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School Climate and the CCRPI 5/21/20151 Jeff Hodges Program Specialist, Safe and Drug-Free Schools Marilyn Watson Program Manager, Safe and Drug-Free Schools.

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Presentation on theme: "School Climate and the CCRPI 5/21/20151 Jeff Hodges Program Specialist, Safe and Drug-Free Schools Marilyn Watson Program Manager, Safe and Drug-Free Schools."— Presentation transcript:

1 School Climate and the CCRPI 5/21/20151 Jeff Hodges Program Specialist, Safe and Drug-Free Schools Marilyn Watson Program Manager, Safe and Drug-Free Schools

2 What is School Climate? 5/21/20152

3 safe  We can all remember childhood moments when we felt particularly safe (or unsafe) in school. connected  We can all remember when we felt particularly connected to a caring adult (or frighteningly alone) in school. engaged  We can all remember when we felt particularly engaged in meaningful learning (or not).

4 positive school climate Research has demonstrated that a positive school climate is associated with: Academic achievement Academic achievement Student engagement in school Student engagement in school Positive social skills development Positive social skills development Studies show that there is a significant difference in student achievement between schools with a good school climate and those with a poor school climate.

5 What is School Climate? “School Climate School Climate “School Climate refers to the quality and character of school life. School Climate is based on patterns of students’, parents’, and school personnel’s experience of school life and reflects norms, goals, values, interpersonal interactions, teaching and learning practices and organizational structures.” -National School Climate Center

6 What Does That Mean? Students Students: If students do not feel safe at school, do not feel welcomed at school, are not treated with respect, and are not given opportunities to learn, mature and grow, they will not meet their academic potential or learn positive social lessons. Schools Schools: If the school climate is not positive, students will underperform, student attendance and student discipline are not likely to improve, school safety could be compromised, and teacher retention may be negatively affected. 5/21/20156

7 Four Dimensions of School Climate Safety Safety: referring to the physical and emotional safety of students and the rules and procedures in place to ensure student safety; Relationships / Engagement Relationships / Engagement: student social support from educators and parents, the level of respect students have for others, school and community engaged, and student and parental leadership; Teaching and Learning Teaching and Learning: a positive and professional student- teacher-school relationship, social and emotional skills training, civic education, and positive support for learning; and Institutional Environment Institutional Environment: the physical environment of the school. Source: National School Climate Center 5/21/20157

8 How Do We Measure School Climate? 5/21/20158

9 Measuring School Climate in Georgia Georgia Student Health Survey II (GSHS II) Administered annually to students in grades 6-12 Grades 3-5 added in school year 2013-2014 Georgia School Personnel Survey (GSPS) Administered annually to teachers, staff and administrators Georgia Parent Survey Administered annually to parents online School Climate Star Rating – Part of Georgia’s new accountability system – College and Career Ready Performance Index (CCRPI) 5/21/20159

10 school climate Georgia Student Health Survey II (GSHS II) Georgia is one of the first states with a defined method in the collection and analysis of school climate data through the implementation of the Georgia Student Health Survey II (GSHS II). safety and health issues that can have a negative impact on student achievement and school climate. The GSHS II is an anonymous, statewide survey instrument developed by the Georgia Department of Education (GaDOE) in collaboration with the Georgia Department of Public Health and Georgia State University. The GSHS II identifies safety and health issues that can have a negative impact on student achievement and school climate.

11 alcohol and drug use, nutrition and dietary behaviors, thoughts of dropping out of school, suicide and self-harm, bullying and harassment, use of unsupervised time, sense of safety and well-being, etc. The GSHS II is offered at no cost and provides Georgia public school districts (and private schools that wish to participate) with a measurement system for several categories: alcohol and drug use, nutrition and dietary behaviors, thoughts of dropping out of school, suicide and self-harm, bullying and harassment, use of unsupervised time, sense of safety and well-being, etc. 113 middle school questions 120 high school questions* URL address School systems are given a URL address to participate in the GSHS II online.

