DISTRICT GOAL 1: Percent of students reading and writing at or above grade level for grades 3 through English 11 will increase by three percentage points annually between Spring 2016 and Spring 2020. DISTRICT GOAL 2: The percent of graduates meeting the Global Graduate standards will increase three percentage points annually from the class of 2017 baseline up to 85% by 2022. DISTRICT GOAL 3: Among students who exhibit below satisfactory performance on state assessments, the percentage who demonstrate as least one year of academic growth will increase three percentage points annually in reading and in math between Spring 2017 and Spring 2022. 6 PILLARS OF HISD’S IMPROVEMENT REQUIRED TURNAROUND FRAMEWORK: 1. Leadership Excellence 2. Teaching Excellence 3. Instructional Excellence 4. School Design 5. Social and Emotional Learning Support 6. Family and Community Empowerment THEORY OF ACTION: If HISD provides a centralized package of essential leadership, instructional, social and emotional, and community supports for our historically underserved and underperforming feeder patterns and school communities, then our schools will be equipped to accelerate preparation of our students to fulfill the qualities and characteristics of the HISD Global Graduate profile. pg. 1 PILLAR 1: LEADERSHIP EXCELLENCE Definition: Identify and facilitate the assignment of talented leaders who will bring effective instructional leadership skills to each school in order to improve student proficiency in core academic areas. School leaders will receive additional compensation and supports (staffing, professional development, etc.) to encourage retention. STRATEGY Principal profile: experienced and effective leadership Central staffing formula for leadership and support teams Staffing incentives for all contract positions Collaborative school support team PERSON/DEPARTMENT RESPONSIBLE STRATEGY DESCRIPTION School Office Human Resources Budget Department School Office Human Resources Each campus will have essential staffing positions to carry out the 6 principles of HISD’s Turnaround Framework. Essential positions will include: Budget Department Student Support Office ES: Counselor/Social Worker, Nurse, Librarian/Information Literacy Specialist, Reading and Math Instructional Coaches MS: Counselor/Social Worker, Nurse, Librarian/Information Literacy Specialist, Reading and Math Instructional Coaches HS: Counselor/Social Worker, Nurse, Librarian/Information Literacy Specialist, Reading and Math Coaches School Office Human Resources Budget Department School Office Budget Department Turnaround Principals will be experienced Principals with a track record of successful school leadership. Each turnaround Principal will be expected to implement, with fidelity, the Principles of the Turnaround Framework. They will also be responsible for leading and motivating the leadership team and all teachers and staff toward a common goal. Principal assessments will occur quarterly to identify school and Principal effectiveness. Incentives will be paid to successful leaders who accept the challenge and commit to long-term work. The incentives will be paid out annually for 3 years based on the positions below: Principal: EL ($10,000) MS ($15,000) HS ($20,000) AP/Dean/Teacher Specialist/Instructional Specialist: $5,000 SSOs will be assigned based on experience and skills for specific feeder pattern networks. The CSOs will work collaboratively with a team of Teacher Development Specialists assigned to their SSOs. pg. 2 PILLAR 2: TEACHER EXCELLENCE Definition: Selective hiring, development, compensation, and strategic assignment of talented teachers with the appropriate experience, certification, and the right fit of each campus. Teachers are an integral part of developing Global Graduates and improving student growth and achievement. STRATEGY Priority Teacher Staffing Staffing Incentives PERSON/DEPARTMENT RESPONSIBLE School Office Human Resources Budget Department School Office Human Resources Budget Department STRATEGY DESCRIPTION Schools’ Pre K -12 core teaching staff will be comprised of at least 85% of teachers rated highly effective or effective based on HISD’s Teacher and Appraisal Development System (TADS) and current student data. The remaining percentage of teachers may be new or out-of-district teachers without an HISD rating. Incentives will be paid to effective teachers and other professional staff who accept the challenge and commit to long-term work. Incentives will be paid out annually for 3 years. Teachers and other professional staff with 3+ years experience: $5,000 Teachers and other professional staff with 0-3 years experience: $2,500 A study by the U.S. Department of Education found that financial incentives successfully attracted high performing teachers to transfer to low performing schools. A majority of these teachers chose to remain after the incentives ended. (Turning Around Chronically Low Performing Schools. U.S. Dept. Of Ed. 2008) Differentiated Job Posting and Interview Process School Office Human Resources Budget Department Specialized job posting/application that clearly denotes additional work hours required as part of teacher contract (addendum) for Professional Development. Job posting will also include instructional non-negotiables that must be adhered to. pg. 3 PILLAR 3: INSTRUCTIONAL EXCELLENCE Definition: Instructional Excellence will engage, accelerate and optimize learning experiences for students with the highest needs, allowing them to achieve at their highest potential. STRATEGY PERSON/DEPARTMENT RESPONSIBLE Curriculum and Development School Office Teacher and Leadership Development Adherence to calendar of aligned formative assessments Curriculum and Development School Office Scheduled, structured data conversations School Office Student Assessment School Office Teacher Development Specialists Consistent curriculum implementation and instructional delivery Uniform data tracking STRATEGY DESCRIPTION TEKS-based curriculum will be fully implemented and rigorous lesson plans will be developed using the backward design planning process and best practices in literacy and math