pges summer administrator’s training 2014 mark & debbie

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PGES SUMMER ADMINISTRATOR’S TRAINING 2014 Mark & Debbie

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  • Slide 1
  • PGES SUMMER ADMINISTRATORS TRAINING 2014 Mark & Debbie
  • Slide 2
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  • OTHER PROFESSIONALS For the 2014-2015 year only, the following certified positions will not be included in TPGES. However, at least one person from each category will be part of the OPGES directed by the state: Guidance Counselors Media Specialists Speech/Language Pathologists OT/PT School Level Instructional Specialists Psychologists Nurses Social Workers Pre-school Teachers
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  • Required for all Warren County Teachers All teachers will participate in self-reflection and professional growth planning each year. All teachers will document self-reflection and professional growth planning in CIITS. The Professional Growth Plans shall align with the school/district improvement plans.
  • Slide 6
  • Warren County School Progressive Model (3 & 1 model) Warren County Schools will implement the Progressive Model (3 & 1) for observations. Observers will conduct three mini-observations of approximately 20-30 minutes each. Because these are shorter sessions, the observer will make note of the components observed in order to identify look fors in the next mini-observation session. The final observation is a full formal observation consisting of one full instructional period. Mini-observations do not have to be announced/scheduled, however, the observer must be visible and the teacher must be aware that an observation is occurring. Required for all Warren County Teachers The observation model must fulfill the following minimum criteria: There is a minimum of four (4) observations in the summative cycle. A minimum of 3 observations conducted by the primary evaluator (2 minis and 1 full/formal) and 1 observation conducted by the peer. The final observation is conducted by the primary evaluator and is a full/formal observation after the peer observation is completed. All observations must be documented in CIITS.
  • Slide 7
  • Non-tenured teachers Non-tenured teachers will follow the progressive 3 & 1 model each year. A minimum of 3 observations conducted by the primary evaluator (2 minis and 1 full/formal) and 1 observation conducted by the peer. The peer observer shall complete a mini-observation prior to the full/formal observation conducted by the primary evaluator. The final observation is conducted by the primary evaluator and is a full/formal observation and must occur after the peer observation is completed. All observations must be documented in CIITS.
  • Slide 8
  • Tenured Teachers Tenured teachers will receive one full/formal observation by the supervisor and three mini-observations over the three-year cycle. One of the three mini- observations will be by the peer observer and will occur in the summative year. The primary evaluator shall complete one mini-observation in the first year, one mini-observation the second year, and a full/formal being completed during the final year of the cycle. The peer observer shall complete a mini-observation during the third year of the cycle, prior to the full/formal observation conducted by the primary evaluator.
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  • Observation Conferencing Required for all Warren County Teachers Observers will adhere to the following observation conferencing requirements: Full/Formal An electronic pre-conference communication shall take place 3-5 working days prior to the observation. A person-to-person, post-observation conference will be conducted within five (5) working days after the full/formal observation. All data will be entered into CIITS prior to the post-observation conference. Peer Person to person pre-conference communication shall take place 3-5 working days prior to the observation. A person-to-person, post-observation conference will be conducted within five (5) working days after the peer observation. All data will be entered into CIITS prior to the post-observation conference. Mini No pre-conference meeting is required for this observation. A person-to-person, post-observation conference will be conducted within five (5) working days after the mini-observation. All data will be entered into CIITS prior to the post-observation conference. The summative evaluation conference shall be held at the end of the summative evaluation cycle. During the summative conference, the evidence from all observations will be reviewed so that an overall performance rating can be determined for domains two and three of the Framework for Teaching by March 15 of each year. A summative report shall be printed from CIITS at the conclusion of the summative conference and signed by both evaluator and evaluatee. The summative report shall be included in the district teacher personnel file by May 30 of each year. The evaluatee will also be provided a copy of the summative report.
  • Slide 12
  • Observation Schedule Assignment of Primary Evaluator The immediate supervisor will designate the primary evaluator for each certified staff member assigned to his/her location by September 1 of each year. Required for all Warren County Teachers Observations may begin 30 calendar days after the first day of teacher employment or as soon as staff is trained on the Certified Evaluation Plan. District will adhere to the KTIP-approved guidelines when completing evaluations.
