1 / 17

Rhode Island Transition Indicator Rollout

Rhode Island Transition Indicator Rollout. 3rd Annual Secondary Transition State Planning Institute May 12-14, 2009. Presentation Goals. Share how Rhode Island is publically reporting the SPP Transition Indicator results Share the policy implications for State District Advocacy Partners

Download Presentation

Rhode Island Transition Indicator Rollout

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Rhode IslandTransition Indicator Rollout 3rd Annual Secondary Transition State Planning Institute May 12-14, 2009

  2. Presentation Goals • Share how Rhode Island is publically reporting the SPP Transition Indicator results • Share the policy implications for • State • District • Advocacy Partners • Discuss implications and strategies Secondary Transition Institute

  3. Rhode Island SPP Process • Indicators 1 & 2 Graduation & Dropout Rates • Cohort Formula • In second year (2007) of reporting by this method • Previously reported Special Education graduation/dropout rates from special education census Secondary Transition Institute

  4. Rhode Island SPP Process • Indicator 13 Transition Process • Did not use I-13 checklist • Collected data through special education census from IEP • Waited for full implementation based on the new state IEP form (July 1, 2008) • Focused on the qualitative inferences of Indicator 13 Secondary Transition Institute

  5. Rhode Island SPP Process • Indicator 14 • Using census approach • Collected by districts – primarily student’s teacher • Web based survey – based on NPSO Stage 1 • In second year of reporting • First year reporting district level data • Response rate 51% • Representative for all groups except dropouts • 79% engagement rate Secondary Transition Institute

  6. Transition Indicator Rollout • Statewide forums on SPP over the past few years • Include in monitoring visits • Included in Consolidated Resource Plan application – district’s federal funding application Secondary Transition Institute

  7. Transition Indicator Rollout • Prepared a presentation with all Transition Indicators and shared with • Regional Transition Advisory Committees • Regional Special Education Director groups • Parent organizations • State Special Education Advisory Committee • Vocational Rehabilitation Counselors • State Transition Council Secondary Transition Institute

  8. Transition Indicator Rollout • State Policy Implications • District Level Application Implications Secondary Transition Institute

  9. Transition Indicator Rollout • State Level Policy - Indicators 1&2 • RI High School Regulations 2004 • Graduation by proficiency • Concern of increased dropout rate – No evidence • Dropout rate is down • Fifth year retention rate is up • Transition Academies • Interventions for reaching PBGR Secondary Transition Institute

  10. Transition Indicator Rollout • District level implications • Are trends for state level date reflected in district level data? • Disproportionate representation for a district prompts state focus in Commissioner’s Review (HS Regulation monitoring system) • Provide plan to address in CRP application Secondary Transition Institute

  11. Transition Indicator Rollout • State level policy – Indicator 13 • 95% compliance • Districts given names of students with non-compliant IEPs with 60 days to correct • Did not address “qualitative” components of Indicator 13 • Coordinated • Measurable • Based on Assessments • Reasonably Enable the student to reach the post school goals Secondary Transition Institute

  12. Transition Indicator Rollout • New IEP will capture & state will collect: • Student Participation in IEP, if not, documentation of students preferences • Assessments used • Measurable post-school goals on the IEP • Transition Services • Student Assurance • □ Yes □ No I have been provided information about transition planning in the areas of education, training, employment and independent living. • □ Yes □ No I agree that my measurable post-school goals are based upon age appropriate transition assessments and will reasonably enable me to reach my goals after I complete my high school education. Secondary Transition Institute

  13. Transition Indicator Rollout • District level implications • #1 be sure IEP is completed properly • #2 be sure census clerks alert the special education director when non-compliant IEP is discovered • Active participation in PD opportunities – ex. Transition Assessment forum – sold out! Secondary Transition Institute

  14. Transition Indicator Rollout • State level policy – Indicator 14 • Focus on representativeness • Focus on results • Shared results in report • Used NPSO tools • Discussed state level conclusions • Prompted district level analysis Secondary Transition Institute

  15. Transition Indicator Rollout • Looking at District Data • Begin by examining the “Total Reported” (last) column on the report. • Did your district collect a sufficient percentage to draw conclusions? • Was your percentage at or higher than the state average? • If not, you should examine your collection methodologies and develop improvements in the next round of data collection in April and May of 2009. • Examine the percentage of students engaged • Compare your district to the state data and districts with similar demographics. • Examine the numbers for students who are not engaged • This is of concern at the state level for particular demographic groups and holds particular implications at the local level. • Who these former students are and what lead to a non-engagement result? • Implications on Practice • The primary goal of the transition outcome data collection and reporting is to influence transition planning and program decisions at the local level. • Do the results point our team in directions to improve programming or services? • What has worked, what has not? • If we change particular practices would we expect to see a change in some or all of this data? Secondary Transition Institute

  16. Transition Indicator Rollout • Going forward • Annual reporting on indicators to all groups • Built into the federal funding application • Built into public reporting • Built into monitoring system • Merging SPP data with state level policy discussions – ex. Dropout Prevention Secondary Transition Institute

  17. David SienkoRhode Island Department of Education401-222-8987David.Sienko@ride.ri.gov Secondary Transition Institute

More Related