2011 drop out prevention summit november 17, 2011

45
Dr. John D. Barge, State School Superintendent “Making Education Work for All Georgians” www.gadoe.org 2011 Drop Out Prevention Summit November 17, 2011 1

Upload: clyde

Post on 11-Jan-2016

48 views

Category:

Documents


0 download

DESCRIPTION

2011 Drop Out Prevention Summit November 17, 2011. Dropout Rates in Georgia and Future Interventions. National Perspective on Student Dropout. 2010 Dropout Rate: Statewide and Metro Districts. State Data on Student Dropout. Future Interventions. Dropout Prevention / Early Warning System: - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: 2011 Drop Out Prevention Summit November 17, 2011

Dr. John D. Barge, State School Superintendent“Making Education Work for All Georgians”www.gadoe.org

2011 Drop Out Prevention Summit

November 17, 2011

1

Page 2: 2011 Drop Out Prevention Summit November 17, 2011

Dr. John D. Barge, State School Superintendent“Making Education Work for All Georgians”www.gadoe.org

Dropout Rates in Georgia and Future Interventions

2

Page 3: 2011 Drop Out Prevention Summit November 17, 2011

Dr. John D. Barge, State School Superintendent“Making Education Work for All Georgians”www.gadoe.org

National Perspective on Student Dropout

3

Page 4: 2011 Drop Out Prevention Summit November 17, 2011

Dr. John D. Barge, State School Superintendent“Making Education Work for All Georgians”www.gadoe.org

2010 Dropout Rate: Statewide and Metro Districts

9/14/2011 4

Page 5: 2011 Drop Out Prevention Summit November 17, 2011

Dr. John D. Barge, State School Superintendent“Making Education Work for All Georgians”www.gadoe.org

5

State Data on Student Dropout

Page 6: 2011 Drop Out Prevention Summit November 17, 2011

Dr. John D. Barge, State School Superintendent“Making Education Work for All Georgians”www.gadoe.org

Future Interventions

• Dropout Prevention / Early Warning System:– GaDOE partnering with GLISI, Gwinnett County

and SERVE to develop a system that provides a student-level indication for the probability of high school graduation starting in 6th grade.

• GaDOE CCRPI – Next generation accountability system incentivizes

holistic student development towards college and career readiness

9/14/2011 6

Page 7: 2011 Drop Out Prevention Summit November 17, 2011

Dr. John D. Barge, State School Superintendent“Making Education Work for All Georgians”www.gadoe.org

7

We have a choice. We can simply defend what we have…or create what we need.

Sixteen Trends

Their Profound Impact on Our Future

by Gary Marx

Page 8: 2011 Drop Out Prevention Summit November 17, 2011

Dr. John D. Barge, State School Superintendent“Making Education Work for All Georgians”www.gadoe.org

8

Page 9: 2011 Drop Out Prevention Summit November 17, 2011

Dr. John D. Barge, State School Superintendent“Making Education Work for All Georgians”www.gadoe.org

The Common Core State Standards Initiative

9

Beginning in the spring of 2009, Governors and state commissioners of education from 48 states, 2 territories and the

District of Columbia committed to developing a common core of state K-12 English-language arts (ELA) and

mathematics standards.

The Common Core State Standards Initiative (CCSSI) is a state-led effort coordinated by the

National Governors Association (NGA) and the Council of Chief State School Officers (CCSSO).

www.corestandards.org

Page 10: 2011 Drop Out Prevention Summit November 17, 2011

Dr. John D. Barge, State School Superintendent“Making Education Work for All Georgians”www.gadoe.org

10

Why Common Core Standards

• Preparation: The standards are college- and career-ready. They will help prepare students with the knowledge and skills they need to succeed in education and training after high school.

• Competition: The standards are internationally benchmarked. Common standards will help ensure our students are globally competitive.

• Equity: Expectations are consistent for all – and not dependent on a student’s zip code.