  • Slide 13
  • Peer Observation A Peer Observer will observe, collect, and share evidence, and provide feedback for formative purposes only. Peer Observers will not score a teachers practice, nor will peer observation data be shared with anyone other than the Evaluatee unless permission is granted. A peer observer must be a certified Warren County school employee who has been trained. Required for all Warren County Teachers Tenured teachers will receive a peer observation in their summative year. Non-tenured teachers will receive a peer observation yearly until tenured status is achieved. All Peer Observers participating during the summative year observations will complete the state- developed training once every three (3) years. All required peer observations must be documented in CIITS. Peer observers will be assigned to teachers by the immediate supervisor on or before September 1 of each school year. Trained peer observers will be selected by the primary evaluator. Examples of trained peer observers include: Teacher leaders, PLC Team Members, NBCT cadre, content specialists, or from a pool of teachers who have met the training requirements. First year teachers; teachers in their KTIP year; first year teachers to the District or tenured teachers whose results yield an ineffective determination will not be considered as peer observers.
  • Slide 14
  • Student Voice Surveys The Student Voice Survey is a confidential, on-line survey that collects student feedback on specific aspects of the classroom experience and teaching practice. Required for all Warren County Teachers All teachers will participate in the state-approved Student Voice Survey annually with a minimum of one identified group of students. Results will be used to inform Professional Practice. The Student Voice Survey will be administered between the hours of 7:00 am and 5:00 pm local time. The survey will be administered in the school. Survey data will only be considered when 10 or more students are respondents in a section.
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  • STUDENT GROWTH
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  • Rigor and Comparability of Student Growth Goals Required for all Warren County Teachers Teachers will collaboratively work with primary evaluator to develop a student growth goal prior to September 30 th of each school year. Use the protocol for ensuring rigor Use the protocol for ensuring comparability
  • Slide 18
  • Rigor Rigor will be assessed for each Student Growth Goal using a district-defined checklist (Checklist can be found in Appendix). The checklist will be completed collaboratively by the teacher and primary evaluator. The checklist will include checking each student growth goal to determine if the goal is specific, measurable, appropriate, realistic, and time-bound (SMART). The goal will align to an enduring skill, process, understanding, or concept that students are expected to know. Finally, each goal will be checked to determine if it includes both a growth component and a proficiency component. Goals that do not meet all required parts of the checklist will be sent back to the teacher for review before being approved in CIITS. All student growth goals will be checked for rigor by the primary evaluator by October 15 th of the academic year.
  • Slide 19
  • Comparability Administration Protocol In order for student growth goals to be comparable across schools and the district, teachers will meet in Professional Learning Communities to analyze data from assessments for the purpose of gathering baseline and continuous data. Baseline data and continuous data can come from multiple sources including, but not limited to STAR assessments, teacher-created assessments, Literacy Design Collaborative (LDC) tasks, Math Design Collaborative (MDC) tasks, End of Course assessments, and K- PREP data. Teacher-created assessments will be based upon the state and/or national standards for the teachers content area. When teachers do not have a school-level Professional Learning Community, the teacher may consult with other professionals in the district with similar content to create and/or analyze data. These consultations may take place in person or through the use of technology. A pre-test, post-test model will be utilized. A score of 80% on an assessment used to determine your student growth goal will be considered proficient.
  • Slide 20
  • LOCAL STUDENT GROWTH LOCAL STUDENT GROWTH GOALS INCLUDE BOTH GROWTH AND PROFICIENCY COMPONENTS.
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  • GROWTH AND PROFICIENCY RATINGS The ratings for the growth and proficiency ratings be low, expected, or high. The numerical values for these ratings are as follows: Low = 1 Expected =2 High = 3
  • Slide 22
  • For the growth component: High growth is 90% or more of the students showing growth Expected growth is 75% - 89% of the students showing growth Low growth is 74% or below of the students showing growth Example: Mrs. Jones administers a pre-test to the 30 students in her Physics 1 class at the beginning of the year. At the end of the year Mrs. Jones administers a post-test and 27 out of her 30 students had a higher score on the post-test than on the pre-test. Math: 27/30=.90 or 90% scored higher on the post test. Apply the chart above and Mrs. Jones Physics 1 class had high local growth.
  • Slide 23
  • For the proficiency component: The local proficiency target is set by the teacher and the primary evaluator. High proficiency is more than 10% above the proficiency target Expected proficiency is plus or minus 10% of the proficiency target Low proficiency is more than 10% below the proficiency target Example: Mrs. Jones administers a pre-test to the 30 students in her Physics 1 class at the beginning of the year. (Same pre-test as above, it can be utilized for both) On the pre-test 3 out of 30 students score 80% or higher. Mrs. Jones and her primary evaluator meet and determine that a local proficiency target goal for her Physics 1 class should be 50 %. Mrs. Jones administers the post-test at the end of the year and 16 out of 30 students scored 80% or higher on the test. Math: Pre-test proficiency rate is 3/30=.10 or 10%. Post-test proficiency rate is 16/30=.533 0r 53.3%. The local proficiency target goal was 50% so the range for the expected proficiency is 45%-55% (10% below and 10% above target); therefore, Mrs. Jones proficiency rate of 53.3% falls into expected proficiency.
