Post on 20-Jan-2016
Deaf Education Leaders’ Summit 2010
Overview and Summary
State Leaders’ Summit Goals
Participants will connect with others across the country and leave with ideas and information learned from interactive conversations
States will form or strengthen their stakeholder teams
Participants will identify current research and effective strategies to be used for improvement planning
State teams will leave with an updated action plan Teams will assess their state’s progress in meeting
the goals of the National Agenda
National Agenda Overview
Early identification and intervention Language and communication access Collaborative partnerships Accountability, high stakes testing, and standards-
based environments Placement, programs, and services Technology Professional standards and personnel preparation Research
Minnesota Summit Attendees
Eighteen states participated this year (on-site and remotely) Minnesota attendees included:
– Minnesota Hands & Voices representative– Minnesota Association of the Deaf representative– Social worker– Educational Audiologist– Teachers from urban, rural, and suburban districts– School administrators– University professors– PepNET representative (transition program for DHH students)– Educational interpreter– EHDI coordinator from MDH and MDE– Minnesota Resource Center: D/HH Director- MDE– MCDHH staff– 2 participants were hard of hearing, 3 were deaf, 3 were parents of deaf
and hard of hearing children
Presentation and Discussion Overview
State team meetings and discussions– Survey results
Joyce Daugaard presented about FAEDHH Survey (2010) Mary Cashman-Bakken presented about MDE Survey
(2009)– SWOT Analysis– Kids in the Middle Discussion– Action Planning Session
Parent and Recent Graduate Panel Discussions Research and Implementation Panels Thinking through Improvement (IT Kit)
– Ann Bailey
SWOT Analysis
OPPORTUNITIES– Link EHDI and MDH data– Engage families and students from other cultures– More opportunities to convene– Use technology to reach families
List serv In-home training Connect kids, critical mass
– Standardize training for DHH teachers– One website to get all information related to DHH
THREATS– Aging of teachers and professionals at higher
education level– Local control– Economics - $5 billion deficit– Politics within field, from outside world, and
legislators over education
STRENGTHS– Variety of services and communication options– EHDI mandate: Identification and intervention
earlier– Strong teacher preparation
Committed teachers
– Excellent legislation and advocacy– Parent resources – Hands & Voices
WEAKNESSES– Limited rural services– Hard of hearing often overlooked– Need critical mass statewide– Equitable testing, valid for DHH?– Collaboration mandate in Part C only (not Part B)– Bias of “who” gives message to parents– Need funding to support tech resources– Parent education beyond 0-3 is lacking– Limited information on evidence based practices
State Goal for Next Year
Develop a statewide improvement plan based on
the National Agenda- MCDHH takes the lead with MDH and MDE as
partners
Summit Evaluation
On average, participants responded that the Summit effectively: – Helped the state form and strengthen their stakeholder teams– Created an updated action plan in moving forward
Participant reactions to the Summit included:– Informative, Inspiring, Overwhelming– Collaborative, Hopeful, Planful– Driven, Committed, Eye-opening
Improvements for next year include:– Better technology for the remote connection– Increase time spent for state planning and discussions– Greater focus on hard-of-hearing in addition to deaf students– Mind-mapping of process
Next Steps
Create a scope statement and budget Discuss proposal with MDE and MDH Ask for commission approval on May 21st Create team of diverse stakeholders to create
improvement plan Timeline: one year