12 Student Alcohol / Drug Use Patterns  Use of alcohol/drugs in past 30 days  Where students use alcohol/drugs (home, school, friend’s house, etc.)  When students use alcohol/drugs (weekends, after school, etc.)  Age of onset (age of first use)  Perceived risk (“I think alcohol is harmful to my health.”)  Social disapproval (My friends would disapprove if I used alcohol.”) 5/21/201512

13 School Climate, Risk & Protective Factors gang activity Community - participation in gang activity, teen driving laws, etc. feeling safe at school bullying and harassment weapons School - feeling safe at school, feeling academically successful, bullying and harassment, brought weapons to school, thinking of dropping out of school, etc. Family - feeling safe at home, time spent watching TV, time spent on Internet, etc. suicide and self-harm Individual – suicide and self-harm, getting along well with other students and adults 5/21/201513

14 Survey The Survey is administered annually beginning in October. 2007 Baseline data was collected in the fall of 2007. 2011-2012350,000+ students took the Survey 2011-2012: 350,000+ students took the Survey 2012-2013657,000+ students took the Survey 2012-2013: 657,000+ students took the Survey 2013-2014: 895,000+ students took the Survey 2013-2014: 895,000+ students took the Survey

15 Surveyschool, district and state levels Survey results are available at the school, district and state levels. Surveyposted on the GaDOE webpage Survey results are made public and are posted on the GaDOE webpage at www.gadoe.org. www.gadoe.org Surveycomprehensive report plan prevention and intervention strategies and programs Each school and school district that participates in the Survey receives a comprehensive report that allows school administrators and other staff members to compare outcomes and plan prevention and intervention strategies and programs.

16 Survey Data Analysis GaDOE Partnership with Georgia State University 5/21/201516

17 GaDOE and Georgia State University GaDOE working with the Center for School Safety, School Climate and Classroom Management at GSU Conducted Factor Analysis on survey questions Conducted Factor Analysis on survey questions to look at clustering of items which measure the same construct Statistically linked eleven (11) questions Statistically linked eleven (11) questions to the direct measurement of macro school climate Other survey questions are important to identifying micro school climate 5/21/201517

18 GSHS II – Macro School Climate Identified Questions Assessing School Climate: School Climate #1: “I Like School” School Climate #2: “I Feel Successful at School” School Climate #3: “I feel my school has high standards for achievement” School Climate #4: “My School Sets Clear Rules for Behavior” School Climate #5: “I know what to do if there is an emergency at my school” School Climate #6: “Teachers treat me with respect” School Climate #7: “The behaviors in the classroom allow the teacher to teach so I can learn” School Climate #8: “Students are frequently recognized for their good behavior” School Climate #9: “I feel my school counselor would be helpful if I needed assistance” School Climate #10: “I get along with other students and adults” School Climate #11: “School is a place at which I feel safe” 5/21/201518

19 Connecting GSHS II with the Four Dimensions of School Climate 5/21/201519 School Climate #4: “My School Sets Clear Rules or Behavior” School Climate #5: “I know what to do if there is an emergency at my school” School Climate #11: “School is a place at which I feel safe” School Climate #3: “I feel my school has high standards for achievement” School Climate #8: “Students are frequently recognized for their good behavior” N/A School Climate #7: “and School Climate #10: School Climate #6: “Teachers treat me with respect” School Climate #1: “ I Like School”; School Climate #2: “I Feel Successful at School” School Climate #9: “I feel my school counselor would be helpful if I needed assistance” DimensionsGSHS II Questions

20 Academic Impact of School Climate GaDOE analyzed the impact of changes in school climate on CRCT and End of Course Test performance Used school-level data from 2008-2012 Results Significant impact on mathematics performance  3x as large as any other subject 1% increase in school climate increased scale scores between 3% and 16% 1% increase in school climate increased scale scores between 3% and 16% Teacher and administrator experience did not impact the development of school climate Local type (i.e. Urban, Suburban, or Rural) did not impact school climate 5/21/201520

21 School Climate and Behavioral Outcomes impacts student behavioral outcomes School Climate significantly impacts student behavioral outcomes 1% increase in School Climate is estimated to decrease discipline actions per pupil by 1.35% increases student attendance School Climate increases student attendance 1% increase in School Climate is estimated to increases average daily attendance by 1.60% decreases suspension days School Climate decreases suspension days per pupil Effect constant across both middle and high schools 5/21/201521

22 Factors Impacting School Climate Student and teacher demographics do not appear to significantly impact the development of positive school climate. School climate is a product of intrinsic motivation and personal actions of teacher and leaders School climate is a product of intrinsic motivation and personal actions of teacher and leaders. 5/21/201522

23 What does this mean? School Climate and the CCRPI 5/21/201523

24 The College and Career Ready Performance Index (CCRPI) ESEA Flexibility under NCLB – CCRPI is Georgia’s new accountability system replacing AYP Incentivizes student performance across a number of academic and behavioral areas. Student attendance, student discipline, school climate, and substance abuse/violent incidents will be included within the reporting document. 5/21/201524

