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Needs Assessments: Using What You Know to Get Where You Want to Go Christina Endres National Center for Homeless Education.

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Presentation on theme: "Needs Assessments: Using What You Know to Get Where You Want to Go Christina Endres National Center for Homeless Education."— Presentation transcript:

1 Needs Assessments: Using What You Know to Get Where You Want to Go Christina Endres National Center for Homeless Education

2 Who moved the hay? Suzie & Billy were cousins who often helped out on the family farms their parents ran. One day, Billy determined the hay was on the wrong side of the barn & set out to move it to a better location. Later that evening, Suzie came into the house fuming: someone had moved the hay farther away from her cows after she spent hours putting it exactly where she needed it. She was sure it had been Billy’s brother Bobby, because that was just the sort of thing he’d do. Billy hung his head and confessed, saying, “I thought it would help you.”

3 Why a needs assessment? Creates links between needs, goals, activities, outcomes, & resources Helps you balance work Provides a rationale & logic for your work –Enables you to describe & justify it –Enables you to define it & show its value

4 Do you think about a list of activities… Every activity is equally important –No priorities, all must be done Short term focus Success measured by completion, not by achieved level of change Often independent from district priorities or goals

5 …Or a programmatic approach? Limited set of goals –Derived from needs or areas for growth –Drive activities Results in long-term planning Eliminates the unnecessary; prioritizes time & energy Success measured by level of change achieved

6 Fundamentals Use of data Collaborative relationships (i.e. don’t go it alone) Creation of clear goals Prioritization of activities (i.e. time management) Measures of progress

7 Use of data Consolidated State Performance Report –All districts collect it –Information about enrollment, academic performance, & more Barrier tracking logs –All districts should collect it –Phone and email logs of fires you put out –Every year is different- look for trends

8 Use of data Other data options –Free and reduced lunch –Urban Institute estimate –Community wealth and health Unemployment, foreclosures, hunger Grants: new, old, recently cancelled

9 Quick peek SY09-10SY10-11SY11-12% Change MS7,49910,15011,44853% AL16,28718,91017,6708% LA25,22323,21120,762-18% AR8,1079,6259,55018% TN11,45013,95814,58627%

10 Quick peek Free & Reduced Foreclosure (Children) HCY Unemployment MS71%28,000 11,448 9% AL56%45,000 17,670 8% LA67%39,000 20,762 6% AR61%200,000 9,550 7% TN55%73,00014,5868%

11 Another look An examination of the data shows that homeless students have IEPs at a higher rate (19%) than the state rate (14%) The suspension rate for homeless students was 26%, while the state rate was 14% overall The majority of suspensions (59%) were related to alcohol, drugs, defiance, or aggression

12 Collaborative relationships Create a needs assessment committee –Establish meeting schedule –Communicate purpose & commitment level Make the case for data-based decision making to ensure participation –Take into account guidance from MDE

13 Collaborative relationships People to include: –Title I program administrators –Social workers and counselors –Other student services staff –Homeless parents/youth –Community agency representatives –Head Start & other program staff –Others, including enrollment staff

14 But what about me? Important to remember everyone has an agenda & things for which they are accountable Committees that do not address the concerns of the group fail If you identify concerns, you can tailor information so members are more receptive to change

15 Guiding the discussion NCHE’s Needs Assessment Worksheet Focus areas include –Awareness raising –Policies & procedures –Identification & enrollment –Student success –Collaboration, internal & external to district –Resources & capacity

16 Guiding the discussion Make the worksheet fit your district –Choose questions most important to you & district or state initiatives –Adjust level of specificity based on current program status –Be strategic: not all data & information is useful

17 Guiding the discussion Where are we now? Where do we want to go? How will we get there? How will we know we are there? How can we keep it going? –Edie L. Holcomb, Asking the Right Questions: Tools for Collaboration & School Change

18 Connecting needs and outcomes Your district provides after school tutoring to homeless students. However, in reviewing the data on grades and academic performance, you notice they really aren’t improving. You’re baffled because you know you hired solid teachers as tutors. What could be the issue?

19 Connecting needs and outcomes Your district wants to provide school supplies because you’ve noticed that a large number of students simply do not have what they need when the school year starts. As you open your email to send a message to the treasurer about the budget for this expense, you remember: MDE wants academic outcome data. What can you use to support this expense?

20 Creation of clear goals Good goals describe expected change –Specific, measurable, attainable, realistic, timely –Based on what you discover from data –Drive your activities –Should be limited in number –Consult Standards & Indicators for Quality McKinney-Vento Programs

21 Example goals I will train all teachers on homelessness. 100% of special education teachers will receive training on homelessness. The district will lower suspensions related to IEP identified needs of students by 5%.

22 Create a plan Prioritize the work Establish goals Determine who will carry out activities –Clarify roles and responsibilities Decide how to measure success Include a timeline Make sure your plan aligns to allowable expenses

23 Avoid timewasters Choose activities wisely –Which ones will have the greatest impact? –Which ones are unrelated to your goals? –Which activities can be reasonably completed? –If an activity requires participation of more than the liaison, is it realistic? –Is the activity concrete in nature?

24 Managing your time

25 Barriers Don’t forget to account for them –Barriers for students (data, logs) –Barriers for plan implementation Examine source or cause –Build solutions into your plan

26 Tools to guide you Needs Assessment Guide http://center.serve.org/nche/pr/na_eval.php Standards & Indicators for Quality Programs http://center.serve.org/nche/downloads/st_and_i nd_2006_rev.dochttp://center.serve.org/nche/downloads/st_and_i nd_2006_rev.doc Homeless Liaison Toolkit http://center.serve.org/nche/pr/liaison_toolkit.php

27 Contact us NCHE –http://center.serve.org/nche/http://center.serve.org/nche/ –(800) 308-2145 or homeless@serve.org homeless@serve.org Christina Endres –cendres@serve.org or (336) 315-7438cendres@serve.org


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