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Quality Education Commission OSBA Regional Meetings September 2002. Quality Education Commission Introduction. Introduction. The Model. Conclusions. Recommendations. Quality Education Commission Introduction. Oregon’s education goals
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Quality Education Commission OSBA Regional Meetings September 2002
Quality Education Commission Introduction Introduction The Model Conclusions Recommendations
Quality Education Commission Introduction • Oregon’s education goals • “…the best educated citizens in the nation and the world.” • “Access to a Quality Education must be provided for all of Oregon’s youth…” ORS 329.035 • Quality Education Goals • ORS 329.015 • Academic excellence • Rigorous academic standards • Applied learning • Lifelong academic skills
Quality Education Commission Introduction Commission Charge Use research, data, professional judgment, and public values to identify: • Best practices for meeting the Quality Education Goals in statute and their cost. • Current education practices in Oregon and their costs. • Expected student performance using these practices.
Quality Education Commission The Model • Purpose of the Quality Education Model • To determine the level of statewide resources • needed for schools and students to meet the • quality education goals established in law. • To provide a policy tool that decision-makers can • use to develop education budgets.
Quality Education Commission The Model • Prototype Schools • Elementary Middle High • Identifies Cost per Student based on assumptions • Calculates statewide cost and state contribution • to support Quality Education
Quality Education Commission The Model Each Prototype School • In the Full Model each prototype school contains additional resources beyond the baseline for: • Added time for students having trouble reaching standards • Curriculum development and technology support • On-site instructional improvement • Professional development for teachers & administrators • Assistance with record keeping • Adequate classroom supplies and textbooks
Quality Education Commission The Model • To create a system of high-performing schools, • we need: • Adequate resources • Educational practices based on • research and local decision-making
Quality Education Commission The Model • Intangible factors in the Model • Examples of Quality Indicators: • -Instructional leadership • -Teacher quality • -Parent and community involvement • -Effective Instructional programs • -Orderly learning environment
Quality Education Commission 2002 Recommendations Full QEM 2002 Cost 2001-03 2003-05 2003-05 Budget* CSL**QEM State School Fund Amt. $4.946 bil. $5.596 bil. $6.995 bil. Amt per student (ADMw)*** Year 1 $ 5,081 $ 5,786 $ 6,589 Year 2 $ 4,924 $ 6,000 $ 6,832 * Does not include School Improvement Fund. Includes $261 million cut ** Current Service Level – Based on 2000-01 School Program Levels *** Student enrollment – weighted average daily membership
Quality Education Commission 2002 Recommendations Student Performance Expectations For Reading and Math Using Best Practices • 90% of all students would reach reading and math benchmarks in this decade • Elementary by 2005 • Middle school by 2008 • High school by 2010
Quality Education Commission 2002 Recommendations Implementation Priorities Stay the Course • Maintain the focus on reading in the early grades • Increase Staff Professional Development • Support High School Restructuring
Quality Education Commission Questions and Discussion • Questions and Discussion • Visit our website at www.ode.state.or.us