RACE TO THE TOP FINALIST PRESENTATION RACE TO THE TOP FINALIST PRESENTATION New York P RESENTATION T EAM Merryl Tisch – Chancellor, NYS Board of Regents.

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Presentation transcript:

RACE TO THE TOP FINALIST PRESENTATION RACE TO THE TOP FINALIST PRESENTATION New York P RESENTATION T EAM Merryl Tisch – Chancellor, NYS Board of Regents David Steiner – Commissioner of Education John King – Senior Deputy Commissioner for P-12 Education Joel Klein – Chancellor, New York City Department of Education Michael Mulgrew – President, United Federation of Teachers

New York Is Ready For The Race Implement bold reform agenda based on compelling theory of action and educational needs Exercise the full authority of the Board of Regents and Education Commissioner Passed landmark education reform legislation with support of broad coalition Statewide principal and teacher evaluation system with 40% weight on student achievement established Charter school cap raised from 200 to 460 (over 10% of NYS public schools) Over $20 million in capital funds dedicated to expanding the state’s longitudinal data system Educational Partnership Organizations authorized to manage persistently lowest-achieving schools The legal authority and policy initiatives to deliver results 2

Theory of Action Strategies To Make Our Goal A Reality Adopted Common Core State Standards Dramatically raised proficiency bar on state assessments to match college- readiness Making state assessments more rigorous and performance-based Committed to building sequenced, content-rich statewide curriculum with embedded formative assessments PARCC – Governing State Board Exam Consortium – Governing State 1% consortium – Participating State 3 Integrated approach to achieve student success Integrated approach to achieve student success Students Highly Effective School Leaders Highly Effective Teachers R e d a c t e d

All Students Graduate From High School Prepared To Succeed In College And Careers Measurable, substantial progress towards college and career successand closing gaps in achievement Measurable, substantial progress towards college and career success and closing gaps in achievement 4 MeasureBaseline 2013 Target Points Gain NAEP Grade 4 Reading Proficient 36%46%10 NAEP Grade 4 Math Proficient 40%48% 8 NAEP Grade 8 Reading Proficient 32%40% 8 NAEP Grade 8 Math Proficient 34%42% 8 All Students Close the gaps in achievement for Blacks, Hispanics, English language learners, and students with disabilities by at least 20% on these NAEP exams

5 College ReadinessCurrent 2013 Target Points Gain ELA Regents Exam score 75 or above 61%74%13 Math Regents Exam score 75 or above 60%77%17 Graduation Rate 71%76% 5 College Persistence 72%76% 4 All Students Measurable, substantial progress towards college and career successand closing gaps in achievement Measurable, substantial progress towards college and career success and closing gaps in achievement All Students Graduate From High School Prepared To Succeed In College And Careers

Align RTTT with Regents policies Coordinate services Track outcomes Develop content for professional development Support school improvement Align local instruction Use data Participate in professional development Conduct evaluations Implement educator- and classroom-level reforms via Inquiry Teams NYSED BOCES & Big 5 Districts* BOCES & Big 5 Districts* LEAs PARTNERS SCHOOLS DATA Implement The Strategies To Make Our Goal A Reality Deliver professional development via Network Teams Represent the Commissioner in the field Well-designed implementation 6 * Buffalo, New York City, Rochester, Syracuse, Yonkers

Best-In-Class Data System New York collects all data required by the America Competes Act Data portal will present a wealth of data customized for different users (teachers, parents, administrators, students, researchers) System will connect to postsecondary education and State Labor Department databases to map backwards to determine college and career readiness An Early Warning System will alert schools if at-risk students are not on track to academic success New York State has raised $48 million to expand our data system Reform will be data-rich and data-driven 7

Using Data To Get Results Deliver statewide instructional reporting and improvement system based on proven models, including NYC’s ARIS Deploy data teams through BOCES and Big 5 city districts to coach and support teacher-teams in every school statewide Use statewide comprehensive instructional improvement system to analyze state and local data – including formative, interim, and summative assessments and “early warning” indicators – to spot problems, devise and carry out solutions, and evaluate results All stakeholders will have actionable information when they need it 8

Teachers and School Leaders: From Recruitment to Lifetime Results Teaching and leadership standards: Foundation for teaching reform Performance assessments: Teachers and school leaders demonstrate critical classroom and school- based skills and content knowledge for initial certification Teachers demonstrate student growth for professional certification Alternative pathways for teachers and school leaders: Transitional B Certification: Teach for America and NYC Teaching Fellows Non-collegiate institutions Clinically-rich teacher and principal programs Leadership academies for school principals Teacher and principal career ladders, linked to supplemental compensation Transforming preparation programs and certification to create world-class teachers and leaders 9

Accountability Throughout The System Rigorous performance reviews for teachers and leaders in statute: Multiple measures – subject to Commissioner’s Regulations – including student growth as 40% Four Performance Categories: Highly Effective, Effective, Developing, Ineffective Teacher and principal improvement plans to target professional development Fair, objective, and timely removal of teachers and principals with two consecutive “Ineffective” ratings which constitutes very significant evidence of incompetence Hold LEAs accountable for improvements in teacher effectiveness Accountability profiles – based on student growth – for teacher and principal preparation programs Managing human capital to increase student achievement 10

Turning Around Our Weakest Schools We Are Taking bold, aggressive action in all our 243 lowest-performing schools Building upon lessons learned from the State’s registration review process and New York City’s closure and replacement of more than 100 schools To Support Our Plan, We Have Embedded the four RTTT/SIG models into the State’s accountability system Created Office of Innovative Schools Models with focus on performance contracts that provide flexibility in exchange for greater accountability Enacted new Educational Partnership Organization legislation; developing Partnership Zones with Mass Insight Approving the first cohort of Transformation and Turnaround models, including a ground-breaking agreement regarding teacher evaluation and compensation in New York City. Drive dramatic achievement gains in our persistently lowest-achieving schools 11

New Schools For A New Era Innovative Secondary Schools Model Incentive Fund (e.g., STEM, CTE, Arts) Nurture high performing charter networks (e.g., KIPP, Achievement First, Uncommon Schools) Expand I-Zone in to provide innovative instructional delivery to over 13,000 students in 84 schools Leverage technology  School of One  Online Advanced Placement courses – particularly for high-need rural and urban schools  Online Professional Development Fostering innovation to drive achievement gains 12

Advancing 21 st Century Student Learning Opportunities STEM – preparing for new world systems More rigorous mathematics, science and technology learning standards Advanced Placement courses for STEM Particular focus on underrepresented populations Innovative strategies to recruit and train STEM teachers for high- need schools Differential Pay Transfer Fund to provide financial incentives to teachers of STEM/English language learners/Students with disabilities Data systems track STEM successes from early grades through higher education Embracing the flattened world 13

New York State A microcosm of the nation Our 3.1 million public school students speak more than 150 languages. We have 240,000 certified public school educators working in more than 700 school districts – ranging in size from 1.0 million to less than 15 students A global capital for innovation, finance, and the arts 56 of Fortune 500 companies headquartered in NYS. We have 750 museums; 7,000 libraries; 100’s of theaters, art galleries A great investment opportunity 14