• Clarity: The standards are focused, coherent, and clear. Clearer standards help students (and parents and teachers) understand what is expected of them.

• Collaboration: The standards create a foundation to work collaboratively across states and districts, pooling resources and expertise, to create curricular tools, professional development, common assessments and other materials.

Page 11: 2011 Drop Out Prevention Summit November 17, 2011

Dr. John D. Barge, State School Superintendent“Making Education Work for All Georgians”www.gadoe.org

11

Thomas Fordham InstituteGPS and CCSS in 2010

Georgia: Grade A-

Clarity and Specificity 3/3

Content and Rigor 6/7

Total GPS Score 9/10

Georgia is one of eight states receiving at least 9/10 points.

CCSS: Grade A-

Clarity and Specificity 2/3

Content and Rigor 7/7

Total CCSS Score 9/10

Page 12: 2011 Drop Out Prevention Summit November 17, 2011

Dr. John D. Barge, State School Superintendent“Making Education Work for All Georgians”www.gadoe.org

Why are the Common Core State Standards for English language arts and mathematics

right for Georgia?

• Previous work with the GPS has prepared Georgia for the implementation of the CCGPS.

• Prior teacher and administrator GPS training ensures a smooth transition.

• Although some content may be in different grade levels in CCSS, nearly all of the ELA and mathematics standards are addressed.

• CCSS expectations are consistent with a single/high-rigor diploma requirement for all students.

12

Page 13: 2011 Drop Out Prevention Summit November 17, 2011

Dr. John D. Barge, State School Superintendent“Making Education Work for All Georgians”www.gadoe.org

K- High School CCGPS Subjects

English Language Arts (ELA) Literacy in History/Social Studies,

Science, and Technical Subjects Mathematics

13

Page 14: 2011 Drop Out Prevention Summit November 17, 2011

Dr. John D. Barge, State School Superintendent“Making Education Work for All Georgians”www.gadoe.org

Common Core State Standards inEnglish Language Arts and Literacy in History/Social Studies,

Science, and Technical SubjectsCollege and Career Readiness (CCR) Standards

Overarching standards for each strand that are further defined by grade-specific standards

Grade-Level Standards in English Language Arts (CCGPS) K-8, grade-by-grade 9-10 and 11-12 grade bands for high school Four strands: Reading, Writing, Speaking and Listening, and Language

Standards for Literacy in History/Social Studies, Science, and Technical Subjects Standards are embedded at grades K-5 Content-specific literacy standards are provided for grades 6-8, 9-10, and 11-12

14

Page 15: 2011 Drop Out Prevention Summit November 17, 2011

Dr. John D. Barge, State School Superintendent“Making Education Work for All Georgians”www.gadoe.org

College and Career Readiness Standards and Common Core State Standards

• The College and Career Readiness Standards were written first and define the expectations for all students upon graduation from high school.

• The K-12 grade-specific standards define end-of-year expectations and a cumulative progression designed to enable students to meet college and career readiness expectations no later than the end of high school.

• Each Common Core State Standard is aligned to a college and career readiness standard.

15

Page 16: 2011 Drop Out Prevention Summit November 17, 2011

Dr. John D. Barge, State School Superintendent“Making Education Work for All Georgians”www.gadoe.org

College and Career Readiness Standards

(CCR)

These 32 standards “anchor” the document and define

general, cross-disciplinary literacy expectations that

must be met for students to be prepared to enter

college and workforce training programs ready to

succeed. (10 Reading, 10 Writing, 6 Speaking & Listening, and 6 Language)

16

Page 17: 2011 Drop Out Prevention Summit November 17, 2011

Dr. John D. Barge, State School Superintendent“Making Education Work for All Georgians”www.gadoe.org

17

Common Core for Mathematics

Standards for Mathematical Content• K-8 grade-by-grade standards organized by domain

• 9-12 high school standards organized by conceptual categories

Standards for Mathematical Practice• Describe mathematical “habits of mind”

• Offer standards for mathematical proficiency: reasoning, problem solving, modeling, decision making, and engagement

• Connect with content standards in each grade

Page 18: 2011 Drop Out Prevention Summit November 17, 2011

Dr. John D. Barge, State School Superintendent“Making Education Work for All Georgians”www.gadoe.org

18

K- 8 Mathematics Standards

• The K-5 standards provide students with a solid foundation in whole numbers, addition, subtraction, multiplication, division, fractions and decimals.

