing; 4 credits math including Algebra 1, Geometry, Algebra 2 (or Common Core equivalent) • 3 credits science include 2 lab courses • 4 credits social studies • Senior project Recommended for Classes of 2013-17 To be adopted as default for Class of 2018 in September 2010 by State Board of Education Cornerstone of the Common Education Agenda

  16. Supporting More: New STEM Pathways R e d a c t e d Ensuring access to technology, math and science will develop interest in and engage students in relevant STEM experiences

  17. Our Promise: Every teacher & principal R e d a c t e d

  18. Teachers, Principals, Policymakers:Paddling Together to the Common Destination The collaboration among teachers (HSTA) and principals (HGEA) in Hawai‘i is one-of-a-kind. This is our way to achieve success for every student. R e d a c t e d

  19. Great Teachers, Great Leaders (GTGL): Collaboration for Results GTGL Workgroup May 2010 Signed Agreement of Concepts • Interest-Based Bargaining • 2011- 2013 Collective Bargaining Agreement • GTGL Workgroup • 2011-2014 • Advise on Implementation

  20. Expecting More, Supporting More: Every Teacher, Every Principal R e d a c t e d Expecting More • Performance-based teacher evaluation, 50% based on multiple measures of student growth • Teacher tenure extended to 3-5 years requiring three consecutive ratings of effective or higher • Teacher evaluation system linked to employment and compensation • Principal performance contracts Five Year Tenure Track Requires Three Consecutive Ratings of Effective or Higher Supporting More • 12 month teaching contracts; 30 days of professional development • Comprehensive induction for first three years of teaching • Personalized professional development: PD360 and PDE3 • Data for School Improvement for teachers • School dashboards for principals Clear, Common Targets and Coherent Professional Development Systems

  21. Expecting More: A Thoughtful, Realistic Plan for Teacher Performance-based Evaluation 50% based on multiple measures of student growth • 50% based on multiple measures of teacher growth Annual Ratings: Exemplary Effective Marginal Unsatisfactory • Online HSA • Interim/benchmark assessments • End of course exams • New measures: non-tested subjects • Multiple observations • Stakeholder satisfaction • Leadership and service to school

  22. Expecting More: Linking Evaluation to Employment and Compensation Annual Ratings: Exemplary, Effective, Marginal, Unsatisfactory • System will be linked to compensation: • Effective novice teachers: cost of living increases and increases for PD • Exemplary teachers: new leadership positions with higher compensation, as well as increases, bonuses and other incentive payments System will be linked to employment: Exemplary and Effective teachers awarded tenure Marginal teachers get personalized PD plan Unsatisfactory teachers can be removed

  23. Supporting More: Induction of New Teachers HIDOE will implement a new set of Induction Program Standards across all 15 complex areas Providing necessary support for the state’s new teachers Required Elements • Create three‐year pathway with multiple co‐teaching and observation opportunities • Pair each novice teacher with an experienced mentor teacher • Adhere to a maximum ratio of 15:1 for inductees to experienced mentor • Provide novice teachers with content‐specific support • Include 4 formative reviews per year and a formal comprehensive review • Contain an individualized professional development plan • Identify new teacher evaluators, with a description of support for those evaluators Adhere to a maximum ratio of 15:1 for inductees to experienced mentor Outcomes • Ensure new teachers become rated effective and are more equitably distributed  • Grow number of novice teachers becoming successful in their classrooms • Ensure only teachers gauged as at least “effective” are granted tenure • Improve overall teacher retention rates More effective teachers across the state and in Priority Schools

  24. Our Promise: Every community R e d a c t e d

  25. Expecting More, Supporting More: Every Community R e d a c t e d High Expectations • All students ready for kindergarten, ready for secondary school, ready for careers and college • Tracking of student progress on user-friendly parent/caregiver dashboards • Only Highly Qualified Teachers and/or teachers rated Effective will teach in the core subjects • Regular progress monitoring until Priority Schools meet targets or are forced to close P-20 Approach: All Schools and Providers in Region Collaborate for Results Supporting More • Pre-K stipends for priority school areas • Incentives for Highly Qualified, Effective and Exemplary teachers, especially in STEM • Utilizing technology to extend the reach of Effective teachers • Increased number of turnaround leaders and teachers • Deployment of regional human resource personnel to the Zones • Community-based, community-specific wraparound supports Conditions for Success: Inside and Outside the Schools

  26. Every Community: Beginning in Hawai‘i’s Zones of School Innovation R e d a c t e d

  27. Expecting More: Turning Around Persistently Lowest-Achieving Schools In addition to the curriculum, assessment and data tools rolling out statewide, HIDOE will: Create the Office of Strategic Reform and identify turnaround partners to help evaluate the progress in Priority and Zone schools and provide “just-in-time” strategic technical assistance; Implement “Reform Action Plans” and provide community-specific operational, curricular, and family/student supports; and Monitor implementation and evaluate intervention efforts to identify successful practices that might be replicated in other schools and complex areas.

  28. Supporting More: Wraparound Supports in the Leeward Zone • For example… • Pre-k stipends and demonstration projects for preschool through 3rd grade • Native Hawaiian Education Outcomes Council • Homeless student outreach • Prenatal outreach and coordinated services • Searider Productions and Makaha Studios

  29. From Zones of School Innovation to a State of Innovation R e d a c t e d

  30. Leveraging Short Term Resources for Long Term Sustainability Office of Strategic Reform: Special Executive Assistant for School Reform(SEASR) Clear Targets Cross-Functional Project Managers: Balanced Scorecard, Teacher and Leader Effectiveness, Data, Career- and College-Ready Diploma and STEM Weekly Tracking Enables all DOE state office staff to identify and address barriers, especially cross-functional barriers

  31. Every Student Every Teacher & Principal Every Community Our Promise: Everystudent,Everyteacher and principal,Every community for long term sustainability R e d a c t e d

  32. Hawai‘i: A Proof Point for the Nation “He Moku, He Wa‘a, He Wa‘a, He Moku” R e d a c t e d We Are in the Canoe Together. Join Us.

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