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Comprehensive Planning: The Highway to Continuous Improvement and Success

Comprehensive Planning: The Highway to Continuous Improvement and Success. November 16, 2012 Carbon Lehigh Intermediate Unit. Important Presentation Links. Important Presentation Links http://tinyurl.com/CP-PDE-Home http://training.paplanning.org

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Comprehensive Planning: The Highway to Continuous Improvement and Success

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  1. Comprehensive Planning: The Highway to Continuous Improvement and Success November 16, 2012 Carbon Lehigh Intermediate Unit

  2. Important Presentation Links • Important Presentation Links • http://tinyurl.com/CP-PDE-Home • http://training.paplanning.org • http://tinyurl.com/DLP-Offline-Guidance-Tool

  3. Previously Submitted eSP Plan Reports: • Academic Standards & Assessment (6 years) • Professional Education (3 years) • Teacher Induction (6 years) • Student Services (3 years) • Special Education (3 years) • Educational Technology (3 years)

  4. Research Study Spring / Summer 2010 • Field Practitioners and PDE Officials • Interviews, Focus Group Sessions, Survey • Analysis conducted by independent former • administrators • Conclusion • Identified the need for a comprehensive process and associated tool that aligns District and School level planning

  5. Comprehensive Planning Project Project Purpose: Design and develop a single, streamlined, yet systematic, process and plan management system for district and school level planning CAIU & DCIU Partnership

  6. Current and Future Contributors to the Project: • Bureau of Teaching and Learning Support • Bureau of Special Education • Bureau of Assessment & Accountability • Bureau of Career & Technical Education • Bureau of School Leadership and Teacher Quality • Center for Data Quality & Information Technology • IU 8, 10, 11, 12, 13, 15, 17, 20, 24, 25 & 27 Personnel • Pennsylvania Association for School Administrators • The Education Policy and Leadership Center • PAIU-CC , PAIMS, PAIU-SS , PAIU-ED • Stakeholder Advisory Committee • Educational Technology Office

  7. The Process • All Phase 2 Districts will submit a District Level Plan via the CP web application by November 30, 2013. • Submission will consist of a single LEA Comprehensive plan containing up to six goals every three years. The single plan will meet legislative requirements including, but not limited to Chapters 4, 12, 14, 16, and 49. • The DLP will be submitted online through the CP web application. • The District Level Planning Offline Guidance Tool guides the process.

  8. Characteristics of High Performing Educational Systems: • Clear and Shared Focus • High Standards and Expectations • Effective District Leadership • High Levels of Collaboration and Communication • Curriculum, Instruction and Assessment Aligned with Standards • Frequent Monitoring of Teaching and Learning • Focused Professional Development • Supportive Learning Environment • High Levels of Community and Parent Involvement

  9. Incorporating 21st Century Skills into the Comprehensive Plan The Partnership for 21st Century Skills framework presents a vision for 21st century student outcomes and the support systems that are needed to produce these outcomes. Mastery of core academic subjects is the base upon which all 21st century learning occurs.

  10. Partnership for 21st Century Learning Early in the process of comprehensive planning, it is highly encouraged that a district takes the Milestones for Improving Learning and Education (The MILE Guide) self-assessment. The MILE Guide toolset is designed to help districts determine where they are on the spectrum of ensuring 21st century readiness for every student. To view the Partnership for 21st Century Learning’s Framework visit: http://www.p21.org/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=254&Itemid=119 To view the MILES Guide and complete the self-assessment online visit: http://www.p21.org/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=800&Itemid=52

  11. Comprehensive Planning

  12. District Level Planning Team Staff and Stakeholder groups may include: • District and School Level Administrators • Program and Support Personnel (e.g., Curriculum, Special Education, Student Services, Instructional Technology) • Coaches and Mentors • Elementary, Middle and High School Teachers • Students • Parents • District Board Members • Local Business and Community Representatives