• The 6-8 standards describe robust learning in geometry, algebra, and probability and statistics.

• Modeled after the focus of standards from high-performing nations, the standards for grades 7 and 8 include significant algebra and geometry content.

• Students who have completed 7th grade and mastered the content and skills will be prepared for algebra in 8th grade or after.

Page 19: 2011 Drop Out Prevention Summit November 17, 2011

Dr. John D. Barge, State School Superintendent“Making Education Work for All Georgians”www.gadoe.org

19

High School Mathematics Standards

• Call on students to practice applying mathematical ways of thinking to real world issues and challenges

• Require students to develop a depth of understanding and ability to apply mathematics to novel situations, as college students and employees regularly are called to do

• Emphasize mathematical modeling, the use of mathematics and statistics to analyze empirical situations, understand them better, and improve decisions

• Identify the mathematics that all students should study in order to be college and career ready.

Page 20: 2011 Drop Out Prevention Summit November 17, 2011

Dr. John D. Barge, State School Superintendent“Making Education Work for All Georgians”www.gadoe.org

20

Common Core Georgia Performance Standards (CCGPS) Professional Learning and Implementation Timeline

 September 21, 2011 State-wide CCGPS meeting for educators and stakeholders provided by State School

3:00-4:00pm Superintendent, Dr. John Barge, and GaDOE staff via Georgia Public Broadcasting

  Use the following link to access the session and recording:

gpb.org/education/common-core

August – Dec. 2011 Technical Assistance, Webinars, Transition Documents, Resource Development

January – March 2012 K-12 grade by grade ELA and Mathematics teacher professional learning with live/interactive streaming via Georgia Public Broadcasting

Sessions will be recorded. To access all of the CCGPS 2011-2012 Live Streamed Professional Learning sessions and recordings use the following link: gpb.org/education/common-core

Ongoing professional learning and technical support will be provided for local districts/schools via RESA Mathematics Mentors and ELA Specialists and GaDOE staff

2012-2013 Year 1 Implementation/Transition

2013-2014 Year 2 Implementation; Field Test

2014-2015 Year 3 Implementation and Common Assessment

Contacts: CCGPS Coordinator - Jan Wyche ([email protected])ELA Program Coordinator - Kim Jeffcoat ([email protected])

Mathematics Program Coordinator - Sandi Woodall ([email protected])

Page 21: 2011 Drop Out Prevention Summit November 17, 2011

Dr. John D. Barge, State School Superintendent“Making Education Work for All Georgians”www.gadoe.org

Common Core Assessment

• Georgia is a governing state within the Partnership for the Assessment of Readiness for College and Careers (PARCC), a consortium of 24 states focused on building a common assessment based on the Common Core.– Implementation is planned for the 2014-2015 SY

21

Page 22: 2011 Drop Out Prevention Summit November 17, 2011

Dr. John D. Barge, State School Superintendent“Making Education Work for All Georgians”www.gadoe.org

Update on

Georgia and

Career Clusters

22

Page 23: 2011 Drop Out Prevention Summit November 17, 2011

Dr. John D. Barge, State School Superintendent“Making Education Work for All Georgians”www.gadoe.org

23

Page 24: 2011 Drop Out Prevention Summit November 17, 2011

Dr. John D. Barge, State School Superintendent“Making Education Work for All Georgians”www.gadoe.org

24

Page 25: 2011 Drop Out Prevention Summit November 17, 2011

Dr. John D. Barge, State School Superintendent“Making Education Work for All Georgians”www.gadoe.org

