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DoD Education Activity (DoDEA) Community Strategic Plan (CSP) for School Years 2013/14- 2017/18

DoD Education Activity (DoDEA) Community Strategic Plan (CSP) for School Years 2013/14- 2017/18 Training Module for School-level Educators July 2013. Purpose of the CSP CSP Framework CSP Foundational Concepts CSP Foundational Elements Mission and Vision Core Values

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DoD Education Activity (DoDEA) Community Strategic Plan (CSP) for School Years 2013/14- 2017/18

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  1. DoD Education Activity (DoDEA) Community Strategic Plan (CSP) for School Years 2013/14- 2017/18 Training Module for School-level Educators July 2013

  2. Purpose of the CSP • CSP Framework • CSP Foundational Concepts • CSP Foundational Elements • Mission and Vision • Core Values • Strategic Goals • Measuring Our Performance • DoDEA’s PK-12 Education Transformation Priorities • Strategic Goals & Performance Measures • Review 2

  3. Purpose of the CSP Serves as DoDEA’s Call to Action • The CSP is the product of DoDEA’sstrategic planning process. • The CSP for school years 2013/14 – 2017/18 articulates DoDEA’s blueprint for achieving • new levels of excellence in the areas most vital to becoming one of our Nation’s best • school systems. • These areas include: student achievement, school performance, talent management, • organizational effectiveness, and community outreach • The CSP also: • Forms the foundation for all other organizational planning; • Strengthens organizational accountability and transparency; and • Serves as a Call-to-Action for our community and public education partners. 3

  4. CSP Framework • Review of DoDEA’s Current State: • To initiate the strategic planning process, a comprehensive review was conducted to • capture organizational strengths, weaknesses, opportunities and challenges. Review findings • are provided in the CSP Background Report. • Strategic Direction and End-state Aspiration Determination: • A leadership team developed the plan’s foundational elements – DoDEA’s Vision, Mission, • Core Values ,and Strategic Goals. The elements convey DoDEA’s strategic direction and • end-state aspirations. Provided in the Volume I of the CSP. • CSP Goal Strategy Development: • DoDEA HQ is leading the effort to develop a strategy for each strategic goal. The strategies • will explain how we intend to achieve each goal over the next five years. The strategies will • be provided in Volume II of the CSP – scheduled for a December 2013 publication. • CSP Annual Review and Accountability Reporting: • Each year, we will review our current state, and, as needed, adjust the goal strategies. Annual • review results are published in December of each year in the CSP Annual Accountability Report. • The fist annual accountability report will be published in December 2013. 4

  5. Maintain a focus in all we do on the “whole” military-connected student. • Represent the broad and varied views of DoDEA’s community stakeholders. • Measure success in terms of the “individual.” • Improve the outcomes for all 1.2 million military-connected students. • Strengthen our culture of accountability. • Ensure transparency to those we serve. • Foster partnerships and community collaboration. 5

  6. Mission and Vision Mission Educate, engage, and empower each student to succeed in a dynamic world. Vision To be among the world’s best leaders in education, enriching the lives of military-connected students and the communities in which they live. 6

  7. Core Values • Students are at the heart of all we do. • Each student can realize his or her fullest potential. • Educating the whole child fosters academic, social, and emotional well-being. • Learning environments are student-centered, stimulating and relevant. • High performing educators and leaders make a difference in student success. • Parental engagement and support are vital to student success. • Engaged partnerships enrich the lives of our students. • Our diversity inspires excellence and innovation. 7

  8. Strategic Goals • 1. Student Excellence • Challenge each student to maximize his or her potential and to excel academically, • socially, emotionally and physically for life, college and career readiness. • 2. School Excellence • Develop and sustain each school to be high-performing within an environment of • innovation, collaboration, continuous renewal and caring relationships. • 3. Talent Excellence • Recruit, develop and empower a diverse, high-performing team to maximize • achievement for each student. • 4. Organizational Excellence • Build a great, enduring and responsive organization, which provides appropriate • resources, direction and services in pursuit of highest student achievement. • 5. Outreach Excellence • Foster family, school and community partnerships to expand educational opportunities • for students. 8

  9. Measuring Our Performance • DoDEA’s CSP process includes a performance measurement process. • The process measures the effectiveness of the goal strategies in achieving each goal. • Performance measures establish performance targets in areas most critical to each goal’s success. • Performance measures are indicators of goal success – they do not define goal success. • Schools are responsible for the achievement of 17 of DoDEA’s 31 performance measures. -- 6 in Goal 1; 6 in Goal 2; 2 in Goal 3; 3 in Goal 5 • The performance measurement process is dynamic – performance measures are monitored and adjusted or replaced when they are met and/or more effective ways to measure goal success become available. • Performance targets represent levels of success that once achieved, establish the foundation from which further progress is measured. 9

