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ESE Data Collection Training: School Safety and Discipline Report

ESE Data Collection Training: School Safety and Discipline Report. 01. Introduction to SSDR. Contents. 02. What’s new this year?. 03. CONTENTS. Submitting SSDR via SIF. 04. SSDR Application. 05. SSDR Summary Reports. 01 Introduction to SSDR. Introduction to SSDR. 01. What is SSDR?.

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ESE Data Collection Training: School Safety and Discipline Report

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  1. ESE Data Collection Training: School Safety and Discipline Report

  2. 01 Introduction to SSDR Contents 02 What’s new this year? 03 CONTENTS Submitting SSDR via SIF 04 SSDR Application 05 SSDR Summary Reports

  3. 01 Introduction to SSDR Introduction to SSDR 01

  4. What is SSDR? • SSDR = School Safety and Discipline Report • This report is annual and cumulative for each school year • SSDR is a collection that centers around student offenses and disciplines • Certification deadline for SSDR is in late July every year • This year deadline is July 20, 2018

  5. Background The Federal Gun-Free Schools Act The Federal Individuals with Disabilities Act (IDEA) • (Section 14601 of the Improving America's Schools Act) includes re-authorization of the Elementary and Secondary Education Act (ESEA). It requires each state to provide annual reports to the Secretary of Education concerning implementation of the Act’s requirements. M.G.L. c. 71, §37H and 603 CMR 53.14 requires each state to report annually to the Secretary of Education the number of children with disabilities disciplined for drug, weapon or other offenses. effective July 1, 2014, requires school districts, charter schools, and virtual schools to collect, periodically review, and annually report student discipline data to ESE.

  6. What is reportable in SSDR? • All incidents involving drug, violent, or crime-related offenses on school property and any resulting suspensions or removals imposed on the student offender(s) AND • Any other incidents involving more minor offenses (violations of the student code of conduct) that result in a suspension or removal for the student offender(s)

  7. Reportable Discipline Actions 1 – In-school suspension (more than half the day) 2 – Out-of-school suspension 3 – Expulsion 4 – Removal by an impartial hearing officer to alternative setting* 5 – Removal by school personnel to an alternative setting* 6 – Emergency removal *only applicable for students with disabilities

  8. What is NOT reportable in SSDR? • Any non-drug, non-violent, non-criminal student offenses that do not result in a suspension or removal • Any disciplines that do not involve the removal of the student from the normal education setting such as: • Detention • Saturday school

  9. Incident data details • Incident ID and date • School code where incident took place • Type of offense(s) involved • Count of offenders & offender type (student, non-student) • Count of victims & victim type (student, staff, unknown) • Physical Injury Indicator (did incident result in injury?) • Discipline Indicator (did incident result in suspension, removal, expulsion?)

  10. Discipline data details • Incident ID and date • SASID/name/DOB of disciplined student • SWD or general education student • Disciplinary Action type • Dates and duration of discipline • Appeal indicator (did student appeal discipline decision to Superintendent?) • Education services (was student academically engaged during the discipline? If yes, how so? If no, why not?)

  11. Where does the data end up? • Public Profiles Reports

  12. Where to find more information • Documentation on SSDR can be found online http://www.doe.mass.edu/infoservices/data/ssdr.html

  13. 02 What’s new this year? What’s new this year? 02

  14. New offense code set • 2017-18 is the first school year that the MA legacy code set is replaced by the NCES (National Center for Education Statistics) code set • The new offense code set (95 categories)is much more granular and detailed than the prior code set (19 categories) • Where this granularity is most significant is in the offense categories that used to be MA codes 18 and 15 • Capturing the offenses with these codes results in more useful and actionable data

  15. Offense Code 18 MA legacy code NCES codes 1210 – Forging absence excuse 2460 - Obscene language/profanity 1220 – Skipping class 2497 – Other obscene behavior 1230 – Tardiness 3600 – Violation of school rules 1240 – Truancy 1297 – Other attendance policy violation 1500 - Disorderly Conduct 2200 – Insubordination 2410 – Displays of affection in violation of school policy 2420 – Obscene written messages 2430 – Drawing obscene pictures 2440 – Obscene electronic communication 2450 – Obscene gestures 18

  16. Discipline End Date • 2017-18 is the first school year that the discipline “Return Date” is redefined to be discipline “End Date”. • It will be used to report the last date of the discipline, instead of the date the student came back to school/class. • Example: For a one day suspension, the discipline start date and discipline end date would be the same date • This is to align the legacy and SIF logic to make sure both systems are treating this date the same way.

  17. 03 Submitting SSDR via SIF Submitting SSDR via SIF 03

  18. What is SIF? • SIF = School Interoperability Framework • SIF is a standard data structure for exchanging and communicating education data. It packages the data into objects that house like information. • In 2013, MA began the initiative to convert all major state reporting collections (SIMS, SCS, EPIMS and SSDR) to the SIF data structure. This will eventually replace the file upload method of state reporting. • The SIF project is a joint effort between MA ESE and EOE IT, and requires collaboration with SIS vendors. SIS vendors must go through a MA SIF certification process to verify their ability to transmit state reporting data via SIF.