Future: All Students with a Career Pathway

25

Page 26: 2011 Drop Out Prevention Summit November 17, 2011

Dr. John D. Barge, State School Superintendent“Making Education Work for All Georgians”www.gadoe.org

Career Clusters• The GaDOE shall develop a curriculum for the following programs

of study including, but not limited to:1. Agriculture, food, and natural resources

2. Architecture and construction

3. Arts, audio-video technology, and communications

4. Business, management, and administration

5. Education and training

6. Finance

7. Health science

8. Hospitality and tourism

9. Human services

26

Page 27: 2011 Drop Out Prevention Summit November 17, 2011

Dr. John D. Barge, State School Superintendent“Making Education Work for All Georgians”www.gadoe.org

Career Clusters (cont’d)• The GaDOE shall develop a curriculum for the following

programs of study including, but not limited to:

10. Information technology

11. Law, public safety, and security

12. Manufacturing

13. Government and public administration

14. Marketing, sales, and service

15. Science, technology, engineering, and mathematics

16. Transportation, distribution, and logistics

17. Energy (Not required in law but will be developed)

27

Page 28: 2011 Drop Out Prevention Summit November 17, 2011

Dr. John D. Barge, State School Superintendent“Making Education Work for All Georgians”www.gadoe.org

Georgia’sNext Generation Accountability

College and Career Ready Performance Index

28

Page 29: 2011 Drop Out Prevention Summit November 17, 2011

Dr. John D. Barge, State School Superintendent“Making Education Work for All Georgians”www.gadoe.org

College and Career Ready Performance Index,High School Model Grades 9 - 12

DRAFTDr. John D. Barge, State School Superintendent

“Making Education Work for All of Georgia’s Students”

GRADUATION RATE

Cohort Graduation Rate (%)

STUDENT ATTENDANCEStudent Attendance Rate (%)

POST HIGH SCHOOL READINESSPercent of graduates completing 3 or more Pathway Courses

Percent of CTAE Pathway Completers earning a CTAE Industry-Recognized Credential

Percent of tested students earning a Work Ready Certificate on the ACT Work Keys Assessment

Percent of graduated students entering Technical College System of Georgia technical colleges and/or University System of Georgia 2 or 4 year colleges and universities NOT requiring remediation or support courses

Percent of graduates earning high school credit(s) for accelerated enrollment via Accel, Dual HOPE Grant, Move On When Ready, Early College, Gateway to College, Articulated Credit, Advanced Placement or International Baccalaureate courses

Percent of graduates earning 2 or more high school credits in the same world language

Percent of AP exams receiving scores of 3 or higher and/or percent of IB exams receiving scores of 4 or higher

Percent of tested graduates scoring a minimum of 22 on the ACT (out of 36)

Percent of tested graduates scoring a minimum of 1550 on the SAT (out of 2400)

Percent of students scoring at meets or exceeds on the Georgia High School Writing Test

CONTENT MASTERY (END of COURSE TESTS and WRITING ASSESSMENT to be REPLACED by COMMON CORE ASSESSMENT, 2014-15)

Percent of students scoring at meets or exceeds on the Ninth Grade Literature End of Course Test

Percent of students scoring at meets or exceeds on the American Literature End of Course Test

Percent of students scoring at meets or exceeds on the Mathematics I (or GPS Algebra) End of Course Test

Percent of students scoring at meets or exceeds on the Mathematics II (or GPS Geometry) End of Course Test

Percent of students scoring at meets or exceeds on the Physical Science End of Course Test

Percent of students scoring at meets or exceeds on the Biology End of Course Test

Percent of students scoring at meets or exceeds on the US History End of Course Test

Percent of students scoring at meets or exceeds on the Economics End of Course Test

Page 30: 2011 Drop Out Prevention Summit November 17, 2011

Dr. John D. Barge, State School Superintendent“Making Education Work for All Georgians”www.gadoe.org

Factors for Successa companion to the

College and Career Ready Performance Index for High Schools

In addition to the twenty (20) items within the College and Career Ready Performance Index, high schools may earn additional points for these five supplemental indicators.

