The La Crosse Education Association
president was a public speaker and thanked the administration for
their cooperation leading to contract ratification. There was
hopefulness expressed that such cooperation would continue.
At several points during the meeting,
our superintendent reminded the board of the strategic plan and
especially how the reports (ELL, Youth Options, and SAGE) aligned
with the plan. During these comprehensive reports, the supervisor,
Rob Tyvoll, was applauded for his thoroughness in reporting and the
results he achieved as reflected in ACCESS scores, overall enrollment
numbers that have dropped nearly 50% since ELL was started. This was
credited to a combination of fewer ELL students as well as many of
them being exited from the program. 12 different languages are
spoken by students in La Crosse who are served by ELL and this
diversity was celebrated. One particular program that was celebrated
was the ELL Science Adventures program in which students were
pre-taught science skills and learned language in the environment
which involved extensive travel. The DPI honored our ingenuity in
this summer program. In the AMAO's, for WKCE, those exiting the
program, and progress in language goals we met expectations. There
was a call to continue supporting Preschool through grade one with
increased support. Also, we showed our appreciation for our
partnerships with higher education. Exit interviews with students
were very favorable overall. Some were not so favorable, and serve
as opportunities for us to improve.
Youth Options Report. This program for
students in grades 11 and 12 affords students great flexibility in
what courses can be taken. Data presented included numbers of
students and the classes they enrolled in. Mr. Tyvoll brought up a
new change in our law called course options in which students could
take courses from other school districts. The only provisions for
blocking such requests at the moment include if there's a conflict
with an IEP, if it doesn't support a college or career pathway, or if
it does not meet graduation credit requirements. We will keep a
watchful eye on costs (figured on prorated open enrollment). This is
far from solidified, but being a large district with a wide variety
of courses, we stand to benefit.
SAGE report. This has been a
long-standing commitment in our district. Our associate
superintendent of human resources made this report highlighting the
goals of SAGE. 900+ students qualified at a reimbursement rate of
$2,000+ per student. While the total dollar amount has increased, it
was only due to the increased number of free/reduced lunch
students...not increased financial support from the state. We have
made a commitment to support every k-3 classroom with SAGE. Reports
were made based on $ received by each school.
Along with the proposed budget came
Instructional Priorities. This was submitted by all instructional
supervisors. Included in the report was a status of initiatives led
by the team, as well as future planning as it relates to the
strategic plan. This was directly aligned with the board goals and
this is where many new ideas were presented. One overarching goal
reiterated by Dr. Harcey was the commitment our district will be
making to a customized learning plan for students.
We showed good gains in all levels on
the WKCE and this was a separate report. However, time was not
allotted to discussion about each school. Data was reported by
grade/school/content.
Reviewing the checklist from the NSBA publication:
Our board and staff have been trained
on the principles of continuous improvement...this has been partially
achieved. Some of our board, most of our administration, and some of
the teaching staff have been trained in aspects of continuous
improvement, but to varying degrees.
We have developed a culture that
promotes quality among the first considerations...this has been
partially achieved. While some of our district programs (Fine Arts,
Health Science Consortium, Preschool) are distinguished, we lag
behind the state averages in reading and math. This isn't
necessarily a new problem, but we are falling into the trap of making
excuses for not reaching goals instead of focusing on quality.
We manage by facts and our decisions
are data-driven...this is partly achieved. We have come a long way
in terms of using data, but our decisions are sometimes “softened”
when we realize the many different possible causes for problems. For
example, there is a very clear understanding that each building is a
different community and in some buildings where academic success is
not as high, we are willing to use excuses like “the demographics
of that school inhibit them from achieving as high as another more
affluent school.”
We focus on our customers and clients
in designing and delivering our services...we have mostly achieved
this goal. We really reach out to provide a variety of instructional
programming and make it accessible to all of our constituents (our
choice and charter program for example: lottery selection, bussing
from satellite schools, etc.).
We practice problem solving, prevention
and intervention rather than reaction to promote student
success...this has been partially achieved. Our district's revision
of the RTI process is demonstrative of our proactive (rather than
reactive) approach to helping struggling learners. Where the process
breaks down, however, is in details of unsuccessful interventions
that lead to referrals. Not accepting students in Special Education
because of procedural errors is a disservice to our students.
We use problem solving and risk taking
to move beyond incremental improvement...this is mostly achieved.
Our year round school is an example of our district taking a
calculated risk to support this endeavor. This was a bold move and
has been supported by our board.
We use strategic planning to focus and
drive our decisions and strategies for achieving our
priorities...this has been mostly achieved. The strategic plan is
posted, referred to often at our district leadership team meetings,
and referenced continually in our board meetings.
We practice bench making with other
school districts and businesses...this is partially achieved. We
have called upon our community partners in setting goals and even in
instructional design (Health Science Academy). However, we seldom
collaborate to set academic goals with other districts.
We treat all stakeholders with
respect...this is fully achieved. We recognize our community
partners regularly at board meetings, celebrate staff accomplishments
routinely, and have made customer service a goal this past year.
We practice constancy of purpose...this
is mostly achieved. See above.
As Superintendent, in order to improve
the board's focus on continuous improvement, I would make the
following 3 recommendations:
- After successful (thorough, thoughtful, positive) reports I would ask openly, “How can we do this better? Are there ways we can expand the success of this program to touch more students? The data represents a successful program is in place. What is our next step to make it even more successful?”
- We often function with blinders on as a district. At best we compare ourselves to our neighbors. I think we need to take a wider look at the state and look at other districts our size with similar demographics who have distinguished themselves as being exceptionally high-achieving and model some best practices after their work.
- Are we looking at the right data when making decisions? Do we have the right tool to house and access that data? Last, are all of our administrators and teachers trained in using data correctly...leveraging it to make changes in instruction that result in increased student learning? At the moment, I would say no to all of the above. I think we are using a “shotgun” approach at collecting data...burdening our teachers with collecting data that is reported and not used (i.e. AimsWeb, DRA, PALS, and district assessments all being recorded in kindergarten.
Hello Steve:
ReplyDeleteI believe that the board meeting you described for Lacrosse moves toward the actions we would all like to see in school boards. You also stated that the board and staff received instruction on the principles of continuous improvement. As educators we spend 4 or more years preparing to be part of the educational process. Our board members do not come to the process with the same training and it is the responsibility of administrators to help prepare them towards a positive role. Each member brings a strength to the community and when they feel valued they are more easily engaged.
Steve, I was very impressed with how the BOE was told of data during the reports in your district- and I agree with Linda that many of us would like to see that type of board meeting take place in our districts. I appreciate that in your plan, you are going to ask the correct questions: How can we do this better? Are there ways we can expand the success of this program to touch more students? The data represents a successful program is in place. What is our next step to make it even more successful?” It acknowledges that the staff is doing well, but we are always improving and looking to get better.
ReplyDeleteSteve,
ReplyDeleteI could not agree more with you final recommendation. You asked, "Are we looking at the right data when making decisions? Do we have the right tool to house and access that data? Last, are all of our administrators and teachers trained in using data correctly...leveraging it to make changes in instruction that result in increased student learning?" This is so powerful. Data is only useful if we know how and why we are using it. If it is not driving instruction and helping us to improve student learning it does not have a place in the district. I would argue that with focused education of staff (including administration) many of the tools that you mentioned can be used to drive instruction and support student learning. Thank you for you honesty.