summer school monitoring 2016 summer school fees 2017€¦ · summer school monitoring 2016 ......

Post on 19-Jul-2020

10 Views

Category:

Documents

0 Downloads

Preview:

Click to see full reader

TRANSCRIPT

Summer School Monitoring 2016Summer School Fees 2017

Tara Nattrass, Assistant Superintendent, Instruction

Tyrone Byrd, Director of Secondary Education, Instruction

December 1, 2016

Summer School Monitoring

Program Profile: Course OfferingsElementary School

• Enrichment: Global Village Summit, Summer Laureate, Spanish Immersion, Outdoor Lab, Math Academy

• Make-up & Strengthening: Math and Language Arts, Spanish Immersion, Pre-Kindergarten

• Special Education

Middle School

• Enrichment: Arabic and Chinese, Leadership Academy on Global Issues, Democracy in Action, Summer Literacy Academy, Outdoor Lab

• Make-up & Strengthening: Math, English, Science, HILT/HILTEX

• Special Education

High School

• New Work (including Driver Education)

• Make-up & Strengthening

• Special Education

5

Program Profile: Staffing

School-Based StaffElementary Programs

Teachers: 257; Assistants 163; Clerical 10; Assistant Principals: site specific

Secondary ProgramsTeachers: 188; Assistants 44; Clerical 11, Administrators 11

Total School Based Staff: 684

Central Office StaffCoordinator (0.8)Administrative Assistant (0.5)

6

All Students

2014 2015 2016

6381 students(7034 course enrollments)

5479 students(6326 course enrollments)

5328 students(6226 course enrollments)

Program Profile: Student Enrollment

2014 2015 2016

Enrichment 371 ES36 MS

417 ES91 MS

606 ES231 MS

New Work (incl. Driver Ed)

382 HS 483 HS 505 HS

Make-Up and Strengthening

3392 ES517 MS1683 HS

2826 ES389 MS (700 enrollments)1289 HS (1777 enrollments)

2459 ES427 MS (698 Enrollments)1170 HS (1626 Enrollments)

HILT 2268 students2512 enrollments

2470 students2881 enrollments

2441 students2888 enrollments

Special Education 1466 students1696 enrollments

1248 students1433 enrollments

1235 students1427 enrollments

7

SOL Comparison Pass Rate for New Work

ELA (10) Math (62) Social Studies

(20)APS (92)

8

SOL Comparison Pass Rate for Make-Up and Strengthening

Math

(33)

English

(162)

Science

(102)

Social Studies

(58)

9

Goals

Goals

Goal 1: Increase options for students

• Expand APS developed blended learning courses for high

school students to accelerate learning or provide

additional support

• Review and replicate successful elementary and middle

school programs

• Increase middle school offerings to meet demand

• Include science courses at the high school level

11

Goals

Goal 2: Increase student success in make-up

and strengthening courses

• Identify causes for decreases in the SOL pass rates for

the make-up and strengthening courses

• Recruit teachers with a history of success in the courses

offered to teach summer programs

• Review scope and sequence of program with teachers

who have demonstrated a history of success to revamp as

needed

• Provide professional development

12

Goals

Goal 3:Provide students with greatest need for

support in reading and math with a highly

engaging, evidence-based program of study

• Revise the curriculum and experience for elementary math

and language arts programs

• Recruit teachers with a history of success in the courses

offered to teach summer programs

• Provide site administrators at each elementary location to

support the teaching and learning experiences of all

students

13

Fees

2017 Fee Recommendations

15

Summer School Monitoring 2016Summer School Fees 2017

Tyrone Byrd, Director of Secondary Education, Instruction

Tara Nattrass, Assistant Superintendent, Instruction

December 1, 2016

top related