1.Percent of graduates completing three credits in the same world language

2.Percent of graduates taking the SAT or ACT

3.Percent of graduates earning credit in a physics course

4.Percent of students in grade nine earning 4 Carnegie Unit Credits in 4 core content areas

5.Percent of graduated students qualifying for the Zell Miller Scholarship as awarded through legislative guidelines managed by the Georgia Student Finance Commission

To Be Considered at a Later Date

Percent of tested students scoring at a proficient level on a Soft Skills Assessment

Percent of tested students earning an AFQT score of 35 or higher on the Armed Services Vocational Aptitude Battery

Percent of tested students scoring ‘College Ready’ on the COMPASS examination

School’s average score on the Georgia Teacher Effectiveness Measurement

School’s average score on the Georgia Leader Effectiveness Measurement

Percent of students participating in the PLAN examination

Percent of graduates completing Work Based Learning or a Senior Project

School has earned a Georgia Science, Technology, Engineering and Math (STEM) Program Certification

DRAFT

Page 31: 2011 Drop Out Prevention Summit November 17, 2011

Dr. John D. Barge, State School Superintendent“Making Education Work for All Georgians”www.gadoe.org

College and Career Ready Performance Index,Middle School Model Grades 6 - 8

DRAFTDr. John D. Barge, State School Superintendent

“Making Education Work for All of Georgia’s Students”

CONTENT MASTERY AND PREPARATION FOR HIGH SCHOOL

Percent of students scoring at meets or exceeds in ELA

Percent of students scoring at meets or exceeds in reading

Percent of students scoring at meets or exceeds in mathematics

Percent of students scoring at meets or exceeds in science

Percent of students scoring at meets or exceeds in social studies

Percent of students scoring at meets or exceeds on the Grade Eight Writing Assessment

Percent of students in grade eight achieving a Lexile measure greater than 1050

STUDENT ATTENDANCE

Student Attendance Rate (%)

SUPPORTS AND INTERVENTION

Percent of English Learners with positive movement from one Performance Band to a higher Performance Band

Percent of Students With Disabilities served in general education environments greater than 80% of the school day

Percent of students in grade eight passing at least four courses in core content areas

CAREER EXPLORATION

Percent of students in grade eight with a complete Individual Graduation Plan documented in GaCollege411, GCIS, or Career Cruising

Percent of students completing 3 or more Career Interest Inventories from a preferred Career Interest System within GaCollege411, GCIS, or Career Cruising

Page 32: 2011 Drop Out Prevention Summit November 17, 2011

Dr. John D. Barge, State School Superintendent“Making Education Work for All Georgians”www.gadoe.org

Factors for Successa companion to the

College and Career Ready Performance Index for Middle Schools

In addition to the thirteen (13) items within the College and Career Ready Performance Index, middle schools may earn additional points for these seven supplemental indicators.

1.Percent of students in grade eight scoring proficient/advanced on the 21st Century Skills Technology Assessment

2.Percent of students in grades six and seven with a fully documented Fitnessgram assessment

3.Percent of students in grade eight scoring at exceeds in science

4.Percent of students successfully completing three years of courses in the fine arts and/or one world language and/or career exploratory

5.Percent of students in grade eight scoring at exceeds in mathematics

6.Percent of students in grade eight scoring at exceeds in social studies

7.Percent of eighth grade students earning at least one high school credit

To Be Considered at a Later Date

School’s average score on the Georgia Teacher Effectiveness Measurement

School’s average score on the Georgia Leader Effectiveness Measurement

Percent of students in grades six through eight advancing to above grade level subject acceleration and/or whole grade acceleration

DRAFT

Page 33: 2011 Drop Out Prevention Summit November 17, 2011

Dr. John D. Barge, State School Superintendent“Making Education Work for All Georgians”www.gadoe.org

