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Ohio Association of Career and Technical Superintendents Summer Conference Mark Hartman, Battelle for Kids June 25, 2010.

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Presentation on theme: "Ohio Association of Career and Technical Superintendents Summer Conference Mark Hartman, Battelle for Kids June 25, 2010."— Presentation transcript:

1 Ohio Association of Career and Technical Superintendents Summer Conference Mark Hartman, Battelle for Kids June 25, 2010

2 Copyright ©2010. Battelle for Kids.  Understand the goals and outcomes of Value-Added/T-CAP  OVAHS  ACT QualityCore  Understand the possibility of future Learning Targets

3 Copyright ©2010. Battelle for Kids.

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5 It’s NOT Your Fault!!!  The Past  The Right  Now  NCLB  The Near Future  Access/Readiness

6 Copyright ©2010. Battelle for Kids. Hope!  Jobs  $1 million for ever student  $10,000 - $50,000 for every family  A talented and qualified workforce  All students!

7 Copyright ©2010. Battelle for Kids. Ohio Job Outlook

8 Copyright ©2010. Battelle for Kids. The Key to Opportunity is Education Less than high school High school graduate Some college, no degree Associate’s degree Bachelor’s degree Master’s degree Graduate degree Professional degree Unemployment RateAverage Annual Earnings 7.00% 3.50% 0.00% $0K$40K$80K$120K Source: Bureau of the Census, Bureau of Labor Statistics; published by Postsecondary Education OPPORTUNITY; 2006 Unemployment rate, 2005 Earnings

9 Copyright ©2010. Battelle for Kids. What Will the August Reports Say?

10 Copyright ©2010. Battelle for Kids. 15%59%55%

11 Copyright ©2010. Battelle for Kids. Are Students Prepared for College? ACT National Curriculum Survey 2009

12 Copyright ©2010. Battelle for Kids.  Effective for the class of 2014  Affects students enrolled after July 1, 2010 who are:  Accelerated, or  Graduating early www.legislature.state.oh.us/analysis.cfm?ID=126_SB_311&hf=a nalyses126/s0311-rh-126.htm Ohio Core Graduation Requirements

13 Copyright ©2010. Battelle for Kids. What Are Students Needing Remediation at the College Level Telling Us?  More than half described themselves as good students who worked hard and nearly always completed high school assignments.  59% of remedial education students report that their high school classes were easy.  Nearly four-out-of-five remedial students had a high school grade point average of 3.0 or higher. Source: Strong American Schools

14 Copyright ©2010. Battelle for Kids. Courses Tested in the OVAHS Project  English 9  English 10  English 11  English 12  Biology  Chemistry  Physics  Algebra I  Algebra II  Geometry  Pre-Calculus  US History  Note: Out of Scope Tests

15 Copyright ©2010. Battelle for Kids. ACT QualityCore® Tools and Targets! www.QualityCore.org

16 Copyright ©2010. Battelle for Kids. Why Use Value-Added in Lieu of Pure Achievement? Student A Student B Proficient

17 Copyright ©2010. Battelle for Kids. School Achievement and Poverty Level

18 Copyright ©2010. Battelle for Kids. School Value-Added Gains and Poverty Level

19 Copyright ©2010. Battelle for Kids. VARC – The Oak Tree Analogy

20 Copyright ©2010. Battelle for Kids. What Has Happened So Far?  High schools ordered more than 62,000 end-of- course exams (78,000 to date)  High schools completed and scored 53,312 end-of- course exams  25,422 students participated in the testing in nine subject areas (projecting 31,000)  36 (44) Ohio urban, rural and suburban high schools administered the tests. In addition, STEM, digital, career technical and early college high schools were represented in the mix.

21 Copyright ©2010. Battelle for Kids. Participating High Schools  Batavia High School  Bexley High School  Butler Tech  Centennial High School  Circleville High School  D. Russel Lee Career-Technology Center  Dayton Early College Academy  Franklin Heights H.S.  GlenOak High School  Granville High School  Green High School  Greentree Health Science Academy  Grove City High School  Hillsdale High School  John Glenn High School  Jonathan Alder H. S.  Kettering Fairmont H. S.  Little Miami High School  Madeira High School  Mariemont High School  Metro Early College H. S.  Monroe High School  Morgan High School Note: Pilot Schools

22 Copyright ©2010. Battelle for Kids.  Oak Hills High School  Olentangy High School  Olentangy Liberty H.S.  Olentangy Orange H.S.  Philo High School  Reynoldsburg High School  Washington High School  Wheelersburg High School  William Mason High School  Withrow University H.S.  South Webster  Thomas Worthington H. S. New Schools for 2009-10  Bellbrook High School  Blanchester High School  Chaminade Julienne Catholic High School  Dayton Regional STEM School  Fairborn Digital Academy  Hayes High School  Jackson High School  Maysville High School  Mechanicsburg High School  Oakwood High School Note: Pilot Schools Participating High Schools (cont.)

23 Copyright ©2010. Battelle for Kids. 1. Teacher Value-Added Summary 2. District Alert Summary 3. Annual School Value-Added and Diagnostic Summary What Creative Reporting is Occurring?

24 Copyright ©2010. Battelle for Kids. Teacher Value- Added Summary Jane Doe John Doe James Doe

25 Copyright ©2010. Battelle for Kids. Teacher Value- Added Summary Jane Doe John Doe James Doe Jane Doe John Doe James Doe Jason Doe Janet Doe

26 Copyright ©2010. Battelle for Kids.

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29 Sample T-CAP Report  All three sub-groups of students were within one standard error of where they were expected to be

30 Copyright ©2010. Battelle for Kids. XYZ

31 Copyright ©2010. Battelle for Kids. Jane Doe

32 Copyright ©2010. Battelle for Kids. Jane Doe

33 Copyright ©2010. Battelle for Kids. Jane Doe

34 Copyright ©2010. Battelle for Kids. Jane Doe John Doe Jane Doe John Doe Jane Doe John Doe Jane Doe John Doe Jane Doe John Doe Jane Doe John Doe Jane Doe John Doe Jane Doe John Doe Jane Doe John Doe Jane Doe John Doe Jane Doe John Doe Jane Doe

35 Copyright ©2010. Battelle for Kids. College Projections  Level 2: Youngstown State University, University of Akron and Cleveland State University  Level 3: Kent State University, Bowling Green State University, University of Toledo and Wright State University  Level 4: University of Cincinnati and Ohio University  Level 5: Ohio State University and Miami University  Level 5+: Brown University, Columbia University, Cornell University, Dartmouth College, Harvard University, Princeton University, University of Pennsylvania and Yale University

36 Copyright ©2010. Battelle for Kids. Questions?

37 www.BattelleforKids.org Mark Hartman, Battelle for Kids mhartman@BattelleforKids.org


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