presentation on the elementary and secondary education act “no child left behind” nicholas c....
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![Page 1: Presentation on The Elementary and Secondary Education Act “No Child Left Behind” Nicholas C. Donohue, Commissioner of Education New Hampshire Department](https://reader036.vdocuments.mx/reader036/viewer/2022062423/56649ea15503460f94ba533f/html5/thumbnails/1.jpg)
Presentation on The Elementary Presentation on The Elementary and Secondary Education Actand Secondary Education Act
“No Child Left Behind”“No Child Left Behind”
Presentation on The Elementary Presentation on The Elementary and Secondary Education Actand Secondary Education Act
“No Child Left Behind”“No Child Left Behind”Nicholas C. Donohue, Commissioner of Nicholas C. Donohue, Commissioner of
EducationEducationNew Hampshire Department of EducationNew Hampshire Department of Education
November, 2002November, 2002
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Purpose of No Child Left Behind
“…to ensure that all children have a fair, equal, and significant opportunity to obtain a high-quality education and reach, at a minimum, proficiency on challenging State academic achievement standards and state academic assessments”
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Persistent Themes
Local Schools and Districts……”where the action is.”
Federal-State-Local pieces all essential Support “disadvantaged” children “What Works!” Increased Resources… related costs? Urgency Accountability…
…with teeth.
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Major Provisions
• Provides Flexibility and Local Control• Provides for Expanded Options and
Choice for Parents• Focus on Teaching• Focus on Reading• Demands Accountability for Results
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Demands Accountability for Results
High standards –English Language Arts, Math and Science… at a minimum.
Assessment system ELA and math every year grades 3-8 Science – 3 times, once within each of three grade-spans (3-5),(6-
9),(10-12) ELA and math once with (10-12) grade-span.
All public school children NAEP - 4th and 8th Grade, reading and math, every two
years Single State Accountability System
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$$$$$$$$$$$
This Year $41.9 MillionNext Year $59.6 MillionNew Resources $ 17.7 Million
(36% Increase)
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H$ghl$ghts! $27 million in Title I “Basic” - $5 million more (+18%) $13.6 million to train and retain skilled educators (+45%) $3.1 million for Educational Technology Programs in the
schools (+30%) $1.5 million to fund after-school programs for at-risk
children (21st Century Schools Program – New!) $2.1 million in funding for Reading First (New!) $3.9 million to help NH assess student learning (New!)
Note: Funding figures are US Department of Education estimates
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Single State Accountability system
Based on academic standards and assessments
Includes achievement of all students Include sanctions and rewards to hold all
public schools accountable for student achievement (these may differ from the sanctions required under Title I)
Includes “Adequate Yearly Progress”- Measure of performance and
progress
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At The Center… “Adequate Yearly
Progress”Grounded in assessment resultsMajor debate.. Very hard to do as
one size fits allOld version… Accepted… Now changingNew stakes, new guidelines
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01-0202-03
03-0406-07
09-1008-09
07-0805-06
04-05
Goal: All Proficient
10-1111-12
12-1313-14
Starting Point
School Year
Defining AYP: Defining AYP: Starting PointStarting Point
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Defining AYP:Defining AYP:Intermediate Intermediate GoalsGoals
01-0202-03
03-0406-07
09-1008-09
07-0805-06
04-05
Goal: All Proficient
10-1111-12
12-1313-14
Starting Point
Intermediate Goals – 3 years maxmust increase in equal increments
First increase within 2 years
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Annual Annual Measurable Measurable ObjectivesObjectives
01-0202-03
03-0406-07
09-1008-09
07-0805-06
04-05
Goal: All Proficient
10-1111-12
12-1313-14
Starting Point
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AYP Requires
Same high standards for all Statistically valid and reliable Continuous and substantial improvement for all students Separate measurable annual objectives for achievement
• All students• Racial/ethnic groups• Economically disadvantaged students• Students with disabilities• Students with limited English proficiency• All related subject areas, all grades
Graduation rates for high schools and 1 other indicator for elementary schools
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How a school or district makes AYP…
Each group of students meets or exceeds statewide annual objective
exception: - the number below Proficient reduced 10% from
prior year, and - subgroup made progress on other indicators
ANDFor each group, 95% of students participate in the assessments on which AYP is based
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Schools Not Making AYP For 2 Consecutive Years
Year 1 Year 2 Year 3
Year 4
Year 5
- 2 Year Plan, Choice w/in District- Choice, “Supplemental Services” *- Choice, Supp. Services, “Corrective Actions”
Staff, New Curric, Outside Expert, Extend Year and/or Day, Restructure Internal School Organization
- Choice, Supp Services, “Plan Restructuring”**Reopen as charter, Remove staff –all or most, principal too, Contract with entity, State takeover, Any other major governance restructuring.
- Choice, Supp Services, Implement Restructuring
*Unless natural disaster, or “unforseen” decline in $$$** Consistent with state law
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For a State to make AYP
Annual peer review beginning in year 3 will determine…
Did the State make AYP as defined under Title I for each group of students ?
Did the State meet its annual measurable achievement objectives for LEP attainment of English proficiency under Title III?
(Title VI, Subpart 4)
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If a State fails to make AYP for 2 consecutive years…
The United States Secretary of Education shall provide technical assistance that is: • Valid, reliable and rigorous, and• Constructive feedback to help the State
make AYP or meet the annual measurable objectives
SY 2005 Report to Congress on Status of States
State Administrative Funds at Stake
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Annual State Report Card
Will include:• Disaggregated student achievement results by performance
level• Comparison between annual objectives and actual
performance for each student group• Percent of students not tested, disaggregated• 2-year trend data by subject, by grade tested• Data on other indicators used to determine AYP• Graduation rates• Performance of districts making AYP, including the number
and names of schools identified for school improvement• Professional qualifications of teachers, percent with
provisional credentials, percent of classes not taught by highly qualified teachers including comparison between high- and low-poverty schools
• Optional information provided by State
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COSTS
• Assessment: Expanded, Plus and Minus, Local Work.
• AYP: The Cost of Help and Support.• High Quality Educator: Certification,
Professional Development, Para’s.• Accountability: AYP, State, What
Will it Look Like, What Will It Mean.
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This Year! Answering questions
without clear answers Tracking fed regulations AYP for NH Identify “supplemental”
service providers Support Parent
Notification NH Accountability
System Developing “Plan” for
’05-’06 Including key stakeholders
Grade Level Benchmarks High Quality Educators
Definitions Drop out, Safe School
and LEP Targets Analyzing implications
re: NH State Law and related rules, and DOE capacity
Communicating well Details/Big Picture
Balance
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NH Issues and Choices…
Minimum required Single State Test Social Studies ? Dual (and dueling)
accountability systems Continue to provide limited
technical assistance Limit Reading Effort Limited Quality Educators Assume fed’s know best
Take Advantage State/local partnership Continue to build a powerful
“system” of teaching and learning.
One, sensible, unified system of accountability and support
Attract and keep even better educators
Lead the nation in literacy Assume we can make the
“best of this.”
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NH Issues and Choices…
Will we…Meet federal requirements or…
meet New Hampshire’s challenges?
Meet expectations or… exceed expectations?
Adequate or…excellent?
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Your NH Department of Education