College and Career Ready Performance Index,Elementary School Model Grades K - 5

DRAFTDr. John D. Barge, State School Superintendent

“Making Education Work for All of Georgia’s Students”

CONTENT MASTERY AND PREPARATION FOR MIDDLE SCHOOL

Percent of students scoring at meets or exceeds in ELA

Percent of students scoring at meets or exceeds in reading

Percent of students scoring at meets or exceeds in mathematics

Percent of students scoring at meets or exceeds in social studies

Percent of students scoring at meets or exceeds in science

Percent of students scoring at meets or exceeds on the Grade Five Writing Assessment

Percent of students in grade three achieving a Lexile measure greater than 650

Percent of students in grade five achieving a Lexile measure greater than 850

STUDENT ATTENDANCE

Student Attendance Rate (%)

SUPPORTS AND INTERVENTION

Percent of English Learners with positive movement from one Performance Band to a higher Performance Band

Percent of Students With Disabilities served in general education environments greater than 80% of the school day

CAREER EXPLORATION

Percent of fifth grade students completing ten Career Awareness Modules

Percent of fifth grade students with a Career Portfolio in GaCollege411, GCIS, or Career Cruising

Page 34: 2011 Drop Out Prevention Summit November 17, 2011

Dr. John D. Barge, State School Superintendent“Making Education Work for All Georgians”www.gadoe.org

Factors for Successa companion to the

College and Career Ready Performance Index forElementary Schools

In addition to the thirteen (13) items within the College and Career Ready Performance Index, elementary schools may earn additional points for these seven supplemental indicators.

1.Percent of students enrolled in world language courses

2.Percent of students enrolled in fine arts courses

3.Percent of students in grades one through five with documented data for the Fitnessgram assessment

4.Percent of students in grade five scoring at exceeds in science

5.Percent of students in grade three scoring at exceeds in mathematics

6.Percent of students in grade five scoring at exceeds in reading

7.Percent of students in grade five scoring at exceeds in social studies

To Be Considered at a Later Date

School’s average score on the Georgia Teacher Effectiveness Measurement

School’s average score on the Georgia Leader Effectiveness Measurement

Percent of students in grades one through five advancing to above grade level subject acceleration and/or whole grade acceleration

DRAFT

Page 35: 2011 Drop Out Prevention Summit November 17, 2011

Dr. John D. Barge, State School Superintendent“Making Education Work for All Georgians”www.gadoe.org

GaCCRPI Calculations & Scores

35

• The foundation of the GaCCRPI is the college and career ready indicators

• The indicators are grouped by categories at each school level

• A percentage rate will be calculated for each indicator

• Scores will be provided in 3 areas to arrive at the Overall School Score: Achievement Score Progress Score Achievement Gap Closure Score

• Schools will also receive Star Ratings in two areas: Financial Efficiency School Climate

Page 36: 2011 Drop Out Prevention Summit November 17, 2011

Dr. John D. Barge, State School Superintendent“Making Education Work for All Georgians”www.gadoe.org

Student surveys such as the Georgia Student Health Survey II have linked school climate with thoughts of dropping out of school.

Page 37: 2011 Drop Out Prevention Summit November 17, 2011

Dr. John D. Barge, State School Superintendent“Making Education Work for All Georgians”www.gadoe.org

According to data from the Georgia Student Health Survey II, students have contemplated dropping out of school because:

• They don’t feel safe at school• They don’t feel successful at school• They are victims of bullying and harassment• They don’t feel respected at school• Schools don’t set clear rules for behavior• They don’t know anyone at school that they can trust

Page 38: 2011 Drop Out Prevention Summit November 17, 2011

Dr. John D. Barge, State School Superintendent“Making Education Work for All Georgians”www.gadoe.org

• Promotes student learning• Improves test scores• Improves graduation rates• Improves school safety• Improves student attendance• Reduces drop-out rate• Improves working environment (student-teacher and

peer relationships)• Promotes higher rate of teacher satisfaction

Why is a Positive School Climate Important?

