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Educator Effectiveness Evaluation MERA Fall 2013 Conference November 25-26, 2013 Frankenmuth, Michigan.

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Presentation on theme: "Educator Effectiveness Evaluation MERA Fall 2013 Conference November 25-26, 2013 Frankenmuth, Michigan."— Presentation transcript:

1 Educator Effectiveness Evaluation MERA Fall 2013 Conference November 25-26, 2013 Frankenmuth, Michigan

2 2 Overview Michigan State Law requires evaluation of  Teachers  School administrators Evaluation systems  Established and implemented locally  Ratings reported to state Legislature to review recommendations made by Michigan Council on Educator Effectiveness (MCEE)

3 3 Why Educator Evaluations? Educator Evaluations Feedback and Aligned Professional Development Improved Instructional Practices Increased Student Achievement

4 4 Current Model Evaluate teachers and administrators annually Student growth included in evaluation Four evaluation ratings  Ineffective  Minimally effective  Effective  Highly effective

5 5 2011-12 Survey: Growth Measures Other ways growth data are measured include: Combination of data from multiple assessments, pre/post test data, combination of local, state, and national measures, benchmark testing, and several sources as agreed upon in the professional growth plan Number of districts

6 6 2011-12 Statewide Evaluation LabelNumberPercent Ineffective7750.82% Minimally Effective1,9982.11% Effective70,74274.74% Highly Effective21,14122.33% IMPORTANT NOTES: Based on the labels as determined by the local evaluation system; rigor of label designation is not consistent across districts THERE is differentiation in label reporting  now, 22% of teachers are reported as “highly effective”  moving away from a satisfactory/unsatisfactory system We do not believe that 1% of teachers labeled as “ineffective” is unreasonable in the first year

7 7 2011-12 Survey: Decisions Informed Others types of decisions include: Assignment to committees or roles beyond the classroom, classroom support and assistance, layoff/recall/transfer, mentoring, staff placement, scheduling, setting improvement goals, and merit pay Number of districts

8 8 MCEE Recommendation Overview More comparable system across schools and districts  Use of analogous observation tools  More similar weighting of evaluation components Greater emphasis on value added growth models Training and support for implementation Stronger consequences for ineffective educators

9 9 MCEE Recommendation Overview Professional Practice (50%) Student Growth/VAM (50%) Professional Provisional Ineffective 3 consecutive = advanced role (teachers only) 3 consecutive = may be evaluated biennially 3 consecutive = counseled out of role 2 consecutive = terminated from role in LEA

10 10 Timeline on MCEE Recommendation 2013-14 school year  Legislation and RFP/contract development 2014-15 school year  Systems and training development 2015-16 school year  Implementation of the new statewide system Continue existing local systems until 2015-16

11 11 Key Take Aways Support districts in refining system  Observations  Growth measures Promote the use of evaluation data in decision making  Professional development  Rewards and recognition  Career planning

12 12 Michigan Department of Education Educator Evaluations Website http://www.michigan.gov/mde/0,4615,7-140-22709_57992---,00.html MI School Data Portal https://www.mischooldata.org/DistrictSchoolProfiles/StaffingInformation/EducatorEffectiveness/Ratings.aspx Michigan Council on Educator Effectiveness Website http://www.mcede.org/ Resources

13 13 Office of Evaluation, Strategic Research, and Accountability MDE-Accountability@michigan.gov 877-560-8378 Contact


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