development. Instructional non-negotiables will include but are not limited to daily posting of lesson TEKS, small group instruction, and daily evidence of student mastery of lesson objective(s). At the high school level, PowerUp resources will be leveraged to engage, support and challenge all learners in relation to their needs, to maximize achievement of common goals. A competency-based approach will be customized to student needs and monitored by universal screeners (literacy and math). A schedule of common assessments will be adhered to by all schools. Common assessments will be administered every 4-6 weeks per core subject. BOY, MOY and EOY universal screeners in literacy and math will be utilized. Data analysis conversations will be scheduled immediately following every formative assessment. Action plans will be developed to identify individual students and student expectations (SE) that need immediate re-teaching to ensure mastery. Schools will be responsible for uniformly tracking and displaying data for all students in kindergarten through 12th grade, disaggregated by teacher, student, ethnicity and gender. Teachers of every course will show how they have acted on data, including changes in approach, attention to cultural and relational dynamics, contacts with parents and other caregivers. Students will track their own data in relation to clearly specified goals that they understand. Student work portfolios will be maintained. pg. 4 PILLAR 3: INSTRUCTIONAL EXCELLENCE Definition: Instructional Excellence will engage, accelerate and optimize learning experiences for students with the highest needs, allowing them to achieve at their highest potential. STRATEGY PERSON/DEPARTMENT RESPONSIBLE STRATEGY DESCRIPTION Cognitive demand School Office Campuses will focus on developing critical thinking skills by: Curriculum and Development Consultants Teacher and Leadership Development High-quality professional development School Office Curriculum and Development Teacher and Leadership Development Consultants Asking higher order questions; Developing strong intellectual relationships with students, valuing them as thinkers and respecting cultural differences; Incorporating Bloom’s higher-level tasks and Webb’s Depth of Knowledge throughout the instructional lesson design; Including student discourse (teacher to student and student to student) during at least 50% of the lesson; Increasing post-secondary readiness strategies through leveraging resources such as AVID and AP/Pre-AP training; and Offering opportunities for student-driven, structured sustained inquiry High-quality job embedded professional development will be provided to ensure effective Tier 1 instruction and differentiated instruction to ensure student mastery of TEKS. pg. 5 PILLAR 4: SCHOOL DESIGN Definition: The space and environment where students spend a good deal of their time learning has an effect on how well they learn. Effective school design enables students to become critical thinkers, problem solvers, and meaning makers in an environment that encourage active, cooperative, and community-based approaches to teaching and learning. STRATEGY Extended Work Day for Teachers Structured instructional time designed for reading/language arts and math Behavioral expectations PERSON/DEPARTMENT RESPONSIBLE School Office Federal and State Compliance Teacher and Leadership Development School Office Curriculum and Development Teacher and Leadership Development Procurement School Office Student Support Office Teacher and Leadership Development STRATEGY DESCRIPTION The school day will be maximized to provide teacher professional development and planning/collaboration time for an additional two hours a week. In both sites studied by Supovitz (2002) and Supovitz and Christman (2003) “there was evidence to suggest that when teachers engage in structured, sustained and supported instructional discussions and investigated the relationships between instructional practices and student work significant gains in student learning was evident. Instructional minutes will be allocated in both math and reading/language arts to maximize student learning. Instructional strategies will be based on researched best practices and implementation will be monitored for effectiveness. Programs to be used will include but not limited to: Khan Academy (High School) Imagine Learning (Elementary Reading and Language) Achieve 3000 (Middle and High School Reading) DreamBox (Elementary K-2 Math Students) Vontoure Math (Elementary Math Teacher Training) Think Through Math (Elementary and Middle Math Students) Schools will implement discipline management plans that reinforce positive behaviors for students and teachers and improve school climate. The CHAMPS discipline program will be implemented with fidelity across feeders Short (1988) states that research on well-disciplined schools indicates that a student-centered environment, incorporating teacher student problem solving activities, as well as activities to promote student self-esteem and belongingness is more effective in reducing behavior problems than punishment. pg. 6 PILLAR 4: SCHOOL DESIGN Definition: The space and environment where students spend a good deal of their time learning has an effect on how well they learn. Effective school design enables students to become critical thinkers, problem solvers, and meaning makers in an environment that encourage active, cooperative, and community-based approaches to teaching and learning. STRATEGY PERSON/DEPARTMENT RESPONSIBLE Cultural competence School Office Student Support Office Teacher and Leadership Development STRATEGY DESCRIPTION Professional development on cultural competence and culturally relevant instructional tools/strategies will be provided to school staffs. Training will include sessions emphasizing understanding cultural nuances and internal biases, building teacher/student relationships through specific routines, and establishing and implementing school-wide systems and structures appropriate for the cultures served. Jim Cummins (2001), suggest that a major reason previous attempts at educational reform have been unsuccessful