  10. Adoption of common curricular standards, beginning with the Common Core State Standards in English Language Arts/Literacy and Mathematics 2) Adoption of assessments aligned to new curriculum standards 3) Adoption of a research-based, system-wide professional development model 4) Conversion to digital learning environments 5) Modernization of school facilities to align with 21st century instruction 6) Integration of STEM in all appropriate curricular areas 7) Employment reform to change the way we recruit, retain, and evaluate talent 10

  11. Goal 1 Student Excellence - Challenge each student to maximize his or her potential and to excel academically, socially, emotionally and physically for life, college and career readiness. Goal 1 Performance Measures: 1.1 75% (stretch goal of 80%) of DoDEA students in grades 3-11 will score in the top two quarters and no more than 5% (stretch goal of 3%) in the bottom quarter on the system-wide standardized assessment in math, science, reading, language arts, and social studies by SY 2017-2018. Baseline: 2013 TerraNova 3d Ed. results: math – 69%/10%; science – 75%/7%; reading – 74%/7%; language arts - 72%/8%; social studies – 75%/6%. 1.2  (Elementary schools only) All 3rd grade students will meet or exceed the end-of-year grade-level “individual” reading proficiency benchmark by SY 2017-2018.  K-3 students not meeting grade-level “individual” reading proficiency benchmarks will be enrolled in a reading intervention program by SY 2016-2017. Baseline: SY 2012-2013 Benchmark Assessment System (BAS) results: K- 77%; Grade 1 - 69%; Grade 2 - 67%; Grade 3 – 65% (based on BAS results at the end of SY 2012/13) GREEN – school responsibility – actively pursue performance target PURPLE – school responsibility – “hold” for program development BLACK – above school-level responsibility 11

  12. Goal 1 Goal 1 Performance Measures (Cont): 1.3 DoDEA will implement Common Core State Standards (CCSS) curriculum in Math and English Language Arts/Literacy by SY 2016-2017. Baseline: Establish at the end of SY 2015-2016. 1.4 DoDEA will increase curricular and co-curricular opportunities to cultivate student interest and build student competencies in science, technology, engineering and mathematics (STEM) fields by SY 2017-2018. Baseline: Establish at end of SY 2013-2014, measuring student participation in STEM opportunities. 1.5 75% of students in grades 5, 7, and 9 shall meet or exceed the health standards of physical fitness criterion by SY 2017-2018. Baseline: Establish with SY 2014-2015 Fitness Assessments. GREEN – school responsibility – actively pursue performance target PURPLE – school responsibility – “hold” for program development BLACK – above school-level responsibility 12

  13. Goal 2 School Excellence: Develop and sustain each school to be high-performing within an environment of innovation, collaboration, continuous renewal and caring relationships. Goal 2 Performance Measures: 2.1 All DoDEA schools will achieve a minimum AdvancED Quality School accreditation level rating of “Accredited” or above during the current 5-year accreditation cycle ending in SY 2017/18; Baseline: In SY 2012/13, all 37 DoDEA schools receiving an accreditation visit received an “Accredited” rating or above. 2.2 Meet the average daily student attendance rate of 93% or higher by SY 2017-2018. Baseline: For SY12/13, the DoDEA Average Daily Attendance (ADA) was 92.26% (ASPEN Attendance Data). 155 (80%) of DoDEA's 194 schools met or exceeded the 93.00% ADA target. 2.3 Decrease the accident/injury rate by 3% (below the established baseline) each year through SY 2017-2018 as measured and reported in the Accident/Injury Reporting System (AIRS). Baseline: In SY 2012-2013, there were 2,190 incidents reported in the Accident/Injury Reporting System. GREEN – school responsibility – actively pursue performance target PURPLE – school responsibility – “hold” for program development BLACK – above school-level responsibility 14