  • Slide 24
  • The following chart will be used to calculate the Overall Growth Rating.
  • Slide 25
  • Required for all Warren County Teachers Student Growth Goal and Student Growth Percentile (when available) will be used to determine overall Student Growth Rating Three years of student growth data (when available) will be used to determine overall Student Growth Rating. When three years of data are not available, the data that is available will be used to make the final determination.
  • Slide 26
  • In addition to a local contribution, teachers in grades 4-8 in Reading and Math will have a state contribution for student growth expressed as a percentile. The scale for determining growth will be provided by the Kentucky Board of Education. The following decision rules will be used to rate overall growth as low, expected, or high for teachers who have a state and local growth goal. Local student growth goals will contribute 80% of the overall Student Growth Rating, and State Growth Goals will contribute 20% of the overall Student Growth Rating for teachers with both SGG and SGP. For teachers with both state and local student growth goals, the average local student growth goal will be multiplied by.8 and the average state student growth goal will be multiplied by.2. These two numbers will be added to make the student growth number to determine the overall rating using the following rules.
  • Slide 27
  • SAMPLE GROWTH CALCULATION FOR COMBINED STATE AND LOCAL Local 80% State 20% Local growth was expected(2) and state growth was low(1) then the math will be as follows: (.8 x 2) +(.2 x 1) = 1.6 +.2 =1.8 Using the chart then the growth will be expected.
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  • SAMPLE MULTIPLE YEAR CALCULATION Year 1 = Low (1) Year 2 = Expected (2) Year 3 = Expected (2) Take a numerical average for the 3 years. 1 + 2 + 2 =5 5/3 = 1.67 Using the chart the the rating is expected.
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  • The following chart will be used to calculate the Overall Growth Rating.
  • Slide 32
  • RATING PROFESSIONAL PRACTICE The Kentucky Framework for Teaching stands as the critical rubric for providing educators and evaluators with concrete descriptions of practice associated with specific domains. Each element describes a discrete behavior or related set of behaviors that educators and evaluators can prioritize for evidence-gathering, feedback, and eventually, evaluation. Primary evaluators will organize and analyze evidence for each individual educator based on these concrete descriptions of practice. Primary evaluators and educators will be engaged in ongoing dialogue throughout the evaluation cycle. The process concludes with the evaluators analysis of evidence and the final assessment of practice in relation to performance described under each Domain at the culmination of an educators cycle. Primary evaluators will provide a summative rating for each domain based on evidence using the information below. All ratings must be recorded in CIITS. I=Ineffective, D=Developing, A=Accomplished, E=Exemplary
  • Slide 33
  • REQUIRED FOR ALL WARREN COUNTY TEACHERS Provide a summative rating for each domain based on evidence. All ratings must be recorded in CIITS. A summative report will be printed from CIITS and signed by both the primary evaluator and the employee. A copy of the signed summative report will be placed in the employees district personnel file. A copy of the summative report will also be given to the evaluatee.
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  • DETERMINING THE OVERALL PERFORMANCE CATEGORY Required for Warren County Implement the Overall Performance Category process for determining effectiveness. An educators Overall Performance Category is determined by the following steps: Use the growth and proficiency ratings and calculate the Overall Growth Rating Determine the individual domain ratings through the use of sources of evidence and professional judgment. Apply State Decisions Rules for the individual domains and determine the Educators Professional Practice Rating. Apply State Overall Decision Rules for Overall Student Growth and Educators Professional Practice to determine educators Overall Performance Category.
  • Slide 36
  • OVERALL PERFORMANCE CATEGORY Primary evaluators are responsible for determining an Overall Performance Category for each teacher at the end of their summative evaluation year. The Overall Performance Category is informed by the educators ratings on professional practice and student growth. The primary evaluator determines the Overall Performance Category based on professional judgment informed by evidence that demonstrates the educator's performance against the Domains, district- developed rubrics (see local contribution for student growth), and decision rules that establish a common understanding of performance thresholds to which all educators are held.
  • Slide 37
  • CRITERIA FOR DETERMINING A TEACHERS OVERALL PERFORMANCE CATEGORY
  • Slide 38
  • PROFESSIONAL GROWTH PLAN AND SUMMATIVE CYCLE BASED ON THE OVERALL PROFESSIONAL PRACTICE RATING AND STUDENT GROWTH RATING, SUPERVISORS WILL HELP TENURED TEACHERS DETERMINE THE TYPE OF PROFESSIONAL GROWTH PLAN AND THE LENGTH OF THE SUMMATIVE CYCLE.
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  • Go Ye, Therefore, and Do Nothing But Evaluate!!