is that the relationships between teachers and students and between schools and communities have remained essentially unchanged. The required changes involve personal redefinitions of the way classroom teachers interact with the children and communities they serve. Master scheduling with equity in mind School Office Technology Schools’ master schedules will ensure equitable course offerings for all students. All existing instructional programs will be reviewed to determine coherence, relevance and effectiveness. The key to creating a successful master schedule is to be clear about what your highest priorities are and then to allocate time and expertise to address those priorities. In practice, that means that each school’s optimal schedule will be unique. The schedule should be crafted to meet the highest priority needs of the school’s students and faculty. (Miles, K. et al, 2008) pg. 7 PILLAR 4: SCHOOL DESIGN Definition: The space and environment where students spend a good deal of their time learning has an effect on how well they learn. Effective school design enables students to become critical thinkers, problem solvers, and meaning makers in an environment that encourage active, cooperative, and community-based approaches to teaching and learning. STRATEGY Addressing the needs of all students Blended learning PERSON/DEPARTMENT RESPONSIBLE School Office Multilingual Special Education Curriculum and Development School Office Technology Curriculum and Instruction STRATEGY DESCRIPTION Strategies to teach all students including those with disabilities, English Language Learners and gifted and talented students will be implemented and monitored to maximize learning and inclusion for all students. The teacher’s role becomes one of purposeful instruction, a mediator of activities and substantial experiences allowing the learner to attain his or her zone of proximal development (Blanton, 1998; Rueda et al., 1992). School’s current technology and literary resources will be assessed to ensure that the level and quality of the resources meet district standards. Schools requiring upgrades will be prioritized based on needs. Power Up implementation will be assessed using a specific rubric to assess baseline gaps in order to move toward more rigorous instruction. Blended Learning will include: expository instruction (direct presentation of material through lecture, text, visuals, animation); active learning (the individual student researches information, solves problems, takes quizzes, manipulates digital artifacts, engages in drills, simulations, or games); and Interactive learning (students collaborate with other students). Addressing the needs of overage students Student Support School Office Overage students will be identified and supports will be provided that will address their academic needs. Outside programs such as AVA, Middle Colleges (Fraga and Gulfton), High School Ahead and E-Stem programs will be explored as options. pg. 8 PILLAR 5: SOCIAL AND EMOTIONAL LEARNING SUPPORT Definition: The focus on social and emotional learning will be strategic, systematic and completely inclusive of teachers, school leaders and community partners in supporting the social emotional needs of the whole child. Graduates will meet all of the characteristics of the Graduate Profile. STRATEGY Teaching to the whole child to identify personal strengths Global Graduate Profile Feeder pattern connections Wrap around services PERSON/DEPARTMENT RESPONSIBLE School Office Student Support Office Advanced Academics (AAI) Grants Department School Office College and Career Readiness School Office Student Support Office Career and Technology Education Student Support School Office STRATEGY DESCRIPTION Campuses will work with community partners to identify and foster the specific needs of students at all levels and develop partnerships to provide enriching experiences in Fine arts Clubs (i.e. Chess) Sports Academic UIL opportunities At the secondary level, scheduled grade cycle meetings will occur to plan, adjust and address courses and postsecondary sequences and pathways. Apex credit recovery will be used to help students especially overage students who need to recover credits from classes they have been failed. Khan Academy informational meetings for parents regarding college and careers will be held once a semester. Choice options will be aligned throughout feeder patterns to ensure programmatic consistency for elementary, middle and high school students. For example, programs offered at elementary will complement secondary program options. Campuses will work with the Student Support Office to maximize wrap-around services and use the Community Schools’ model to address student, parents and community needs. pg. 9 PILLAR 6: FAMILY AND COMMUNITY EMPOWERMENT Definition: The focus on family and community empowerment will be to improve student achievement by increasing parental and community empowerment. The goal is to ensure that all schools are family-friendly learning environments that will increase parent advocacy by encouraging two way communication from home to school. STRATEGY Family friendly schools Two-Way communication Stakeholder climate surveys PERSON/DEPARTMENT RESPONSIBLE School Support School Office School Support School Office Teacher and Leadership Development Communications Department School Office STRATEGY DESCRIPTION The goal is to make the school more ‘family friendly,” welcoming parents as equal partners, and will serve to affirm parental/community involvement as a critical lever in achieving student academic success. Schools will engage in professional development sessions, either online or in-person, to enhance effective two-way communication with parents, guardians, and community members. This will serve to further develop their capacity as equal partners with parents/guardians and will affirm parental/community involvement as a critical level in achieving academic student success. Schools will conduct annual surveys of parents, community members, teachers, and students to gauge culture and climate at each campus. pg. 10
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