Unpacking the Educator Evaluation System Non-Professional Status Teachers entering the Evaluation...
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Transcript of Unpacking the Educator Evaluation System Non-Professional Status Teachers entering the Evaluation...
Unpacking the Educator Evaluation System
Non-Professional Status Teachersentering the Evaluation System
Goals for Today:
• Broad overview of the New Teacher Evaluation System
• Understand requirements and action items for Educators on the “Non-Professional Teacher Status” Evaluation System
Rubric at a Glance
4 Standards
16 Indicators
33 Elements
www.natickps.org
www.natickps.org
Unofficial goal:
Avoid feeling like this.
What the Process Looks Like
Steps in the Cycle
Step 1: Self Assessment Due October 1 or within the first four weeks of school.
Step 2: Goal Setting and Plan Development Meeting with your Evaluator by October 15 with Revision and Approval Complete by November 1
Step 3: Implementation of the Plan and Collection of Evidence On-going throughout the Year
Step 4: Formative Assessment and Evaluation Process completed by February 15
Step 5: Summative Evaluation Process completed by May 15
What’s the same: Student Learning Goal
What’s the same: Professional Practice Goal
Evaluation Cycle: Self-Assessment
• Educator completes a self-assessment by October 1st or within four weeks of the start of their employment at the school via Teachpoint.
• The self-assessment includes:• An assessment of practice against each of the
four Performance Standards• One goal directly related to improving the
Educator’s own professional practice.• One goal directed related to improving student
learning
Summative Evaluation
To be rated Proficient overall, a teacher must have been, at minimum, rated as Proficient on:Standard 1: Curriculum, Planning, and Assessment
&
Standard 2: Teaching all Students
Here is What it Looks Like
Meet Sally Smith
Profile for Sally Smith
• Sally Smith - 4th grade teacher with 1 year of teaching experience
• Her school:• Elementary level with 400 students• 16% disabilities• 10% limited English proficiency
After Sally Completed the Self Assessment:
Self Assessment Compared to the Rubric
ACTION STEPS: Sally Smith’s Professional Practice Goal
An example about Family and Community Engagement (ELL)
Use Student Learning and other Data to Identify Goal Areas
Improving communication with families for whom English is a second language. (III-B-2: Curriculum Support
ACTION STEPS: Sally Smith’s Professional Practice Goal
An example about Family and Community Engagement (ELL)
Draft the Goal Statement :
During this school year, I will communicate in writing monthly with LEP families about specific strategies to support learning.
Specific Measurable Attainable Relevant to Learning Timebound
ACTION STEPS: Sally Smith’s Professional Practice Goal
An example about Family and Community Engagement (ELL)
Add Key Actions and Benchmarks:•Goal Statement: what do I want to accomplish by when?•Key Actions: what will I/we do to achieve to accomplish it?
1. By September 30 I will contact in writing each LEP family to share my contact information in both English and their native language.
2. By October 15, I will know the WIDA Can-Do Descriptors for ELL Proficiency with regard to learning.
3. Beginning October, I will send home monthly newsletters with strategies for parents to practice.
4. I will attend a WIDA (World-Class Instructional Design and Assessment) Consortium to better understand the relationship between academic language and content knowledge
ACTION STEPS: Sally Smith’s Professional Practice Goal
An example about Family and Community Engagement (ELL)
Benchmarks: how will I/we know if I am on track to accomplish it/have accomplished it?
1. Mid-year I will survey families to solicit feedback about their student’s learning experience. (process outcome)
2. EOY: I will survey families at year end to determine what information about learning strategies was most useful during the school year. I will use this feedback in future planning.
3. On-going evidence for each action step is collected by Educator and shared with Evaluator for the Formative and Summative assessments.
Timelines for the Evaluation System
RTTT DistrictsTimeline
Implement 50% of building in new system+1st Ratings for NPTS
+Add 50% and +Pilot/Select DDMs+First PTS ratings given
+Add 1st year of DDM data collected+Pilot Surveys+1st Ratings PTS to second 50%
+ 2nd year DDM data collection+ First Growth Rating+Student & Parent surveys implemented
The whole system implemented with all measures
2016-17
2015-16
2014-15
2013-14
2012-13
DDMs forStaff
Natick Public Schools
Direct Measures
• Staff will receive a Student Impact Rating of high, moderate, or low based on trends and patterns in student learning, growth and achievement, by November 2016. Most likely spring 2016
• Direct Measure Examples: MCAS (SGP), sub-group performance, pre- and post- assessments in specific subjects, writing prompts, progress monitoring, progress in raising the advanced level on MCAS, progress in AP scores, percent reading at above grade level
• One DDM must be a direct measure
PARCC
• Science will continue to be assessed through MCAS.
• Performance Based Assessment in March of 2015
• End of Year in May of 2015
Indirect Measures
• Indirect measures will not always be measures of student growth, but rather measures of an educator’s impact on conditions that will enable student growth.
• Examples: reducing tardies to school or class, suspension rates, promotion and graduation rates, attendance rates, discipline referrals, reduced bullying, teacher attendance, college matriculation,
Other
• DDMs should be common across roles. DESE recommends that educators in similar roles in a district use identical DDMs to ensure comparability across schools.
• Administrators with Staff Members must Determine baseline data points and set parameters for high, moderate and low growth.
Median SGP
• A district is required to use median SGPs from MCAS/PARCC as one of the measures used to determine a staff members Student Impact Rating. See –DESE brief Using Student Growth Percentiles.
• Grades 4,5,6,7,8,10.
• Administrators required to use SGPs – SUPERINTENDENT, PRINCIPALS, DEPARTMENT HEADS FOR ELA, MATH
•2014-2015 • 2015-2016
DDM 1Low –
Moderate - High
DDM 2Low –
Moderate - High
DDM 1Low –
Moderate - High
DDM 2Low –
Moderate - High
Final Impact RatingLow –
Moderate - High
=
• Spring 2016
Student & Staff Surveys
• Evidence used in educator evaluation shall include:• Student feedback collected by the district starting in
2014 – 2015
• Staff feedback with respect to administrators collected by the district, starting 2014 – 2015
• Surveys must be related to the Standards
• In July 2014, DESE will release model surveys for students and staff that will be closely aligned to the Standards. Districts can adopt or adapt these surveys.
How does feedback get incorporated into an educator's evaluation?
There is no weight or value associated with feedback in an educator’s evaluation. Districts have the flexibility to determine how student and staff feedback informs the Summative Performance Rating. It is recommended that student and staff feedback be used to inform an educator’s self-assessment or shape goal-setting.
Natick’s Plan
• Adopt or adapt the model surveys to be implemented in the spring of 2015
• K-2 – make a good decision
• For 2014 – 2015 teacher keeps the data and uses it to inform self-assessments and goals set in the fall of 2015
• For 2015 – 2016 survey data is shared with administration. Administrators and educators use data to inform self-assessment and goal setting.
For Success
• Work with Evaluator and Mentor
• Use www.natickps.org
• Collect evidence throughout the year
Informational Web site
http://www.natickps.org/districtinfo/educatorevaluation.cfm
• Thank you all for your patience
• HAVE A GREAT YEAR!