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Data Summit 2016

Data Summit 2016. Summer 2016. Sharing Data on Early Learners with Families. The Flamboyan Foundation. Who We Are: Flamboyan Foundation is a private, family foundation focused on improving educational outcomes for children in Pre-K-12 public schools in Washington, D.C. and Puerto Rico.

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Data Summit 2016

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  1. Data Summit 2016 Summer 2016 Sharing Data on Early Learners with Families

  2. The Flamboyan Foundation Who We Are: Flamboyan Foundation is a private, family foundation focused on improving educational outcomes for children in Pre-K-12 public schools in Washington, D.C. and Puerto Rico. What We Do: Bring strategic leadership and investment of time and money to address some of the most deeply rooted educational challenges D.C. Focus Areas : Family engagement and education advocacy Family engagement strategies informed by: • Focus groups with 150+ D.C. parents • Landscape analysis • National research • Expert interviews • Teacher fellowships and school learning partnerships

  3. Who we work with Schools • 40 intensive family engagement partnerships • 5 middle school learning partnerships Teachers • Alternative certification programs (UTC, TNTP, CTRs) • Training for public charter school teachers • Home visit training for 400 ECE teachers and paraprofessionals • Fellowships to learn about family engagement in SPED, family engagement technologies, and to develop a diagnostic tool Principals • Mary Jane Patterson Fellowship (DCPS) • New Leaders D.C. College Readiness • Duke Ellington/College Summit partnership • 5 learning partners

  4. Family Engagement Matters for School Improvement • 5 key factors predicted school improvement • Weakness over time in any one area lowered a school’s chance of improving to roughly 10% Bryk, A.Sebring, P., Allensworth, A., Luppescu, S., & Easton, J. (2010). Organizing Schools for Improvement: Lessons from Chicago. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.

  5. What is Effective Family Engagement?

  6. APTT Background and History • Developed by Maria C. Paredes in Phoenix, AZ • Piloted 4 years ago in Creighton School District • 90% free or reduced lunch • 85% Hispanic, 45% English Language Learners • 65% of parents have less than 8th grade education • Piloted in Creighton School District • Strong impact: • During the 2010-2011 school year, students in APTT classrooms had double the increase in reading fluency than in their peers non-APTT classrooms (89 classrooms implementing) • During 2011-2012, 42% of students in APTT classrooms increased reading mastery compared to 27% of students in non APTT classrooms (186 classrooms implementing)

  7. Let’s watch a video!

  8. Discuss and Chart • How is APTT different from a traditional parent teacher conference? • What data sharing best practices did you identify?

  9. Data Sharing Key Components • Sharing anonymized & comparative data with families. • Identifying foundational skills, goals, and activities • Goal setting • Providing and practicing learning activities with families

  10. Key Data Points for ECE Families

  11. Symbolic Representation: The ability to represent your thoughts concretely.

  12. Take a moment to think... 1. What is this little boy thinking about? 2. What are some ways we can help our own students represent their thoughts? As your child enters kindergarten, they will be asked to use symbolic representation to write reader’s response journals. Having strong symbolic representation skills will ensure they are successful.

  13. Symbolic Representation Symbolic representation is the ability to represent your thoughts concretely. _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ Writing, drawing, storytelling, building, and doing art projects are all ways to practice symbolic representation.

  14. VideoNotice how Kira writes down the exact language of the student to make the student feel like her words are important.

  15. Best Practices *remember not to ask yes/no questions

  16. Practice Time! 1. Read your child’s story with a partner at your table. 2. Act out the story with your partner.

  17. 3 minutes: Set a Goal*Generally students can move several indicators in one school year 1. Talk with your table about how your child might benefit from improved symbolic representation skills. 2. Think of a time of day that you can practice this indicator with your child. 3. Think of additional tips at your tables.

  18. Discuss • Which aspects of the ECE APTT meetings could you use in your parent teacher conferences? • What are you excited to try in you parent teacher conferences next year?

  19. Planning Review the materials and planning tools in your folder For the next 20 minutes: • Select materials to present to your school community • Use the planning to tool to decide how and when you will share these materials and what supports your staff will need.

  20. Thank you!

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