  14. Goal 2 Goal 2 Performance Measures (Cont): 2.4 Implement a standardized assessment system that enables and encourages all students to self-evaluate their level of physical fitness by SY 2014-2015. Baseline: Establish at end of SY 2014-2015 with standardized assessment data. 2.5 Implement an Innovation Configuration map that identifies and describes the major components of quality STEM opportunities and facilitates STEM initiative performance measurement by SY 2013-2014. Baseline: Establish at end of SY 2013-2014 with standardized STEM Innovation Configuration map. 2.6 DoDEA survey results will indicate that 80% of parents, students and teachers agree that their school rates as an “A” or “B” by SY 2017-2018. Baseline: Establish with SY 2013-2014 DoDEA Annual survey results (conducted in the spring). The new survey will be available for review in the fall of SY 2013/14. GREEN – school responsibility – actively pursue performance target PURPLE – school responsibility – “hold” for program development BLACK – above school-level responsibility 15

  15. Goal 3 Talent Excellence: Recruit, develop and empower a diverse, high-performing team to maximize achievement for each student. Goal 3 Performance Measures: 3.1 90% (stretch goal of 100%) of new teacher and administrator hires will meet top-tier requirements as measured by DoDEA’s selection criteria rubric by SY 2017-2018. Baseline: Establish at the end of SY 2015-2016 hiring season (Jan-Aug 2015). 3.2 DoDEA will increase the diversity of its teacher and administrator applicant pool by a minimum of 2% annually through SY 2017-2018. Baseline: Establish with the SY 2014-2015 applicant pool (March 2014). 3.3 DoDEA survey results will indicate that 75% of respondents will “Agree” or “Strongly Agree” on indicators of the following areas: teacher quality; leadership quality, instructional experiences and methods; and development and continuous learning by SY 2017-2018. Baseline: Establish with SY 2013-2014 DoDEA Annual survey results (conducted in the spring). The new survey will be available for review in the fall of SY 2013/14. 3.4 Annual Federal Viewpoint Survey results will indicate an annual 2% increase in “Favorable” responses on the development and empowerment indices (minimum of 10% over five years). Baseline: 2012 Survey measurements: Development: 56.5%; Empowerment: 58.4%. GREEN – school responsibility – actively pursue performance target PURPLE – school responsibility – “hold” for program development BLACK – above school-level responsibility 16

  16. Goal 3 Goal 3 Performance Measures (Cont’): 3.5 DoDEA personnel not covered under a current collective bargaining agreement (CBA) will have an approved, written plan that facilitates professional growth and development by SY 2014-2015. Employees covered by a CBA will establish such plans in accordance with the CBA. Baseline: Establish at beginning of SY 2014-2015. 3.6All teachers and leaders will demonstrate knowledge and application of 21st Century teaching, learning and leading strategies by SY 2017-2018. Baseline: Establish at the end of SY 2013-2014. GREEN – school responsibility – actively pursue performance target PURPLE – school responsibility – “hold” for program development BLACK – above school-level responsibility 17

  17. Goal 4 Organizational Excellence: Build a great, enduring and responsive organization, which provides appropriate resources, direction and services in pursuit of highest student achievement. Goal 4 Performance Measures: 4.1Annual Federal Viewpoint Survey results will indicate an annual 2% or more increase in “Favorable” responses on the following indices: engagement; innovation; collaboration; resources; and direction (minimum of 10% over five years). Baseline: 2012 Survey measurements: Engagement: 65.85%; Innovation: 47.2%; Collaboration: 65.1%; Resources: 61.5%; Direction: 65.1%. 4.2DoDEA will become a “Top 10 Place to Work in the Federal Government” in the agency sub-component category as measured by the Partnership for Public Service by SY 2017-2018. Baseline: 2012 Ranking – 218th. 4.3 DoDEA will fully resource the initiatives identified as being critical to goal success in the Community Strategic Plan. Baseline: Percent of action plans fully resourced at the initiation of the CSP implementing strategies (December 2013). 4.4 90% of DoDEA school facilities will achieve a Q-1 or Q-2 condition rating by end of SY 2017-2018, indicating the facilities meet DoD’sacceptable condition standards. Baseline: At end of FY 2013, 42% of DoDEA’s school facilities were rated as being in a Q-1/Q-2 (fair or better) condition. GREEN – school responsibility – actively pursue performance target PURPLE – school responsibility – “hold” for program development BLACK – above school-level responsibility 18

