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MNSAA Accreditation January 2014 New School Training The Whole Learning School Sarah W. Mueller Executive Director
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Candidate Application The Whole Learning School Provided The Whole Learning School Provided Statement “Why Seeking Accreditation?” Statement of governing authority’s support Projected timeframe (Spring 2015) Programs seeking accreditation (Grades 3-12) Signed by school & governing authority Payment of application fee
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Candidate Application Essential Standards Readiness Essential Standards Readiness Mission & Philosophy statements Curriculum Standards Assessment of Student Learning Health & Safety Requirements Personnel Governance Financial Sustainability
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Achieving NEW Accreditation A Model for The Whole Learning School A Model for The Whole Learning School Year 1 – Develop Self Study Profile & Narrations Year 2 - SSP and Visit Define visionary plan for future Host onsite visit Year 3-7 – Implement Plan File Annual Progress Reports Maintain Strategic Plan as living document
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Accreditation Status Conditions on Accreditation May Apply Conditions on Accreditation May Apply Public Statement Provisional Conditions One or more essential compliance components Additional accountability required Timelines and support provided Provisional Conditions Deficiency detracts from total Failed to meet requirements Violated policy
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Steps to Accreditation Outline to Walk Through Process Outline to Walk Through Process Set up for Renewing schools TWLS already completed Steps 1-2 Next Up Develop Self-Study Communicate Plan
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Standards & Indicators HANDBOOK – Section B 1: Mission & Philosophy 2: Teaching & Learning 3: Climate for Learning 4: Communications & Relations 5: Personnel 6: Leadership & Governance 7: School Strategic Plan
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MNSAA’s Quality Standards Take a LOOK at the Standards MNSAA has 7 quality standards Each standard is comprised of several criteria Each criteria requires a Reflective Narration Narration supported by Performance Indicators
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Essential Performance Indicators Italicized Means Required! Written Mission & Philosophy statements; Written Curriculum Standards; Subject Area Philosophies Written Process of Curriculum Evaluation; Philosophy of Assessment Policy Handbooks; Faculty & Student Handbooks; Annual State-of-the School Report; Etc. Legal Requirement noted LR
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School Self-Study Report HANDBOOK – Section C The School Profile Reflective Standard Narrations The School Strategic Plan
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Getting Organized Understand the Self-Study Requirements (Profile, Standards Narrations, School Strategic Plan) Establish a Steering Team (See Handbook C-1) Develop Sub-Committees (See Handbook C-1) Community-wide Ownership The School Self-Study Report
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Part 1: The School Profile
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Tells your school’s story (Who you are; Who you serve; What’s been happening?) Opens self-study report Summary statement (3-5 pages) History highlights Demographic Study Overview of students, families, and community served Stakeholder perceptions** Survey provides documented evidence Student enrollment trends
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Stakeholder Satisfaction Survey Consider inexpensive electronic survey Connect stakeholders to MNSAA standards Invite honesty, but do not open door to inappropriate responses Summarize data gathered in The Profile Part 1: The School Profile
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School Profile Template Available under School Resources on website Template not required, but components are Consider it an outline for posting your findings Take a look! Take a look Download from MNSAA website: www.mnsaa.org www.mnsaa.org Part 1: The School Profile
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Part 2: Standard Narrations
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Part 2: Standards Narrations Demonstrates readiness for accreditation The heart of your school’s self-study Defines what is currently happening at your school Honesty matters! May find not all criteria are in place at your school Equally important to find areas not in compliance
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Quality of the Reflective Narrations Do NOT merely restate the standard Sets the stage for the onsite team Professional document crafted by well-trained and highly skilled educators Published! Quality evaluated by team Part 2: Standards Narrations
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Identifying Strengths & Challenges Use findings to build summary for each standard Process = Subcommittee writes draft Whole group reviews and adds ideas Identify key strengths & challenges CHALLENGES – Become the focus of the school improvement plan Part 2: Standards Narrations
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Self-Study Narrations Template MNSAA requires use of template Personalize the template for your school Available under School Resources on website Part 2: Standards Narrations
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Don’t Forget Standard 7! Not completed until after strategic plan written Can be forgotten Set a reminder to return to this before publishing Essential component of the Self-Study
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Indicators of Compliance Onsite team looks for supporting evidence for each narration. Ask the questions: “How do we comply?” “How can we provide evidence?” MNSAA requirements & ideas Team observations & interviews
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Part 3: School Strategic Plan
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Summarizes challenges identified A roadmap for school improvement Provide strategic direction + a plan of action Needs to be a collaborative process Key component of Annual Progress Report Maintained as a “Living Document”
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MNSAA SSP Quality Expectations Valid Valid – Reflective of current needs of school Connected Connected – To self-study report Supported Supported – By wide body of stakeholders Visionary Visionary – Not a checklist Reasonable Reasonable – Timeline manageable Focused Focused – On your students! Part 3: School Strategic Plan
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Specific Framework Required! Objectives Objectives – Where the school wants to be Strategies Strategies – How the school plans to get there Action Steps Action Steps – What specifically the school is going to do Part 3: School Strategic Plan
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SAMPLE Objective: Objective: The school will provide a safe learning facility. Strategy 1 Strategy 1: A crisis management plan will be developed. Action Steps Action Steps: 1.A taskforce will be established. 2.The task force will review state guidelines and resources. 3.The task force will interface with local authorities. 4.Draft a crisis management plan for consideration. 5.Seek approval from board. 6.Implement crisis management plan. 7.Evaluate and adjust as needed. Strategy 2 Strategy 2: Explore extended day program. Action Steps: 1.Survey families for need. 2.Determine space for program. 3.Research state laws. 4.Etc. – Continue to add action steps to reach goal.
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MNSAA Template Required! Complete on electronic template Download from MNSAA website Word table - Able to revise Ability to report progress to MNSAA Take a look! Take a look Part 3: School Strategic Plan
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Samples Available Take a look Take a look at the Sample on the MNSAA Template! Be sure to checkout our website for more resources: www.mnsaa.orgwww.mnsaa.org Part 3: School Strategic Plan
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INVOLVE STAKEHOLDERS! Communicate Self-Study Findings Solicit Input Build Buy-In Finalize with full school community Part 3: School Strategic Plan
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The Onsite Visit HANDBOOK – Section D Guidelines & Responsibilities The Onsite Visiting Team The Team Report Template
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The Onsite Visit Purpose of the Onsite Team Visit To Validate To Evaluate Quality Expectations of MNSAA Provide Objective Outside Feedback Bottom Line
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Thinking Ahead of the Visit Budget considerations Facility considerations Technology considerations Interview considerations Team meet and greet Organize your indicators Clear your calendar Advise stakeholders The Onsite Visit
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The Team Report The Team will determine: Sufficient Indication of Compliance Compliance with Concerns Insufficient Indication of Compliance Recommendations for Improvement Commendations for Excellence Take a look!Take a look The Onsite Visit
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The School Responds Visit closure Communicate findings with stakeholders Written response to recommendations Template provided Submit revised SSP The Onsite Visit
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The Appendix HANDBOOK – Section E Sample Timeline for Process Curriculum Standards Requirement SSP Sample Fee Structure
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MNSAA Accreditation January 2014 New School Training The Whole Learning School Sarah W. Mueller Executive Director
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