25 The CCRPI 5/21/201525

26 School Climate Star Rating 1-5 (4 Components) School Climate (GSHS II, GSPS, Parent Survey) Safe and Substance- Free Learning Environment Student Discipline Schoolwide Attendance

27 School Climate Star Rating Components: School Climate Student Responses – Georgia Student Health Survey II – 75% Participation Required for each grade level (6 -12) – Elementary survey introduced in March 2014 (grades 4-5) Personnel Responses – Georgia School Personnel Survey – 75% of Teachers/Administrators Required Parent Responses – Parent Survey (new for 2013-14) – No participation requirement for parents School-wide Agreement – Variance between composite answers of students, teachers, and parents 5/21/201527

28 School Climate Star Rating Components: Student Discipline Weighted Suspension Rate – Maximum value for each student – each student counted once – Suspension Weights: Any # of ISS:0.50 pts. 1 – 2 OSS:1.00 pts. 3 – 4 OSS:3.00 pts. 5 – 9 OSS5.00 pts. 10+ OSS:7.00 pts. Alternative School Assignment6.00 pts. (for disciplinary reasons only) Expulsion7.00 pts. Scores will be on a 0 – 100 scale – Schools receiving a negative student discipline output will be recoded to 0. – Impact Data: Statewide Average is 81.52 5/21/201528

29 School Climate Star Rating Components: Student Discipline Any # of ISS:0.50 pts. 1 – 2 OSS:1.00 pts. 3 – 4 OSS:3.00 pts. 5 - 9 OSS:5.00 pts. 10+ OSS7.00 pts. Alternative School Assignment6.00 pts. (for disciplinary reasons only) Expulsion7.00 pts. 5/21/201529

30 School Climate Star Rating Components: Safe and Substance-Free Learning Environment % of discipline incidents that are not violent incidents using student discipline data % of discipline incidents that are not drug/alcohol related incidents using student discipline data using student discipline data % of students not abusing substances (i.e. illegal drugs, prescription drugs, alcohol, etc.) using GSHS II data % of students not experiencing bullying or harassment using GSHS II data Scores will be on a 0 – 100 scale – Schools receiving a negative student discipline output will be recoded to 0. – Impact Data: Statewide Average is 95.23 5/21/201530

31 School Climate Star Rating Components: School Attendance Average Daily Attendance Rate of Students – All students will be included Average Daily Attendance Rate of Teachers – Includes those who have a job code designated as a teacher – Removes individuals who have more than 30 days of total leave (vacation leave not included) Average Daily Attendance Rate of Administrators – Includes those who have a job code designated as an administrator – Removes individuals who have more than 30 days of total leave (vacation leave not included) Average Daily Attendance Rate of Staff – Includes those who have a job code designated as staff – Removes individuals who have more than 30 days of total leave (vacation leave not included) 5/21/201531

32 Additional Considerations Unsafe School Choice Option (USCO) – “Persistently Dangerous Schools” will lose two stars on School Climate Star Rating. – Schools with felony USCO incidents (i.e. Aggravated Battery, Armed Robbery, Rape, etc.) will lose one star. Disciplinary Disproportionality – Schools will lose one star for disciplinary disproportionality. – Program Services examine the risk of being suspended between Students with Disabilities (SWD), English Language Learner (ELL), and Economically Disadvantaged compared to their non-service reference group. – Race/Ethnicity examines the risk each subgroup compared to all other students. – Group size = 15 // Incident size = 5 – Disproportionate at 5x the risk for subgroup Risk will decrease 0.25 per year until it reaches 3x where it will remain – Need two (2) consecutive years per subgroup for disproportionality “penalty” – Suspension risk includes: OSS, Expulsion, and Assignment to Alternative Schools 5/21/201532

33 Additional Considerations Research/Evidence-based Programs/Practices – Schools can earn additional points on their School Climate Star Rating if they are implementing an evidence/research-based program or practice with fidelity. – Example includes but is not limited to Positive Behavioral Interventions and Supports (PBIS). 5/21/201533

34 QUESTIONS ?? Marilyn Watson: mawatson@doe.k12.ga.usmawatson@doe.k12.ga.us Jeff Hodges: jhodges@doe.k12.ga.usjhodges@doe.k12.ga.us 5/21/201534


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