  13. District Level Planning Team The planning committee must contain at minimum: • (6) Teacher representatives (chosen by the teachers) divided equally among elementary, middle and high school teachers as well as at minimum (1) Special Education Teacher • (2) Educational specialists (chosen by educational specialists) including dental hygienists, school guidance counselors, home-school visitors, technology instructors, school psychologists, school restoration, and nutrition service specialist. • (2) Administrative representatives (chosen by the administrators) • (2) Parents of children attending a school in the district (appointed by the board of school directors) • (2) Local business representatives (appointed by the district board) • (2) Community representatives (appointed by the district board)

  14. District Level Planning Components • Profile • Core Foundations • Assurances • Needs Assessment • Action Planning • Plan Submission

  15. Profile • Mission • Vision • Shared Values • Educational Community • District Level Planning Team

  16. Core Foundations (CF) • Standards • Curriculum • Instruction • Assessments • Safe and Supportive Schools • Materials and Resources • Professional Education • Special Education

  17. Assurances • Safe and Supportive Schools • Special Education

  18. Needs Assessment • Analyze Data • Optional Data Walkthroughs • Optional Locally Relevant Data • Record Patterns of School Level Accomplishments • Record Patterns of School Level Systemic Challenges • Identification of Accomplishments and Concerns • Analyze Systems • District Level Guiding Questions • Academic Achievement Systems • Safe and Supportive Schools Systems • Human and Fiscal Resource Allocation and Stewardship Systems • Prioritize Systemic Challenges

  19. Qualities of a Good Needs Assessment: • Based on clearly presented, valid and reliable data • Includes a variety of sources of information (e.g. teachers, parents, students, administrators, counselors, community members) • Includes a balance of different types of data measuring the pulse of current district status compared with similar data over periods of time(e.g., student achievement scores, perceptions of stakeholders, behavioral and attitudinal patterns, district programs and processes including resource allocations, demographic patterns all in current and longitudinal representation) • Accurately interprets the data to identify both strengths and challenges • Detects needs from identified strengths and challenges • Sets priorities for needs in a manner that addresses student learning

  20. Action Planning • The District Level Plan is the collection of Action Plans that implement Strategies for accomplishing Goals. The following process is repeated for each Action Plan: • Identify a Goal • Identify Indicators of Effectiveness • Identify Strategies • Identify Action Steps • If applicable, complete Professional Development Action Step Worksheet(s)

  21. Goal Action Plan Directions Step 1: Review the highest prioritized Systemic Challenges documented in the District Systemic Challenge Worksheet. Step 2: Select an existing goal or create one. The existing goals are derived from the systemic challenges identified during the Needs Assessment step. Therefore, you may simply transfer the wording of a systemic challenge into the Goal box. Goals need to be SMART goals—they are specific, Student-centered, Measurable, Attainable, Relevant and Time bound. Step 3: If appropriate, align additional Systemic Challenge(s).

  22. Continued… Step 4: Identify one or more Indicators of Effectiveness. These indicators describe the level of student achievement or performance a CP Committee will accept as evidence that the Action Plan is having the impact intended. In addition to summative Indicators of Effectiveness, CP Committees are encouraged to include formative Indicators of Effectiveness that will provide insight into the impact of the Action Plan during the course of its implementation. Step 5: Select Strategies associated in accomplishing the Goal. Strategies may be selected from the PDE Recognized Strategies list. (See Appendix)

  23. Continued… Step 6: Identify the Action Steps that detail the implementation of the identified strategies with the purpose of meeting the identified Goal. The Action Steps should document all of the actions needed to fully reach the Goal of the Action Plan. Step 7: If an Action Step is a Professional Development Action Step, then complete the Professional Development Action Step Worksheet (two pages). One worksheet is required for each Professional Development Action Step.

  24. Plan Submission • Within the online Comprehensive Planning tool the Chief School Administrator will affirm the assurances of quality and accountability statements. In addition, the affirmation verifies that the School Board President reviewed the District Level Plan and affirms the appropriate statements. • Signatures are entered electronically, so the School Board President and the Chief School Administrator must have access to web application.

  25. Happy Comprehensive Planning Members of the Curriculum, Instruction and Educational Technology Department at CLIU are here to help! 610 769-4111 x1064 lenettc@cliu.org goldenc@cliu.org

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