  18. Goal 4 Goal 4 Performance Measures (Cont’) 4.590% of all DoDEA operational funding will be executed each year on direct educational services to students. Baseline: Fiscal Year 2013 – 91% 4.6 DoDEA and its personnel and pay agents (DLA and DFAS) will eliminate personnel and pay transaction errors by SY 2015-2016. Baseline: Establish at the end of SY 2012-2013 (NLT 30 June 2012). 4.7 DoDEA will operate an infrastructure of administrative support systems that ensure accurate, timely, competent, customer-focused service to its employees by SY 2015-2016. Baseline: Establish at the end of SY 2013-2014. 4.8DoDEA will reduce the number of employee debt cases by 20% each year and reduce the debt case backlog (carry-over from previous FYs) to less than 2% of the open debt cases by SY 2017-2018. Baseline: XX debt cases at the end of FY2012; 2,124 were initiated in FY2012. 4.9DoDEA will reduce the number of employee grievances at step 2 or higher by 10% each year; reduce the number of new cases appealed to arbitration by 10% each year; and reduce the number of pay-related grievances that require step 3 or higher resolution to zero by SY 2017-2018. Baseline: Establish at the end of SY 2012-2013. GREEN – school responsibility – actively pursue performance target PURPLE – school responsibility – “hold” for program development BLACK – above school-level responsibility 19

  19. Goal 5 Outreach Excellence: Foster family, school and community partnerships to expand educational opportunities for students. Goal 5 Performance Measures: 5.1 Expand overall outreach opportunities by 5% that improve educational opportunities and minimize academic disruption for military-connected students by SY 2017-2018. Baseline: At the end of SY 2012 - 2013, DoDEA was delivering the following outreach opportunities: 1812 virtual high school courses; 337 Military Family Life Consultants; Advanced Placement Training in 80 public high schools; funding in support of virtual learning opportunities in 5 LEAs. 5.2 DoDEA and Public Schools: Strive to ensure every school with a military-student enrollment of 25% or greater provides research based transition program/ curriculum that support student transitions to new schools by SY 2017-2018. Baseline: At the end of SY 2012 – 2013, 77 of 194 DoDEA schools (40%) had an established peer-based program; 135 DoDEA Partnership grants have been awarded to 442 public schools with a military-student enrollment of 25% or more; of those schools, 82 provide a research based transition program/curriculum to schools (19%). 5.3 DoDEA and Public Schools: Strive to ensure every school with a military-student enrollment of 25% or greater will have one or more parent/family engagement strategies that aim to improve student achievement by SY 2017-2018. Baseline: Establish at the start of SY 2013-2014. 5.4 Each DoDEA school will establish one or more community partnerships that expand student learning opportunities and/or promote student physical health and well-being by SY 2017-2018.  Baseline Establish at the start of SY 2013-2014. GREEN – school responsibility – actively pursue performance target PURPLE – school responsibility – “hold” for program development BLACK – above school-level responsibility 20

  20. In advance of the December release of the goal strategies, schools should perform two actions: 1) Align the Continuous School Improvement (CSI) planning process with the CSP to ensure CSI goals/strategies are supportive of one or more of the CSP goals. 2) Work with district staffs to complete a gap analysis for the 8 school-level performance measures established for existing, active programs and initiatives. -- Gap analysis: measuring the gap between the current performance level and the performance target established in a performance measure. 21

  21. Review • The CSP is the product of a community-wide effort and represents the hopes and aspirations of our entire community. • Every aspect of the CSP focuses on improving student outcomes. • The new CSP aims to make DoDEA a more accountable, transparent organization. • The CSP’s foundational elements – vision and mission statements, core values, and strategic goals – establish what we aspire to achieve (see Volume I of the CSP). • Our five strategic goals seek new levels of excellence in student achievement, school performance, talent management, organizational effectiveness and community outreach. • The Goal strategies will explain how we plan to achieve our goals and, ultimately, our vision (to be released in Volume II in December 2013). • The CSP’s performance measurement process measures how well our goal strategies are working towards goal achievement. • The PK-12 Education Transformation Priorities establish DoDEA’s strategic priority of effort. • Schools should take several actions in advance of the December release of the CSP goal strategies to begin aligning continuous improvement efforts with the CSP. 22

  22. “Greatness is not a function of circumstance. Greatness, it turns out, is largely a matter of conscious choice and discipline.” - Jim Collins 23

  23. “Be tight on Ends and Loose on Means” • Be “Tight” on enduring elements: Mission, Vision, Core Values, and Strategic Goals • Be “Loose” on the CSP’s dynamic elements: the Goal strategies and performance • measures • Positive results are rarely achieved in a lockstep, linear fashion, but rather through multiple pathways. While we believe that schools need to be “tight” on ensuring students are achieving high academic standards, we need to leave room to accommodate the necessary variation in leadership practice dictated by the different challenges and opportunities that exist at one school relative to another. • “Creative innovation is the fuel for continuous improvement.”

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