Page 39: 2011 Drop Out Prevention Summit November 17, 2011

Dr. John D. Barge, State School Superintendent“Making Education Work for All Georgians”www.gadoe.org

School Improvement• School Improvement Specialists serving Needs

Improvement Schools Providing Professional Learning for staff Trained in strategies to identify and provide intervention for at

risk students and to support graduation for all students.

• 21st Century Community Learning Centers 33 Programs at 77 sites in the metro area Decrease the dropout rate for our most at risk students through

Credit Recovery and Academic TutorialProvide college tours, guest speakers, and focused college

and career counseling

Page 40: 2011 Drop Out Prevention Summit November 17, 2011

Dr. John D. Barge, State School Superintendent“Making Education Work for All Georgians”www.gadoe.org

Teacher Keys Evaluation Teacher Keys Evaluation SystemSystem

(Generates a Teacher Effectiveness Measure (Generates a Teacher Effectiveness Measure Score)Score)

Surveys of Instructional Surveys of Instructional PracticePractice

(Primary, Intermediate, Middle, and (Primary, Intermediate, Middle, and High School)High School)

Teacher Assessment on Teacher Assessment on Performance StandardsPerformance Standards

(Data sources include observations (Data sources include observations and documentation)and documentation)

Teacher Keys Evaluation System

40

Page 41: 2011 Drop Out Prevention Summit November 17, 2011

Dr. John D. Barge, State School Superintendent“Making Education Work for All Georgians”www.gadoe.org

Leader Keys Evaluation System

Leader Keys Evaluation Leader Keys Evaluation SystemSystem

(Generates a Leader Effectiveness Measure (Generates a Leader Effectiveness Measure Score)Score)

Governance and LeadershipGovernance and Leadership-Climate SurveysClimate Surveys-Student AttendanceStudent Attendance-Retention of Effective TeachersRetention of Effective Teachers

Leader Assessment on Leader Assessment on Performance StandardsPerformance Standards

(Data sources include documentation of (Data sources include documentation of practice)practice)

Student Achievement Student Achievement GrowthGrowth

-Student growth percentile/value-added Student growth percentile/value-added measuremeasure

-Achievement gap reductionAchievement gap reduction

41

Page 42: 2011 Drop Out Prevention Summit November 17, 2011

Dr. John D. Barge, State School Superintendent“Making Education Work for All Georgians”www.gadoe.org

Learn More and Register At: Learn More and Register At: http://public.doe.k12.ga.us/tss_title.aspx?Pagereq=StatewideConference

Georgia Family Engagement Georgia Family Engagement ConferenceConference

A Partnership of Georgia Department of Education and Georgia A Partnership of Georgia Department of Education and Georgia PTA PTA

February 16 -18, 2012 in Athens, GAFebruary 16 -18, 2012 in Athens, GA

Page 43: 2011 Drop Out Prevention Summit November 17, 2011

Dr. John D. Barge, State School Superintendent“Making Education Work for All Georgians”www.gadoe.org

Save the Date:25th Annual National Dropout

Prevention Network Conference

When: November 3-7, 2013

Where: Crowne Plaza Ravinia

Atlanta, Georgia

43

Page 44: 2011 Drop Out Prevention Summit November 17, 2011

Dr. John D. Barge, State School Superintendent“Making Education Work for All Georgians”www.gadoe.org

44

“I have always been delighted at the prospect of a new day, a fresh try, one more start, with

perhaps a bit of magic waiting somewhere behind the morning.”

J.B. Priestley

Page 45: 2011 Drop Out Prevention Summit November 17, 2011

Dr. John D. Barge, State School Superintendent“Making Education Work for All Georgians”www.gadoe.org

Martha R. Reichrath, Ph.D.

Deputy Superintendent, Curriculum, Instruction, and Assessment

[email protected]

Avis King

Deputy Superintendent, School Improvement

[email protected]

45

Contact Information