  19. Why SIF? • SIF allows for a real-time data exchange from school districts to ESE. • SIF relies on high quality data at the source, so more useful data in the SIS for school and district personnel • Error reports available all the time. • Constant data flow allows ESE to produce data quality reports to help districts address issues proactively ahead of state reporting deadlines.

  20. How does SIF work? All state reporting related information in the district SIS is transmitted to ESE. The data is packaged in SIF objects. extract logic is applied “Extract logic” refers to the filters and parameters that are applied to the received data to determine which records are relevant to a particular data submission. 20

  21. Where to start? “My district is SIF and my SSDR data should be flowing to ESE automatically, so what do I do now?” Check your SIF error reports regularly to stay on top of data errors throughout the year.

  22. SIF Error Reports • Select “SIF Reports”, then collection type then Report 4, which is the primary error report because it’s a comprehensive report for the entire district. • DA Security Role for SIF reports: SIF Adhoc District or SIF Adhoc School

  23. SIF Error Reports Data validations run on an automated cycle 7 days a week from 6am to 7pm Each validation cycle takes a few minutes, then there is a 5 minute gap before the cycle runs again. Error reports have timestamps in the upper corner.

  24. Common SIF Errors – SSDR4970 Error says: “Days Missed must be between 1-200 days” What it means: Days Missed cannot be zero if the student served a suspension. It is a common error to enter the discipline dates, but leave Days Missed blank. Enter the correct number in the Days Missed field for the incident in question. Or go to the incident reporter who entered this incident in your SIS and let them know that one of the mandatory data elements is missing.

  25. Common SIF Errors – SSDR4550 Error says: “Offense Code 1 invalid” What it means: We received an incident record with an ID and a date, but there is no offense code that tells us what type of student offense took place. Enter the correct code in the offense type field for the incident in question. Or go to the incident reporter who entered this incident in your SIS and let them know that one of the mandatory data elements is missing.

  26. Common SIF Errors – SSDR5030 Error says “Type of Offense ID (SOT1) must be one of the offenses listed on the Incident Report (OT1 – OT5)” What it means: The offense type associated with the discipline record is either blank, or it doesn’t match one of the offense types that is associated with the given incident ID. The offense type on the discipline must match an offense type on the incident. If you don’t know what offense the student was disciplined for, reach out to the incident reporter who entered this incident in your SIS and let them know that one of the mandatory data elements is missing.

  27. Common SIF Errors – SSDR4760 Error says “Physical Fight requires at least 2 offenders” What it means: A physical fight by nature must have at least two people involved. We received an incident record for a physical fight, but the count of student offenders is 1. Even if only one student was disciplined for the incident, the count of offenders must be at least 2 for this offense type.

  28. Common SIF Errors – SSDR5010 Error says “Start Date and Discipline End Date inconsistent with number of days missed. What it means: In this example, the days missed reported is 3, which is not possible with a date range of only 2 days. The start date of the discipline is 1/24/18 and the end date is 1/25/18. That means the student missed a maximum of 2 days of school.

  29. 04 SSDR Application SSDR Application 04

  30. What next? “I’ve cleared up all of the errors on my SIF error report, what do I do now?” • You can review summary reports anytime, to review the aggregate data and ensure accuracy • After your last day of school, you are able to certify the SSDR data. If you’ve kept up with the errors and already reviewed reports, go to the SSDR application and complete the submission.

  31. SSDR application – select organization DA Security Role for this application: School Safety and Discipline Report (SSDR)

  32. SSDR application – organization summary

  33. SSDR application – download data

  34. 05 SSDR Summary Reports SSDR Summary Reports 05

  35. Review Summary Reports – SIF application

  36. Summary Report – Discipline by Offense Type

  37. Summary Report – Incident Count by School

  38. Summary Report – Students suspended for more than 10 days This report shows any SASID who is reported to have more than 10 days missed (cumulative) It also shows how many incidents and what type(s) of discipline make up the total days missed, as well as how many days missed were reported with education services received.

  39. Last steps Remember to: • Review all of your summary reports for accuracy • Review the summary page in the SSDR application. Each school is listed with an incident count. Any school with a legitimate incident count of 0, check the ‘none’ box on the screen. • Download a copy of the raw data from the SSDR application for your records • Certify the data

  40. 06 Q&A Q&A 06 What questions do you have? What aspect of SSDR reporting do you need help with?

  41. Thank You THANK YOU Melissa Marino, Data Collection Supervisor 781.338.6797 mmarino@doe.mass.edu www.doe.mass.edu 75 Pleasant Street, Malden, MA 02148

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